Carnival Parade Order in 2026

In 2026 the main parades of the Grupo Especial in Rio de Janeiro’s carnival are scheduled to take place on the nights of Sunday, 15 February; Monday, 16 February; and Tuesday, 17 February. After its introduction and success in 2025, the 12 schools will again parade over three nights. The order for the parades was decided on 12 April 2025 and will be:

Sunday, 15 February 2026

  • Acadêmicos de Niterói
  • Imperatriz Leopoldinense
  • Portela
  • Estação Primeira de Mangueira

Monday, 16 February 2026

  • Mocidade Independente de Padre Miguel
  • Beija-Flor de Nilópolis
  • Unidos do Viradouro
  • Unidos da Tijuca

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

  • Paraíso do Tuiuti
  • Unidos de Vila Isabel
  • Acadêmicos do Grande Rio
  • Acadêmicos do Salgueiro

Acadêmicos de Niterói promoted to the Grupo Especial in 2026

Acadêmicos de Niterói, which won Série Ouro, is promoted to the Grupo Especial in 2026 after bringing an off-season festa junina to Rio.

With the storyline ‘Vixe Maria’, the school took us to Maracanaú in Ceará, for a story about one of the biggest São João festivals in the world.

Acadêmicos de Niterói scored to 269.5, keeping it just ahead of Estácio de Sá with 269.3 and Porto da Pedra with 269.1. It will be the first time the school has paraded in the elite Grupo Especial of twelve, becoming the 32nd different school to do so. Like Viradouro it is located in Niterói.

Relegated from Grupo Especial to Série Ouro is Unidos de Padre Miguel.

Beija-Flor: Rio Carnival Champions 2025

Beija-Flor – caught by the team of RioTur photographers – scored a perfect 270 points to wins its 15th Rio carnival title, and its first since 2018, with the samba ‘Laíla de Todos os Santos, Laíla de todos os sambas’, that celebrated its late carnival director, Luiz Fernando Ribeiro do Carmo, Laíla, who died in June 2021 from complications of Covid-19.

Laíla was responsible for a sequence of the school’s carnival championships between 1998 and 2018, winning in 1998, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2011, 2015 and 2018.

Running Beija-Flor close were Grande Rio in second with 269.9 points and Imperatriz, winner of Globo’s Estandarte de Ouro, with 269.8 points. The relegated school is Unidos de Padre Miguel with 266.8 points.

 

Rio’s Carnival Themes – Enredos – for 2025

SUNDAY, 2 MARCH 2025

Padre Miguel: “Egbé Iyá Nassô” pays homage to the history of the Terreiro da Casa Branca do Engenho Velho, the first Candomblé terreiro (Afro-Brazilian temple) in Brazil, highlighting the resistance of black people and the strength of African women in the struggle for faith and identity.

Imperatriz Leopoldinense: “Ómi Tútú ao Olúfon – Água fresca para o senhor de Ifón”(Ómi Tútu to Olúfon – Fresh Water For the Lord of Ifón’. The story of Oxalá’s desire to visit the kingdom of Xangô, both orishas (divine spirits) and kings within axé culture.

Viradouro: “Malunguinho: O mensageiro de três mundos” (‘Malunguinho: The Messenger of Three Worlds) presents the story of Malunguinho, a hero of the 19th century and the leader of the Catucá Quilombo (a community organised by fugitive slaves) in the north of Pernambuco. The storyline delves into the struggle for freedom and resistance, and the strong dialogue between Afro and indigenous cultures

Mangueira: “À Flor da Terra, no Rio da Negritude entre Dores e Paixões” (At the Flower of the Earth, On the River of Blackness Between Sorrows and Passions) is a narrative that spans time and explores the arrival of the Bantu people at Rio’s Valongo Wharf. It explores the black presence in the centre of Rio, from the influence of the Bantus to the current reality, highlighting the struggles and celebrations of this population.


MONDAY, 3 MARCH 2025

Unidos da Tijuca: “Logun-Edé: Santo Menino Que Velho Respeita” (Logun-Edé: A Saintly Boy Whom Old Men Respect), the story of Logun Edé, the son of Oxum (fresh water) and Oxóssi (the hunter) this orisha, a boy saint that old men respected, carries the essence of youth but the strength of traditions, and is celebrated as a symbol of hope and renewal.

Beija-Flor: “Laíla de todos os santos, Laíla de todos os sambas” (Laíla Of All Saints, Laíla Of All Sambas) recognises and celebrates the work of the school’s carnival director, Laila (Luiz Fernando Ribeiro do Carmo), who died in 2021. It highlights his work in the history of Brazilian carnival along with his invaluable contribution to Beija-Flor’s own story.

Salgueiro: “Salgueiro de Corpo Fechado”, (Closed Body) dives into the rituals used by different cultures throughout history to protect themselves in the search for spiritual protection, including African beliefs, indigenous practices and elements of Rio’s popular culture.

Vila Isabel: “Quanto mais eu rezo, mais assombração aparece” (‘The More I pray, the More Hauntings Appear’) is a walk from childhood to adulthood through the universe of fantastic beings and hauntings that are very strong in Brazilian popular culture. It takes us back to a time when we feared the Bogeyman, the witch and others. 


TUESDAY, 4 MARCH 2025

Mocidade: “Voltando para o futuro, não há limites para sonhar” (Back To the Future – There Are No Limits To Dreaming’,) involves an intergalactic journey that begins with the star of Mocidade, the symbol of the school, and the need for the school to shine and return to its former brilliance. At the same time, the school looks at the importance of stars in our lives following on from the Big Bang. 

Paraíso do Tuiuti: “Quem tem medo de Xica Manicongo” (Who’s Afraid of Xica Manicongo?) is the story of the first documented trans woman in Brazil, Xica Manicongo, a striking figure who carried within her the resistance and struggle for identity and freedom. Xica arrived in Brazil enslaved from Africa. Baptised as Francisco, her name and identity did not reflect who she really was. Within the harsh reality of slavery, Xica sought to preserve her religious practices and found refuge with the Tupinambá people in Bahia where she exchanged knowledge and experiences in a context of collective learning and cultural resistance.

Grande Rio: “Pororocas parawaras:  As águas dos meus encantos nas contas dos curimbós” (Pororocas parawaras: The Waters of My Charms in the Beads of the Curimbós’). The parade plunges into the mysterious waters of  the state of Pará and focuses on the enchanted entities that inhabit the pororocas, where the rivers meet the sea. A plot that celebrates the Parawara Pororocas and the cultural riches of the region, marked by unity and tradition.

Portela: “Cantar será buscar o caminho que vai dar no sol – Uma homenagem a Milton Nascimento” (To Sing Is To Seek the Path That Leads To the Sun – A Tribute to Milton Nascimento). Portela honours the great singer-songwriter Milton Nascimento, highlighting his career and contribution to Brazilian music. A tribute that marks the first time that Portela has honoured an artist during their lifetime. The history and importance of Minas Gerais and Brazilian popular art are also a large part of Milton’s story.

Carnival Parade Order in 2025

In 2025 the main parades of the Grupo Especial in Rio de Janeiro’s carnival are scheduled to take place on the nights of Sunday, 2 March; Monday, 3 March; and Tuesday, 4 March. The 12 schools that will parade for the first time over three nights and when are:

Sunday, 2 March 2025

  • Padre Miguel
  • Imperatriz Leopoldinense
  • Viradouro
  • Mangueira

Monday, 3 March 2025

  • Unidos da Tijuca
  • Beija-Flor
  • Salgueiro
  • Vila Isabel

Tuesday, 4 March 2025

  • Mocidade
  • Paraíso do Tuiuti
  • Grande Rio
  • Portela

Extra Night of Rio Samba School Parades From 2025

Big news coming out of Rio de Janeiro in regard to carnival. From 2025 there will now be three nights of the parades of the top Grupo Especial samba schools, with four instead of six schools parading each of the nights.

Unidos de Padre Miguel, champion of Série Ouro, will open the parades on Sunday 2 March, with Unidos da Tijuca, 11th place in Grupo Especial this year, opening Monday, 3 March, and Mocidade, 10th placed in 2024, opening Tuesday, 4 March. The order and day of the other 9 schools will be decided on 23 May.

As a result of Tuesday being used for Grupo Especial, LIESA – Liga Independente das Escolas de Samba is studying the best solution for the parade of the children’s schools that traditionally take place on the Tuesday.

The changes mean at least 75,000 extra people will get to see the parades live and each night will not be such of a marathon for those at the sambódromo or watching on TV.

 

Viradouro is the champion samba school in Rio for 2024

They were the last school to parade on carnival Monday, but Viradouro, the most successful of all the schools over the last five carnivals, is the champion samba school in Rio again, scoring a perfect 270 out of 270. It last won in 2020. 

Viradouro’s winning samba “Arroboboi, Dangbé” looked at the energy of the cult of the powerful serpent god of Voodoo mythology, Vodou, the force that manifested itself in epic battles on the West Coast of Africa and influenced the struggles of the all female Mino warriors of the Kingdom of Dahomey, a dynasty of women chosen by the python spirit, Dangbé.

Second was the champion in 2023, Imperatriz with 269.3, with Grande Rio (269.2), winners in 2022, in third. Making up the top six that parade in the Winners Parade were Salgueiro (269.0), Portela (268.9) and Vila Isabel (268.8). 

And, as so often happens, Porta da Pedra (264.9), that was promoted last year, is relegated this year with a Unidos de Padre Miguel, champion of Série Ouro being promoted to parade in the Grupo Especial in 2025. Padre Miguel have paraded five times in the elite group of schools, the last time in 1972.

The full results of Rio’s Carnival Parade in 2024 for the Grupo Especial were:

1º – Viradouro – 270,0

2º – Imperatriz – 269,3

3º – Grande Rio – 269,2

4º – Salgueiro – 269,0

5º – Portela – 268,9

6º – Vila Isabel – 268,8

7º – Mangueira – 268,8

8º – Beija-Flor – 268,5

9º – Paraíso do Tuiuti – 268,3

10º – Mocidade – 267,2

11º – Unidos da Tijuca – 265,7

12º – Porto da Pedra – 264,9