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Bad Bunny in Europe 2026: His First Stadium Tour Here in Seven Years

24/05/2026

The album that won the Grammy for ‘Album of the Year’ in an all-Spanish sweep is now coming to European stadiums, with dates ranging from Barcelona to Brussels, and the excitement surrounding the tour is like nothing ever seen before in Europe and the UK. When Bad Bunny last performed in Europe, in 2019, he was still considered a rising star in Latin trap with only two albums to his name.

Fast forward to 2026, this same artist returns to European stadiums not just as a Grammy winner, but as the most-streamed artist on Spotify for an unprecedented three consecutive years, the headliner of Super Bowl LX, and the creator of ‘Debí Tirar Más Fotos,’ the album that has now become the first all-Spanish-language record to win Album of the Year at the Grammys.

Surprisingly, the gap between those two visits is just seven years. We’ve seen acts take longer than that to make a comeback that will shock the world. However, here’s Bad Bunny making history repeatedly over the years. For the Latin diaspora communities across the UK and Europe, especially those who were riddled with watching Bad Bunny’s rise even without ever seeing it live, this summer is the one that counts.

The ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS World Tour’ began in Santo Domingo in November 2025. It swept through Latin America and Australia before getting to Europe in May 2026. With a few days in already, the extraordinary demand generated on announcement remains sustained despite over 2.6 million tickets sold in the first week. This remains a major record for any Latin artist – and it also forced the tour to be expanded from 23 dates to 57, with Madrid alone reaching ten nights at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano.


The ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS World Tour’ At A Glance

  • Approximately 57 shows worldwide
  • Over 2.6 million tickets sold in week one
  • Close to a decade since the previous visit to Europe
  • 10 Madrid nights at the Riyadh Air Metropolitano

The Album: What "I Should Have Taken More Photos" Actually Means

The title – ‘Debí Tirar Más Fotos,’ translating literally to ‘I should Have Taken More Photos,’ carries more weight than nostalgia. The album is Bad Bunny’s politically and culturally charged work that was released on the 5th of January 2025. In all 17 tracks, Bad Bunny tries to document the real struggle in Puerto Rico.

The nation struggles with gentrification and cultural erasure through music that’s drawn from the island’s own traditions: Bomba, Salsa, Plena, Jibaro, alongside his familiar Latin trap and Reggaeton.


What Critics Say

The record was described by Time magazine as an album that stands out as his most culturally genuine, creatively daring, and deeply introspective work that offers an intimate exploration of his identity and personal self-awareness. The album debuted at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 before reaching No.1, making it the first all-Spanish album to achieve that in the streaming era, and later the first to win ‘Album of the Year’ at the Grammys.

 

Track 14, ‘Lo Que Le Pasó a Hawaii,’ addresses Puerto Rico’s displacement crisis directly: gentrification pushing out working-class communities in favour of short-term rentals and wealthy migrants from the mainland.

The album is deeply musical and not polemic – shot through with love and humour, but its politics are present throughout, and they resonate powerfully with the Latin diaspora communities in London, Paris, Madrid, and beyond who face their own versions of the same pressures.

This is the album that this tour is bringing to Europe. Not a commercial showcase, but a cultural statement, performed in Spanish, in European stadiums, for audiences who understand exactly what it means.


The European Dates

The European leg of the ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS World Tour’ runs from 22nd May 2026 through 22nd July of the same year – passing through ten countries and eleven cities. Several dates have already passed at the time of writing; the remaining opportunities are outlined below.


Date(s)

City

Venue

Resale Starting Price

Status

May 30–Jun 15

Madrid, ES

Riyadh Air Metropolitano

€71–€130+

Live — later dates

Jun 20–21

Düsseldorf, DE

Merkur Spiel-Arena

€97–€135+

Upcoming

Jun 23–24

Arnhem, NL

GelreDome

€103–€117+

Upcoming

Jun 27–28

London, UK

Tottenham Hotspur Stadium

€96–€133+

Upcoming

Jul 1

Marseille, FR

Orange Vélodrome

111+

Upcoming

Jul 4–5

Paris, FR

La Défense Arena

€189–€206+

Upcoming

Jul 10–11

Stockholm, SE

Strawberry Arena

€110–€207+

Upcoming

Jul 14

Warsaw, PL

PGE Narodowy

€148+

Upcoming

Jul 17–18

Milan, IT

Ippodromo Snai La Maura

€173–€286+

Upcoming

Jul 22

Brussels, BE

King Baudouin Stadium

€115+

Final show


Key Takeaways:

  • Madrid offers the most accessible entry with tickets starting from €71.
  • London’s Tottenham Hotspur Stadium dates are currently the UK’s only opportunity, with tickets listed for as low as €95
  • Paris currently carries the highest starting prices, reflecting both demand and venue prestige at La Défense Arena.

Price Note: Ticket prices are correct as of 24th May 2026 but may vary significantly by city and date. Find Bad Bunny tickets for the remaining European dates – London, Paris, Madrid, Milan and more here. Acting fast is essential.


The Show: What Fans Can Expect

The ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS World Tour’ has been described as a production that’s designed around the album’s thematic world, based on reviews from both Latin America and Puerto Rico legs.

It makes emotional visual references to Puerto Rican Street life, archival imagery of the island, and a setlist that moves through the full ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS’ record alongside a back catalogue spanning from ‘Safaera’ and ‘Dakiti’ through to ‘La Canción’ and ‘Tití Me Preguntó.’

The production is not a maximalist spectacle in the style of, say, The Weeknd’s ‘After Hours til Dawn’ staging – it is grounded, communal, and warm, designed to feel like a celebration of culture rather than a visual assault.

Shows run approximately 2 to 2/1 hours with no confirmed support acts for the European dates. The doors typically open within 90 minutes before the listed start time, so always check your specific ticket for local timings.


For UK Fans: The London Dates

Bad Bunny will be playing the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on the 27th and 28th of June 2026 – making these the only UK dates on the entire tour. The stadium has a concert capacity of 62k people, establishing it as one of London’s best large concert venues with strong sightlines and acoustics built into its design. This is a genuinely rare event, especially for UK-based fans of Latin music. Bad Bunny has not performed a full headline show in England since 2019.

Resale tickets for both London nights are available from approximately €95 for entry-level and rising to €133 and above for floor and early entry categories. The premium tickets cost more but are equally worth exploring because they come with advantages that regular tickets don’t offer.


Conclusion: A Note On The Broader Summer

Bad Bunny’s European leg sits inside one of the most concentrated stadium seasons in recent memory. If you are planning a summer that’s full of live music, it is worth knowing that several other major tours are active across the same months – including that of The Weeknd’s ‘After Hours til Dawn Tour’ and Bruno Mars’ ‘The Romantic World Tour.’ Both are extensively documented on Locotickets, the leading secondary ticket marketplace in Europe. As it stands, June and July 2026 are among the busiest weeks London has ever had for large-scale live music. Best take advantage of it before time elapses.

Bad Bunny ‘DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS World Tour’ – Find remaining European tickets across all cities here.


Note: Ticket prices reflect current data as sourced from Seatsnet on the 24th of May 2026. Prices may fluctuate continuously; always verify before purchasing. You can also follow Bad Bunny on Instagram: @badbunnypr for more updates about his current career tour.

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