That's just some of the consular advice being offered to foreign football fans heading to the World Cup in Brazil next month.
The advice for fans from the United States, England, Germany and Argentina comes as Brazil races to be ready for the tournament against a backdrop of social unrest over the cost of the event, poor public services and crime.
Much of the worst violence is concentrated in slum districts known as favelas, where so-called police pacification units have been battling drug traffickers and crime gangs.
Homicides in Rio state as a whole rose 23.6 percent in March compared with last year, and 10 percent in Rio city itself, the Rio Institute for Public Security said in figures released Saturday.
More From This Section
Friday saw a fatal shooting in the Rocinha slum easily visible from the luxury hotel where the England team will stay.
Robberies were up by around a third with tourist hotspot such as well-heeled Ipanema some of the worst afflicted.
State secretary for security affairs, Jose Mariano Beltrame, indicated Friday that 2,000 extra military police would be deployed in Rio during the World Cup.
"We are bringing forward a blueprint which will be put in place during the World Cup," said Beltrame, hoping their visible presence would "reduce the (statistical) indices.