This study compares the intonation of two Brazilian Portuguese varieties, Alagoas and São Paulo, focusing on the last three syllables before terminal and non-terminal boundaries of declarative utterances in sociolinguistic interviews from ten male speakers. With the ProPer toolbox, two acoustic measures were extracted from syllables: (i) DeltaF0, measuring F0 change between syllables; and (ii) Synchrony, reflecting F0 trends within syllables. Analyses of 695 boundary tokens reveal continuous differences (F0 excursion size) between varieties for terminal boundaries, and both categorical (edge tone type) and continuous (primarily F0 direction) differences for non-terminal ones. Alagoans produced larger pitch falls for terminal boundaries and favored a high pitch level on post-stressed syllables for non-terminal boundaries, whereas Paulistans preferred a fall on post-stressed syllables. Both regions mark finality vs. continuation primarily with pitch accents, rather than edge tones.