| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 April 2026, Wednesday | 6:02 AM | 5:56 PM | 11h 53m |
| 2 April 2026, Thursday | 6:03 AM | 5:55 PM | 11h 52m |
| 3 April 2026, Friday | 6:03 AM | 5:54 PM | 11h 51m |
| 4 April 2026, Saturday | 6:03 AM | 5:53 PM | 11h 50m |
| 5 April 2026, Sunday | 6:03 AM | 5:52 PM | 11h 49m |
| 6 April 2026, Monday | 6:04 AM | 5:52 PM | 11h 48m |
| 7 April 2026, Tuesday | 6:04 AM | 5:51 PM | 11h 46m |
| 8 April 2026, Wednesday | 6:04 AM | 5:50 PM | 11h 45m |
| 9 April 2026, Thursday | 6:04 AM | 5:49 PM | 11h 44m |
| 10 April 2026, Friday | 6:05 AM | 5:48 PM | 11h 43m |
| 11 April 2026, Saturday | 6:05 AM | 5:48 PM | 11h 42m |
| 12 April 2026, Sunday | 6:05 AM | 5:47 PM | 11h 41m |
| 13 April 2026, Monday | 6:06 AM | 5:46 PM | 11h 40m |
| 14 April 2026, Tuesday | 6:06 AM | 5:45 PM | 11h 39m |
| 15 April 2026, Wednesday | 6:06 AM | 5:44 PM | 11h 38m |
| 16 April 2026, Thursday | 6:06 AM | 5:44 PM | 11h 37m |
| 17 April 2026, Friday | 6:07 AM | 5:43 PM | 11h 36m |
| 18 April 2026, Saturday | 6:07 AM | 5:42 PM | 11h 35m |
| 19 April 2026, Sunday | 6:07 AM | 5:41 PM | 11h 34m |
| 20 April 2026, Monday | 6:08 AM | 5:41 PM | 11h 33m |
| 21 April 2026, Tuesday | 6:08 AM | 5:40 PM | 11h 32m |
| 22 April 2026, Wednesday | 6:08 AM | 5:39 PM | 11h 31m |
| 23 April 2026, Thursday | 6:09 AM | 5:39 PM | 11h 30m |
| 24 April 2026, Friday | 6:09 AM | 5:38 PM | 11h 29m |
| 25 April 2026, Saturday | 6:09 AM | 5:37 PM | 11h 28m |
| 26 April 2026, Sunday | 6:10 AM | 5:37 PM | 11h 27m |
| 27 April 2026, Monday | 6:10 AM | 5:36 PM | 11h 26m |
| 28 April 2026, Tuesday | 6:10 AM | 5:35 PM | 11h 25m |
| 29 April 2026, Wednesday | 6:11 AM | 5:35 PM | 11h 24m |
| 30 April 2026, Thursday | 6:11 AM | 5:34 PM | 11h 23m |
Belo Horizonte sits in a highland valley at around 850 m above sea level, enclosed to the south by the Serra do Curral mountain range. The city's elevated terrain and several public hillside viewpoints give unobstructed westward views over the entire urban basin.
The 18 km promenade around the UNESCO-listed Pampulha lake is open 24 hours and free to access. From the eastern shore, the sun rises directly over the open water, with the Oscar Niemeyer buildings visible on the opposite bank.
Viewpoint 3 is the only one accessible without a guided tour and faces east toward the city grid and the Serra da Piedade range. The park opens at 8:00 (free entry, daily cap of 700 visitors), so arriving at opening works well for early morning light.
From the northern railing at mid-span, the viaduct opens an unobstructed view east toward the Pampulha hills. The structure is open 24 hours and walkable from the Praça da Estação bus terminal, about 500 m away.
The same viewpoints look west over the Pampulha basin; from the upper points along the 4 km trail, Mineirão Stadium and the western suburbs are visible. Guided tours covering all 10 viewpoints can be booked by calling (31) 3246-0600.
At 1,170 m, this is the highest official public viewpoint in BH, with two wooden decks facing west over the city. Open Tuesday to Sunday, 9:00–18:00, free entry; three telescopes installed in 2021 let you pick out landmarks in the skyline below.
This open hilltop square in the Mangabeiras neighborhood looks west down Avenida Afonso Pena toward the Serra do Curral, named after Pope John Paul II's visit here in 1980. Always open and free; arriving 30–40 minutes before sunset is enough to find a spot on the grass.
A car-free street in the Floresta neighborhood with a low west-facing wall overlooking the downtown skyline and Serra do Curral backdrop. Two telescopes on the mureta (installed 2018) and bars along the street make it practical for waiting out the golden hour.
The western end looks toward the city center and the Serra do Curral range on the horizon; Rua Sapucaí, with its bars and food stalls, is one block to the south.