TripsBrazilAmazon

4-day Amazon Survival Tour

Amazon
3 Nights·4 Days

Overview

There is no place on Earth like the Amazon Rainforest in Brazil. With qualified English-speaking guides, this 4-day Amazon survival tour takes you into the largest rainforest in the world to hike through ancient trees, watch wildlife in its natural habitat, camp in the forest, and learn practical survival techniques.

Over four days you explore the jungle on foot and by canoe, witness the famous Meeting of Waters, fish for piranha, learn to identify plants and animals, and sleep in hammocks under the canopy. It is closer to an expedition than a conventional holiday, built for travelers who want real immersion rather than comfort-focused tourism.

This is a shorter version of the 6-day Amazon Survival Tour. If you want a deeper immersion in the Brazilian jungle, ask us about the longer expedition.

  • Meeting of Waters, the phenomenon where the Rio Negro and Rio Solimões run side by side without mixing.
  • Hands-on survival skills: fire making, piranha fishing, plant and animal identification, medicinal plants, and river navigation.
  • Hiking and canoeing through flooded forest and narrow channels to discover the jungle up close.
  • Wildlife watching (monkeys, caimans, birds, and more), including a night tour where guides spot caimans by hand.
  • Wild camping in hammocks with mosquito nets, with a guide keeping watch through the night.
  • Bilingual, English-speaking guides throughout the expedition.
  • Please note: This is an authentic survival expedition, not a lodge tour. Nights are spent wild camping in hammocks with mosquito nets, conditions are rustic (no private bathrooms, limited connectivity and electricity), and the daily routine adapts to the forest.

Itinerary

Day 1

Meeting of Waters / Transfer / Wild camping

  • DepartureManaus (Ceasa Port)
  • Boat safariMeeting of Waters · ~1hr30
  • Drivingto Mamori River · 50 min
  • Boatto main base · 45 min

At 8:00 am a speedboat takes you to the famous Meeting of Waters and on to Careiro da Várzea, a small village nearby. A vehicle then drives 50 minutes toward the Mamori River, followed by a 45-minute speedboat ride to the main base, reached around 11:30 am, where a meal with local ingredients is served. After resting, activities begin at 2:30 pm with a boat ride to the campsite, and dinner is cooked over the campfire.

Meals included: Lunch / Dinner

Aerial view of a wide tropical river bordered by dense Amazon jungle canopy at golden-hour sunset, the glowing sky reflected on the still water
A large white egret soaring low over tall green grass on an Amazon survival tour, wings fully spread against a dramatic cloudy sky with scattered trees in the background
A guide in camouflage clothing lighting a green stick with a lighter during an Amazon survival tour fire-making demonstration in the rainforest
Two blackened metal pots hanging over an open campfire on a rustic wooden frame during an Amazon survival tour, with dense tropical palm vegetation in the background
A man reclining on a mossy log deep in dense rainforest undergrowth during an Amazon survival tour, his straw hat resting beside him amid layers of tropical leaves

Day 2

Jungle hike / Canoeing / Caiman night tour

  • Canoeingsunrise · 1hr
  • Hikingmorning · ~2–3hrs
  • Canoeingflooded forest & channels · ~1hr
  • Night tourcaiman spotting

The day starts at 5:30 am with a relaxing canoe trip to watch the sunrise, followed by breakfast at 7:00 am. An hour later you set out on a jungle hike while guides explain the local fauna and flora. At 3:00 pm the group canoes through the flooded forest and small channels for wildlife watching. After dinner back at camp, an exciting night tour heads out to observe the rainforest after dark, with the caiman as the main focus.

Meals included: Breakfast / Lunch / Dinner

A traveller wearing a straw hat presses against the massive buttressed trunk of a giant rainforest tree during an Amazon survival tour, dwarfed by its scale beneath a dense green canopy
A man in a straw hat stands barefoot on the bow of a weathered wooden canoe, gazing across a calm dark river flanked by dense green forest on an Amazon survival tour
A ringed kingfisher with vivid blue plumage and a rufous breast perched on a branch hidden among dense green tropical leaves during an Amazon survival tour
A wide-eyed, rust-and-grey nocturnal monkey peers down from a tangle of branches in the Amazon jungle canopy
A yellow-and-black spotted snake coils along a thin branch during a night tour on an Amazon survival tour, surrounded by dense green foliage
A large dark hairy tarantula rests among leaf litter and roots on a forest floor, encountered during an Amazon survival tour night walk
A guide wearing a camouflage jacket and headlamp prepares grilled fish and sliced pineapple on palm leaves at a jungle camp during an Amazon survival tour, while another participant helps set out food nearby

Day 3

Survival skills / Fishing / Night tour

  • Hiking8:00–11:00 am · 3hrs
  • Boatto new campsite
  • Fishingpiranha lesson
  • Night tourfinal evening

Hiking fills most of the morning, from 8:00 to 11:00 am, learning how to survive in the jungle using fruits and plants for food and medicine. After a hearty meal, you board the boat to reach a new area and set up another campsite, where experts teach fishing techniques to catch Amazonian fish, especially piranha. You return by dinnertime, and the day closes with one last night tour.

Meals included: Breakfast / Lunch / Dinner

The Milky Way stretches across a dark night sky above a canopy of trees illuminated by warm artificial light on an Amazon survival tour
A woman with a green backpack and sun hat walks a narrow trail through dense palm fronds on an Amazon survival tour
A giant otter rises from a dark river with a small fish clamped in its jaws, whiskers fanned wide and eyes alert — a raw feeding moment on an Amazon survival tour
A hand holds an open spiky red achiote seed pod revealing bright orange seeds inside, during an Amazon survival tour plant identification lesson
A large boa constrictor coiled among dry leaves, twigs, and mossy branches on the forest floor during an Amazon survival tour

Day 4

Várzea wildlife / Return to Manaus

  • Walking / BoatVárzea exploration (walk in drought Sep–Mar; boat in flood season)
  • Transferbase → Manaus · depart 2pm, arrive ~4:30pm

The last day begins by exploring the Várzea area for a final chance to observe wildlife. During the drought season (September to March) the group walks, while a boat ride is used in the flood season. After returning to the main base, it is time for lunch and a rest before heading back to the city. Departure is at 2:00 pm, reaching Manaus around 4:30 pm.

Meals included: Breakfast / Lunch

A large boa constrictor coiled tightly around a slender tree trunk in dense Amazon jungle undergrowth, its cream and brown patterned scales clearly visible
Two scarlet macaws with vivid red, yellow, and blue plumage foraging among green leaves and small fruits in an Amazon jungle canopy
A man paddles a traditional wooden canoe across glassy, still water on an Amazon survival tour, his reflection perfectly mirrored on the dark surface beside lush green riverbank vegetation
A three-toed sloth with algae-tinted green fur clinging upside down to a tree branch in the Amazon jungle canopy, seen from below
A white-throated toucan with a vivid multicolored bill perches on a bare branch surrounded by lush green foliage during an Amazon survival tour

What is Included

  • Accommodation: Safe campsite with hammocks and mosquito nets
  • Meals: Breakfast, lunch and dinner, plus drinking water
  • Transfers: Airport and hotel pick-up and drop-off in Manaus
  • Activities & tours: All activities mentioned in the program
  • Guide: Bilingual tour guides (Portuguese and English)

Not included

  • Flights: International and domestic flights
  • Accommodation: Hotel stay in Manaus
  • Meals: Meals in Manaus
  • Drinks: Alcoholic beverages and soft drinks
  • Travel insurance: Travel insurance (recommended)
  • Personal expenses & tips: Personal equipment (footwear, rain jacket, etc.) — see What to Bring; tips
  • Any services not previously mentioned: Transport in Manaus or anything not specified in the program

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From

$ 1,000/ per person