São Paulo lives and breathes football, and on a matchday the choice is less about whether a bar has a screen and more about which competitions it carries and how loud the room gets. Corinthians, Palmeiras, and São Paulo split the city, while expats want the Premier League and the Champions League with the commentary they can follow. A real matchday bar here clears four bars: enough screens that no seat misses the goal, sound on the match that matters, reliable access to the league you came for, and a crowd that turns a goal into a moment. These ten get those things right.
The English-language football rooms
For internationals with commentary you can follow and a crowd of overseas fans, the expat pubs are the reliable call, with the screens and the satellite access to match.
01
O'Malley's
Jardins$$13 Screens / All Football
O'Malley's in Jardins is the long-running expat football headquarters, a two-storey maze of dark rooms fitted with 13 large screens and projectors that broadcast nearly every local, national, and international match. It carries the English Premier League with the commentary internationals want, plus ice hockey, rugby, and American football, and there is never a problem getting the channel you came for.
Game-day tip: Get there well before a Premier League or Champions League kickoff; the upstairs screens fill first.
02
The Queen's Head
Pinheiros$$100-Inch Projection
On the ground floor of the British Centre in Pinheiros, The Queen's Head is the British pub of record in São Paulo, showing internationals on two large TVs and a 100-inch projected screen. The crowd skews toward UK expats and Premier League fans, the sound goes on the marquee English match, and the room has the feel of a proper match-day local.
Game-day tip: Come for Premier League weekends; the 100-inch screen carries the main match with sound.
03
Finnegan's Pub
Pinheiros$$Oldest Pub / Football + Rock
Founded in 1988 on Rua Cristiano Viana, Finnegan's is the oldest pub in São Paulo and a long-standing home for sports-loving expats. It screens football and live matches, the crowd gathers for games and stays for the rock bands later, and the Irish-pub identity makes it a dependable spot to find a fellow fan of whichever club you follow.
Game-day tip: Good for finding your club's crowd; the room runs football early and live music once the match ends.
São Paulo sports bars: the full guideBeyond matchday, our São Paulo sports bar guide covers every venue worth knowing across the season.
See Sao Paulo sports bars
Vila Madalena, where the football crowd goes
The city's bar district turns into a football quarter on a matchday, with rooms built around the Brazilian league, the Champions League, and a partisan, street-spilling crowd.
04
Republic Pub
Vila Madalena$$14 TVs / Sport Bar
Republic carries a full London theme on Rua Delfina in Vila Madalena, with a dedicated Sport Bar space showing matches on four televisions within a room of 14 screens overall. The imported beer list runs past 30 international labels, from Guinness to English ales, which makes it the pick for a Premier League afternoon with a proper pint in hand.
Game-day tip: Head to the Sport Bar room for the match; the wider pub keeps a screen on for the second game.
05
Artilheiros Bar
Vila Madalena$4 Screens / Football First
Artilheiros is football to the core, its walls covered in team scarves and vintage football magazines, and it commits to broadcasting the full Brazilian league, the Europa League, and the Champions League. Four 50-inch screens are positioned so nearly every spot in the room has a clear line, and the crowd is here for the match rather than the scene.
Game-day tip: A strong call for midweek Champions League nights; every seat has a sightline to a screen.
06
Salve Jorge
Vila Madalena$Street-Side Screens
On Rua Aspicuelta in the heart of Vila Madalena's bar strip, Salve Jorge is one of the area's go-to football rooms, with plenty of screens, cold beer, and good food. The crowd spills toward the street on a big matchday, which gives it the open, neighborhood energy that makes watching a Brazilian league game here feel like part of the night out.
Game-day tip: Arrive early for a derby; the surrounding bars mean the whole street fills as kickoff nears.
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Across the city for the big matches
From Vila Olimpia to Itaim, these rooms put up the projector for a derby or a Champions League night and pack in the groups who came to watch together.
07
Hooters Vila Olimpia
Vila Olimpia$$20+ Screens
The spacious Vila Olimpia Hooters lines its timber-clad walls with more than twenty 42-inch TVs showing national and international football alongside golf, tennis, baseball, basketball, and UFC. The sheer screen count and the wide sports mix make it a reliable catch-all when your group wants several different games and competitions on at the same time.
Game-day tip: Best when the group wants different matches; the screen count covers several competitions at once.
08
Itaim$$Big Screens + Projector
In the heart of Itaim, Boteco São Bento works a high-ceilinged, spacious room where big groups gather in front of two large-screen TVs and a projector running Brazilian league games and the Champions League. The boteco format keeps the beer cold and the petiscos coming, which suits a long matchday spent watching with a crowd of friends.
Game-day tip: Book ahead for a group on a Champions League night; the projector room fills with big tables.
09
BEC Bar e Churras
Pinheiros$Casual / 3 Screens
BEC is a casual house in Pinheiros with open areas and three televisions spread through the space for the best matches. It is the relaxed neighborhood option rather than a screen palace, which makes it a good call when you want to catch the game with a churrasco and a beer in a low-key room instead of a packed expat pub.
Game-day tip: A laid-back pick for a single big match; the open areas stay comfortable on a warm evening.
10
All Black
Sao Paulo$$Irish Pub / Lively Crowd
All Black is one of the city's classic Irish-style sports pubs, with screens for the match and a lively, social crowd that makes it easy to meet other fans. The European-island decor and the pub format put it in the same family as O'Malley's and Finnegan's, and it is a dependable fallback when the better-known expat rooms are already full.
Game-day tip: A good backup when the main expat pubs are packed; the crowd is social and easy to join.
Where to watch the Champions LeagueOur Champions League guide covers the bars that get European nights right, in São Paulo and beyond.
Read the guide
How we picked these bars
We rank São Paulo football bars on the things that decide whether you enjoy the match: screen count and sightlines, whether the sound goes on the match you came for, which competitions each room reliably carries, the crowd, and how the room handles a derby or a Champions League night. Every bar here was cross-checked against its own current listing and at least one independent source. For the wider picture, see our pillar guide to the best bars for watching the game, our ranking of the best cities for sports bars, and the São Paulo sports bar hub.
Frequently asked questions
Where do expats watch the Premier League in Sao Paulo?
O'Malley's in Jardins and The Queen's Head in Pinheiros are the two expat football headquarters, both carrying the English Premier League with commentary internationals can follow. O'Malley's runs 13 screens, and The Queen's Head shows the marquee English match on a 100-inch projection.
Which Sao Paulo bar is best for the Champions League?
Artilheiros Bar in Vila Madalena commits to the full Champions League and Europa League on four screens, and Boteco São Bento in Itaim puts up a projector for European nights. O'Malley's also carries every Champions League match with the sound on the main game.
Where can I watch a Brazilian league derby in Sao Paulo?
Salve Jorge and Artilheiros in Vila Madalena are built for the Brazilian league, and Boteco São Bento in Itaim runs the projector for big domestic matches. Vila Madalena fills street to street on a Corinthians, Palmeiras, or São Paulo derby, so arrive early.
Which Sao Paulo football bars have the most screens?
O'Malley's runs 13 large screens and projectors, Hooters Vila Olimpia lines its walls with more than twenty TVs, and Republic Pub carries 14 screens including a dedicated Sport Bar room. All three suit a group that wants several matches on at once.