One of the biggest live-music spectacles on the planet is in full swing, and this month it belongs to Europe. Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos World Tour — an all-stadium juggernaut — is rolling across the continent through June, underlining the Puerto Rican superstar’s standing as a global box-office force.

The scale of the tour

This is no ordinary run. The all-stadium tour began on November 21, 2025, and will conclude July 22, 2026, at the King Baudouin Stadium in Brussels. Surging demand pushed the show count to nearly 45 dates across 11 countries, with two-night runs in Barcelona, London, Paris, Stockholm and Milan. Stadiums, not arenas — the clearest measure of an artist operating at the very top of the industry.

June’s European blitz

The June calendar is relentless. The headline is a remarkable 10-show residency in Madrid, with dates on June 7, 10, 11, 14 and 15 among them, followed by Düsseldorf (June 20-21), Arnhem in the Netherlands (June 23-24) and London (June 27-28). A multi-night residency in a single city is a flex few artists can pull off — it signals demand deep enough to fill a stadium again and again.

Why it matters

Bad Bunny’s run is a marker of how global the pop mainstream has become. A Spanish-language artist headlining stadiums across Europe — and selling them out repeatedly — would have been unthinkable a decade ago. It reflects both his singular appeal and the borderless, streaming-driven nature of today’s music economy.

The live-music boom

The tour also rides a broader wave. After lean pandemic years, the live-music business is booming, with stadium tours from the genre’s biggest names driving record demand. For host cities, a Bad Bunny residency is an economic event — hotels, restaurants and local economies all feel the lift of tens of thousands of fans pouring in night after night.

The bottom line

With a 10-night Madrid stand and stadiums full across Europe, Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos tour is one of 2026’s defining live-music stories. As it barrels toward its July finale in Brussels, it is a reminder that the concert business is thriving — and that its biggest draws are now truly global.

Photo: i eated a cookie / BY via flickr