Bad Bunny Gira / Tour 2026
Next Bad Bunny Shows
The 8 closest dates from the live Ticketmaster feed.
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Bad Bunny Tickets Near You — Shows by City
10 citiesBad Bunny is playing 10 cities this tour. Tap any city for exact dates, venue info, seat prices, and parking.
8 showsFrom €98
2 showsFrom €142
2 showsFrom €120
2 showsFrom €142
1 showFrom €116
2 showsFrom €207
2 showsFrom €99
1 showFrom €141
2 showsFrom €272
1 showFrom €150Is Bad Bunny Coming to Your City?
0 / 12 citiesLive tour status for Bad Bunny across the 12 biggest North American markets — refreshed daily from Ticketmaster. Tap any "not yet" city to see the closest confirmed date.
23 upcoming Bad Bunny concerts across 10 cities in North America, with tickets from €98 EUR. Live Ticketmaster availability refreshed daily.
- When is Bad Bunny's next show?
- Tue, June 2, 2026 at Riyadh Air Metropolitano.
- How much are Bad Bunny tickets?
- €98–€272 EUR, varies by city and seat section.
- Is Bad Bunny touring near me?
- Playing 10 cities in 2026. See the "Tickets Near You" section below for your city.
- How do I get Bad Bunny tickets?
- Tap any date below to checkout on Ticketmaster — listings here are official primary tickets, refreshed daily.
- What time does the show start?
- Most Bad Bunny shows start between 7 and 9 PM local, with doors 60–90 minutes earlier. Exact time is on each ticket.
- How long is the concert?
- Roughly 90–150 minutes including the opener and a short encore.
Bad Bunny Ticket Prices 2026— Cheapest Seats & Average Cost
Bad Bunny ticket prices vary by city, venue size, day of week, and seat section. Live price breakdown across all 2026 tour stops:
About Bad Bunny
BBad Bunny is the Reggaeton artist on the 2026 gira — bilingual production, live band plus DJ, and a perreo-friendly setlist that pulls from every era of the catalog. 23 confirmed dates across 10 cities this run. Tickets currently start at €98. Bad Bunny is a Puerto Rican artist who has become one of the biggest names in global music, helping push reggaeton, Latin trap, and Spanish-language pop to the forefront of the international mainstream. His catalog blends reggaeton rhythms, trap influences, Latin pop, rock, and experimental production, and he is known for his willingness to take creative risks across his albums. Bad Bunny has released a string of acclaimed studio albums that have topped global charts, and his singles have racked up massive streaming numbers worldwide. Beyond music, he has become a cultural figure known for his distinctive fashion, outspoken personality, and commitment to representing Puerto Rican identity on the world stage. His live shows are massive productions featuring elaborate staging, strong visuals, and high-energy performances that fill stadiums around the world. Fans appreciate his authenticity, his creativity, and the way his music reflects a global Latin music movement. Bad Bunny concerts are consistently regarded as some of the most exciting live events in modern music.
Cheapest Bad Bunny Tickets — 5 Ways to Save on the 2026 Tour
Bad Bunny tickets can move fast, especially for big-city dates, but there are a few reliable ways to land the best price.
- Buy during the official on-sale window. Face-value primary tickets on Ticketmaster are almost always cheaper than resale — the listings above show primary availability first.
- Consider mid-week shows. Tuesday and Wednesday Bad Bunny dates often list 15 to 30 percent lower than weekend stops in the same city.
- Go upper-level. Upper 300-level or balcony sections typically start near €98 and still offer a strong view of the stage.
- Watch last-minute drops.Resellers often slash prices 24 to 48 hours before doors open, especially for mid-week dates that haven't sold out.
- Compare nearby cities. It can be cheaper to drive 2 to 3 hours to a smaller market — check the full cheap Bad Bunny tickets guide for current low-priced dates.
Bad BunnyVIP Packages & Meet & Greet Options
When available, Bad Bunny VIP packages are offered directly on Ticketmaster alongside the standard tickets for each tour date. VIP experiences for Bad Bunnyconcerts often include early venue entry, a premium seat or pit access, an exclusive tour merchandise item, and occasionally a pre-show soundcheck or photo opportunity. Meet and greet packages, when offered, sell out fastest — if you see one listed on the show page above, it's worth grabbing immediately. For the full breakdown of current VIP and meet and greet options on this tour, see the Bad BunnyVIP & meet and greet guide.
Bad BunnyPresale Tickets & Codes
Presale windows for the Bad Bunny 2026 tour typically open 1 to 3 days before the general on-sale and are the best way to lock in seats before inventory drops. The most common presales for Bad Bunnytour stops are Ticketmaster Verified Fan, Live Nation presale, the artist's official newsletter or fan club, and credit-card presales from Citi, American Express, or Capital One in North America. Sign-up links usually go live from the artist's official site 1 to 2 weeks before the on-sale. See the Bad Bunny presale guide for the current active codes and sign-up deadlines.
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Inside Bad Bunny
Bad Bunny is the most consequential Latin artist of the streaming era and, by most reasonable measures, the most-played musician on the planet across multiple calendar years running. Born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio in Vega Baja, Puerto Rico on March 10, 1994, he posted his first songs to SoundCloud while bagging groceries at a supermercado in Vega Alta, signed to Hear This Music and later Rimas Entertainment, and inside three years detonated the global pop ceiling that Spanish-language artists had previously been told they could not break. X 100PRE in late 2018 made the case; YHLQMDLG in 2020 became the highest-charting all-Spanish album in Billboard 200 history at the time; Un Verano Sin Ti in 2022 sat at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 for thirteen weeks and became the first non-English-language album ever nominated for Album of the Year at the Grammys. He headlined the World's Hottest Tour in 2022 — the first Latin artist to headline stadiums on a global rollout at that scale — then pivoted into the Most Wanted Tour through North American arenas in 2024, then announced the Debí Tirar Más Fotos era around a long-form Puerto Rico residency at the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum in San Juan paired with a follow-up world stadium run. The catalogue is fully bilingual in cultural footprint and unapologetically monolingual in vocal: he records in Spanish, he performs in Spanish, the live show is in Spanish, and the audience — Latino and non-Latino, in San Juan, in Toronto, in Tokyo, in Madrid — sings every word back. The Rolling Loud headlining slots, the Saturday Night Live host-and-musical-guest double, the WWE Royal Rumble runs, and the Bullet Train and Caught Stealing acting credits sit around the music as evidence of how far the brand has pushed. This page is the central hub for tour dates, residency runs, ticket guidance, and the cities he plays most.
About Bad Bunny
Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio grew up in the Almirante Sur barrio of Vega Baja, on Puerto Rico's north coast about an hour west of San Juan, the eldest of three sons of a truck driver father and a retired schoolteacher mother. He sang in the church choir from age five, listened to Vico C, Daddy Yankee, and Héctor Lavoe on the radio, and started writing his own reggaeton verses in middle school. He studied audiovisual communication at the University of Puerto Rico in Arecibo while bagging groceries at an Econo supermarket in Vega Alta, and posted self-produced tracks to SoundCloud under the handle Bad Bunny — a nickname inherited from a childhood photo of him scowling in a bunny costume — through 2015 and 2016. Diablo, uploaded in late 2016, caught the attention of DJ Luian and Hear This Music; the early single Soy Peor blew up on Latin radio in early 2017 and he quit the supermarket. The Cardi B and J Balvin collaboration I Like It in 2018 hit No. 1 on the Hot 100 and announced him to the English-language audience; Mía with Drake later that year confirmed he could pull a Drake feature in Spanish, on his terms, with Drake learning the verse phonetically. X 100PRE arrived on Christmas Eve 2018 and set the template: Spanish-only, genre-fluid across reggaeton, trap, dembow, dancehall, and pop, with album-as-statement sequencing. The Diplo, J Balvin, and Residente collaborations across 2019 — including the Oasis joint album with Balvin and the activist-leaning Afilando los Cuchillos with Residente during the Ricky Renuncia protests — placed him at the center of both the genre's commercial peak and its political moment. YHLQMDLG (Yo Hago Lo Que Me Da La Gana) dropped in February 2020 and recalibrated everything: 20 tracks, debut at No. 2 on the Billboard 200, eventual most-streamed album of the year. Las Que No Iban a Salir followed three months later as a quarantine-era collection; El Último Tour del Mundo in November 2020 became the first all-Spanish album ever to top the Billboard 200. Un Verano Sin Ti in May 2022 was the cultural event: Tití Me Preguntó, Me Porto Bonito, Después de la Playa, Moscow Mule, Ojitos Lindos with Bomba Estéreo, a 23-track beach-and-summer record that lived at No. 1 for thirteen weeks and made him the first Spanish-language artist ever nominated for the Grammy Album of the Year. Nadie Sabe Lo Que Va a Pasar Mañana in late 2023 leaned darker and more meditative. DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS in early 2025 turned inward and outward at once — a love letter to Puerto Rico, with plena, bomba, jíbaro, and salsa folded into the production, and lyrics reckoning openly with displacement, gentrification, statehood politics, and what it means to leave or stay on the island. Rimas Entertainment, the independent label that has put out his entire catalogue, sits behind the operation alongside manager Noah Assad.
Bad Bunny tour dates and live show
When Bad Bunny tours outside of Puerto Rico, he plays stadiums in essentially every major market — Estadio Azteca, SoFi Stadium, MetLife, Wembley, Foro Sol, Allianz Parque, and Estadio Monumental have all hosted full-capacity nights across the World's Hottest Tour and the subsequent stadium runs. He was the first Latin artist to headline a global stadium rollout at that scale, and the touring blueprint has not retreated: arenas only when stadiums are not available in a given market, and even then with the same in-the-round production scaled down. The Debí Tirar Más Fotos era reshaped the calendar around a long-form Puerto Rico residency at the José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum in San Juan — the Choli, in local shorthand — running multi-month blocks of show nights designed both for Puerto Ricans on the island and for diaspora fans flying in from the mainland US, Spain, and Latin America. After the residency closes, the show pivots into a world stadium tour with European, Latin American, Asian, and Australian legs scheduled in concentrated bursts. A typical Bad Bunny show runs roughly 100 to 130 minutes — long by Latin urbano standards, deliberately so — built around a full band, a horn section, a percussion line, and an in-the-round or thrust stage that moves him through the room rather than parking him front-and-center. Production leans heavy on video work, custom transitions between eras, and visual nods to Puerto Rican folklore on the Debí Tirar Más Fotos cycle: Taíno iconography, jíbaro imagery, El Yunque silhouettes, Vieques references. No opener on most stadium nights; the set is the evening. If he's touring in your region, the schedule strip above shows every confirmed date.
Bad Bunny tickets
Bad Bunny tickets for stadium tour dates start in the $120–$200 range for upper-level seats at most North American stops on the day of on-sale and climb past $400 for lower-bowl and field GA once Ticketmaster dynamic pricing kicks in. Floor and front-pit packages routinely clear $700–$1,200 face value on Verified Fan releases for the biggest markets — Los Angeles, New York, Miami, Mexico City — and resale on StubHub, SeatGeek, and Vivid Seats can land higher on Friday and Saturday nights. The Puerto Rico residency at the Choli is its own pricing world: the room holds roughly 18,500, demand is essentially infinite, and tickets opened in tiered batches with island-resident-only pre-sales giving Puerto Ricans first access before diaspora and mainland buyers cleared the inventory. Standard residency seats sat in the $200–$600 range; premium and VIP packages climbed into four figures per night, and resale ran at multiples of face given the limited public allocation. Official on-sales go through Ticketmaster as the primary, with Conejos Malos fan club pre-sales opening 24–72 hours ahead of the public window and Ticketmaster Verified Fan codes distributed to registrants for high-demand North American dates. Register for Verified Fan ahead of any announced market — the codes are the only realistic path to face-value lower-bowl seats, and registration windows typically close several days before the on-sale itself. Set an alert on this page rather than checking once and walking away — Bad Bunny on-sales clear the best face-value seats inside the first ten minutes of every confirmed date.
Bad Bunny setlist
A Bad Bunny setlist on the Debí Tirar Más Fotos cycle runs 25 to 30 songs across roughly two hours and braids three distinct eras together into a single show arc. The Debí Tirar Más Fotos cuts — BAILE INoLVIDABLE, NUEVAYoL, EL CLúB, DtMF, VOY A LLeVARTE PA PR, KETU TeCRÉ — anchor the opening third with the full plena-and-bomba live arrangement, the percussion line out front, and the Puerto Rico flag and Taíno iconography on the visuals. The Un Verano Sin Ti block is the singalong center: Tití Me Preguntó, Me Porto Bonito, Después de la Playa, Moscow Mule, Ojitos Lindos, Neverita, Efecto, La Corriente — the room sings every word and the perreo block runs deep. The prior-era classics anchor the back half — Callaíta, Yo Perreo Sola, Dakiti, Safaera (the YHLQMDLG perreo bomb that the crowd treats as a ritual), I Like It and Mía and La Canción when the room is right for a feature reset, Estamos Bien when he wants the emotional pivot. Encores typically pull from El Último Tour del Mundo (Yonaguni, Dákiti reprise) or close on a Debí Tirar Más Fotos statement cut. Night-to-night variation is moderate — the residency at the Choli rotated cuts across show nights given the long run, and the world tour leans more fixed for production reasons. For exact night-by-night setlists, setlist.fm tracks every confirmed Bad Bunny date with crowd-submitted song-by-song lists usually posted within hours of the encore — the most reliable source for what was actually played at a specific show.
Bad Bunny meet-and-greet packages
Bad Bunny meet-and-greet packages are essentially nonexistent at the public-sale level. Neither the Most Wanted Tour nor the Debí Tirar Más Fotos residency and stadium runs have offered a formal meet-and-greet tier or m&g upgrade through Ticketmaster, Live Nation, or Rimas Entertainment. The Conejos Malos fan club is the most consistent route to elevated access: members get pre-sale codes 24–72 hours ahead of the public on-sale, first crack at the closest-to-stage tickets before they clear to the open market, and occasional invitations to limited fan experiences or after-party access on select dates — typically promoted directly through Rimas Entertainment channels and only to verified Conejos Malos members. Stadium-tour VIP packages, when offered, bundle premium seating with a pre-show lounge, an exclusive merchandise item, and early venue entry rather than a face-to-face. Anyone offering a guaranteed in-person Bad Bunny meet-and-greet outside of official Conejos Malos or Rimas channels should be treated with extreme skepticism; that market is the single most heavily scammed segment of the entire Bad Bunny secondary economy. If face-time is the goal, premium floor or front-pit seats are the realistic path — not a meet-and-greet listing on a resale site.
Tour cities
San Juan
San Juan is the home market and, on the Debí Tirar Más Fotos cycle, the literal home base. The José Miguel Agrelot Coliseum in Hato Rey — the Choli — hosted the long-form Puerto Rico residency built specifically for islanders and diaspora fans flying in. The room holds roughly 18,500 and the production is tuned to its sightlines. Island-resident-only pre-sales gave Puerto Ricans first access ahead of mainland buyers, with standard tickets in the $200–$600 range and premium packages climbing into four figures. Plan to be in your seat well before doors close — Bad Bunny residency nights start on time and the production is built around a single uninterrupted run. The Choli is accessible from Tren Urbano at the Hato Rey station and from most San Juan and Condado hotels via rideshare.
Miami
Miami is the mainland US home market — the highest-density Bad Bunny audience outside of Puerto Rico, with a Cuban, Puerto Rican, Dominican, Venezuelan, and Colombian fan base that turns every date into a hometown show. Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens and Kaseya Center downtown have both hosted multi-night runs across the World's Hottest Tour and subsequent cycles. Multi-night Miami stops are standard whenever the routing allows, and floor tickets disappear inside the on-sale window. Pre-sales through Conejos Malos and Ticketmaster Verified Fan run 24–72 hours ahead of the public window. Hard Rock Stadium is reachable via Tri-Rail shuttle from the Hollywood and Opa-locka stations on event nights; Kaseya Center sits at Metromover Freedom Tower.
Los Angeles
Los Angeles is Bad Bunny's biggest West Coast market and one of the largest single-city Latino audiences in the United States. SoFi Stadium in Inglewood hosted multiple sold-out nights on the World's Hottest Tour and stadium-tier production scales fully here; Crypto.com Arena downtown has handled arena-tier runs. LA shows draw heavy industry attendance and the secondary market clears within minutes of on-sale through Ticketmaster Verified Fan. The Conejos Malos fan club pre-sale typically opens 48–72 hours ahead of the public window for LA dates. SoFi is reachable via Metro K Line to Downtown Inglewood plus a shuttle on event nights; Crypto.com Arena sits at the 7th Street/Metro Center station on the A, B, D, and E lines.
New York
New York sees Bad Bunny at Yankee Stadium and MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford for stadium runs, with Madison Square Garden handling arena-tier nights when scheduling allows. The New York Puerto Rican audience is the largest in the mainland US — every NYC-area date functions as a homecoming, and the on-sale window for MetLife and Yankee Stadium dates clears the lower bowl inside minutes. Yankee Stadium is direct on the 4 train and Metro-North Harlem Line; MetLife is NJ Transit from Penn Station via Secaucus on game-day rail; MSG sits on top of Penn Station. Pre-sales run through Ticketmaster Verified Fan and Conejos Malos. Plan transit ahead of time — post-show egress at MetLife and Yankee can run an hour-plus on stadium nights.
Toronto
Toronto has hosted Bad Bunny at Rogers Centre for stadium dates and Scotiabank Arena for arena-tier nights, with multiple sold-out runs on the World's Hottest Tour and Most Wanted cycles. Toronto is a mandatory stop on any North American leg — the Greater Toronto Latino audience pulls hard on the secondary market and tickets clear almost immediately after on-sale through Ticketmaster Verified Fan and the Conejos Malos pre-sale 24–72 hours earlier. Rogers Centre is a five-minute walk from Union Station on the TTC and GO Transit; Scotiabank Arena sits directly above Union. Plan to be in your seat well before doors close — there's typically no opener on Bad Bunny stadium dates and the show starts on time.
Vancouver
Vancouver gets Bad Bunny at BC Place for stadium-tier dates and Rogers Arena downtown for arena nights when the routing allows. Vancouver is typically the only Western Canada stop on a North American leg, which compresses the on-sale demand from across British Columbia, Alberta, and the Pacific Northwest. The Conejos Malos fan club pre-sale and Ticketmaster Verified Fan open 24–48 hours before the public window. BC Place sits at the Stadium-Chinatown SkyTrain station; Rogers Arena is right next door, accessible from the same station. If a Vancouver date is announced, book hotel inside the on-sale window — downtown rates spike fast for stadium-scale nights and the post-show transit window is narrow on SkyTrain's standard schedule.
Montreal
Montreal hosts Bad Bunny at Bell Centre downtown for arena-tier nights and Stade Olympique for stadium-scale dates when the routing scales up. Montreal's francophone-and-Latino dual audience reliably sells out the on-sale window and the secondary market clears fast given that the city is the only Quebec stop on most tours. Bell Centre sits directly above Lucien-L'Allier station on the Orange Line of the Montreal Metro; Stade Olympique is at Pie-IX or Viau on the Green Line. Pre-sales through Conejos Malos and Ticketmaster Verified Fan run 24–72 hours before the public window. Plan transit ahead — the post-show egress at Bell Centre is well-managed but Stade Olympique nights run longer to clear.
Mexico City
Mexico City is one of the single largest markets for Bad Bunny anywhere on the planet. Estadio Azteca and Foro Sol have hosted multi-night runs on the World's Hottest Tour and subsequent stadium cycles, with combined attendance across the Mexico City dates routinely topping every other Latin American stop. The CDMX on-sale clears the lower bowl in single-digit minutes via Ticketmaster Mexico, and the Conejos Malos pre-sale runs 24–72 hours earlier. Foro Sol is reachable via Metro Ciudad Deportiva on Line 9; Estadio Azteca is at Estadio Azteca on the Tren Ligero from Tasqueña on Line 2. Plan transit ahead and add buffer for post-show egress — CDMX stadium nights can take 90 minutes or more to clear on transit and rideshare.








