Leticia Viotti
She/HerBased in Brazil
Portuguese, English, Spanish, French
Leticia Viotti
Ask me about
My Story
I’m Brazilian, based in São Paulo, and I became a travel designer because I got tired of watching great people have mediocre trips for lack of real curation. I founded @aflora_travel to be the well-traveled friend everyone wishes they had when planning. I work with people who want to actually travel, not just check boxes. As a Fora Travel advisor, I use that access to get what Booking can’t deliver: real upgrades, VIP attention, and hotels that genuinely change the experience.
Travel Style
Local experience above everything. Hotel matters a lot (non-negotiable for me). Michelin and street food in the same trip. Neighborhoods that don’t make the guidebook. Always chasing what makes a destination truly itself, not just photogenic.
Reviews (3)
Vivian O.
6 months ago
Leticia was incredibly attentive, perfectly understood what we were looking for in an accommodation and offered one of the best options in Madrid. She was always available when we needed her, responding quickly, politely, and clearly. Highly recommended!
Sofia V.
6 months ago
amazing!
André I.
6 months ago
Truly elevated my whole travel experience… Highly recommended
Vivian O.
6 months ago
Leticia was incredibly attentive, perfectly understood what we were looking for in an accommodation and offered one of the best options in Madrid. She was always available when we needed her, responding quickly, politely, and clearly. Highly recommended!
Sofia V.
6 months ago
amazing!
André I.
6 months ago
Truly elevated my whole travel experience… Highly recommended
Travel ideas (2)

Trancoso on New Year's Eve: When Brazil's Most Beautiful Village Comes Alive
Trancoso is the kind of place that demands you slow down. Not because it tells you to, but because everything about it makes rushing feel absurd. The Quadrado, that impossibly photogenic colonial square with the sea at the end of it, is the obvious draw. But the village reveals itself in layers: the restaurants that don’t open until someone decides they’re ready, the beach that takes forty minutes to reach and feels like it belongs to you alone when you get there, the party that starts at midnight on the sand and ends when the sun comes up. I’ve been watching Brazilians fall in love with this place for years. This guide is the version they’d share between themselves.

Trancoso on New Year's Eve: When Brazil's Most Beautiful Village Comes Alive
Trancoso is the kind of place that demands you slow down. Not because it tells you to, but because everything about it makes rushing feel absurd. The Quadrado, that impossibly photogenic colonial square with the sea at the end of it, is the obvious draw. But the village reveals itself in layers: the restaurants that don’t open until someone decides they’re ready, the beach that takes forty minutes to reach and feels like it belongs to you alone when you get there, the party that starts at midnight on the sand and ends when the sun comes up. I’ve been watching Brazilians fall in love with this place for years. This guide is the version they’d share between themselves.

São Paulo Beyond the Concrete Surface: Where To Eat, Drink & Move Like a Local
São Paulo is the kind of city that doesn’t give itself away easily—and that’s exactly the point. No postcard beaches, no single landmark that defines it. What it has instead is one of the most exciting food and drink scenes in the world, a cultural energy that runs 24 hours, and a layer of incredible places that stay invisible unless you know where to look. I’ve spent years learning to read this city. This guide is that map.

São Paulo Beyond the Concrete Surface: Where To Eat, Drink & Move Like a Local
São Paulo is the kind of city that doesn’t give itself away easily—and that’s exactly the point. No postcard beaches, no single landmark that defines it. What it has instead is one of the most exciting food and drink scenes in the world, a cultural energy that runs 24 hours, and a layer of incredible places that stay invisible unless you know where to look. I’ve spent years learning to read this city. This guide is that map.

Trancoso on New Year's Eve: When Brazil's Most Beautiful Village Comes Alive
Trancoso is the kind of place that demands you slow down. Not because it tells you to, but because everything about it makes rushing feel absurd. The Quadrado, that impossibly photogenic colonial square with the sea at the end of it, is the obvious draw. But the village reveals itself in layers: the restaurants that don’t open until someone decides they’re ready, the beach that takes forty minutes to reach and feels like it belongs to you alone when you get there, the party that starts at midnight on the sand and ends when the sun comes up. I’ve been watching Brazilians fall in love with this place for years. This guide is the version they’d share between themselves.

Trancoso on New Year's Eve: When Brazil's Most Beautiful Village Comes Alive
Trancoso is the kind of place that demands you slow down. Not because it tells you to, but because everything about it makes rushing feel absurd. The Quadrado, that impossibly photogenic colonial square with the sea at the end of it, is the obvious draw. But the village reveals itself in layers: the restaurants that don’t open until someone decides they’re ready, the beach that takes forty minutes to reach and feels like it belongs to you alone when you get there, the party that starts at midnight on the sand and ends when the sun comes up. I’ve been watching Brazilians fall in love with this place for years. This guide is the version they’d share between themselves.

São Paulo Beyond the Concrete Surface: Where To Eat, Drink & Move Like a Local
São Paulo is the kind of city that doesn’t give itself away easily—and that’s exactly the point. No postcard beaches, no single landmark that defines it. What it has instead is one of the most exciting food and drink scenes in the world, a cultural energy that runs 24 hours, and a layer of incredible places that stay invisible unless you know where to look. I’ve spent years learning to read this city. This guide is that map.

São Paulo Beyond the Concrete Surface: Where To Eat, Drink & Move Like a Local
São Paulo is the kind of city that doesn’t give itself away easily—and that’s exactly the point. No postcard beaches, no single landmark that defines it. What it has instead is one of the most exciting food and drink scenes in the world, a cultural energy that runs 24 hours, and a layer of incredible places that stay invisible unless you know where to look. I’ve spent years learning to read this city. This guide is that map.
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