Bad Bunny — the Puerto Rican artist born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio — turned North London into a vast open-air party this weekend, playing the first of two sold-out nights at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on June 27, with a second show on June 28.
A first for Latin music in Britain
The shows are billed as Bad Bunny's first-ever UK stadium dates, making him the first Latin artist to sell out a major British stadium and, by the reckoning of promoters and industry figures, the largest Spanish-language music events ever held in the country, Music Week reported. For a genre long treated as niche by Britain's mainstream concert industry, an entirely Spanish-language set filling a 60,000-capacity stadium marks a clear shift.
"For young British Latinos growing up in the UK, seeing an artist perform in Spanish before tens of thousands of people can be transformative," said Amaranta Wright of LatinoLife, quoted by Music Week.
The show
The production leaned hard into Puerto Rican identity. The centerpiece was La Casita, a full-scale replica of a traditional Puerto Rican home built onto the stage, as Time Out London described. Bad Bunny worked through a long set drawing on years of hits — among them Tití me preguntó, Me porto bonito, Safaera and Yonaguni — alongside material from his latest album. The Puerto Rican band Chuwi opened the shows.
A record-breaking run
The London dates cap an extraordinary stretch for the 31-year-old. His sixth album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos, released in January 2025, became the first all-Spanish-language album to win Album of the Year at the Grammy Awards — a landmark in the award's history — and went on to amass billions of streams. He has ranked as Spotify's most-streamed artist globally for several years running, and earlier in 2026 became the first Latino solo act to headline the Super Bowl halftime show. The current world tour also included a lengthy residency in Puerto Rico that drew hundreds of thousands of fans to the island.
Latin music's global moment
The Tottenham nights sit within a broader arc in which reggaeton and Latin urban music have pushed into markets once dominated by English-language acts. Bad Bunny's European run included a record-setting stretch of shows in Madrid, and he has become one of the highest-grossing touring artists in the world while performing almost entirely in Spanish. For the tens of thousands who packed into North London — many of them British Latinos — the weekend was evidence that Spanish-language pop has not just crossed over, but arrived as a headline act in its own right.



