If you were thinking about taking a vacation in 2026 and you’re a Bad Bunny fan… cancel those plans. Or at least start budgeting hard. Tickets for his upcoming DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS world tour just dropped—and so did a lot of jaws when people saw the prices.
The 23-date tour will take the global superstar through Latin America and Europe, with stops in Mexico, Brazil, Spain, Italy, Sweden, Poland, and London, among others. Notably, he’s skipping the U.S. entirely this time around, and fans overseas are hyped—it’s his first return to Europe since his X 100pre tour back in 2019.
So hyped, in fact, that Ticketmaster crashed during the presale. Some people found themselves in digital queues 150,000 people deep. Yes, you read that right.
Now let’s talk price tags. While reports suggested London tickets started at £79, most fans aren’t seeing anything under £115—and they shoot all the way up to £360 for premium spots. Still, people are buying. Fast.
Sure, we all know costs have gone up—venue fees, travel, wages, everything. But a recent BBC report suggests that out of a £150 ticket, about £93.60 of that still lands in the artist’s pocket. That stings a bit, especially for someone like Bad Bunny, who’s often spoken out about injustice and inequality. It raises the question: is this price point fair to the fans who helped make him a global icon?
Artists like Yungblud are already trying to push back against skyrocketing ticket costs. He launched his own festival with tickets capped at £49.50 to keep things accessible. “I’d have 1,000 kids outside the venue who couldn’t afford to come in,” he told Music Week. “Something’s got to change.”
To be fair, Bad Bunny has made efforts before—like when he made tickets for his Puerto Rico show way more affordable, with prices starting at just $35. But for a world tour this big, fans are hoping for more of that kind of accessibility.
Because let’s be honest: music should bring people together, not price them out.
0 Comments