The Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour is the seventh concert tour by the Colombian singer-songwriter Shakira, in support of her twelfth studio album, Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran (2024). The stadium tour commenced on 11 February 2025 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and is currently scheduled to conclude on 27 February 2026 in Mexico City, Mexico. It is her first tour in seven years after her El Dorado World Tour (2018). As of October 2025, it has earned US$327.4 million within its first 64 concerts, becoming the highest-grossing Latin tour ever by a woman ever, as well as the second highest-grossing Latin tour ever.
| Tour by Shakira | |
Promotional image | |
| Location |
|
|---|---|
| Associated album | Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran |
| Start date | 11 February 2025 |
| End date | 27 February 2026 |
| No. of shows | 90 |
| Supporting acts |
|
| Producer | Live Nation |
| Attendance | 2.5 million |
| Box office | US$327.4 million |
| Website | shakira |
| Shakira concert chronology | |
Background and development
Following her halftime performance at Super Bowl LIV, Live Nation announced Shakira would tour in 2021. Further news was delayed, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In September 2023, Shakira told Billboard she planned to release new music and embark on a "global tour" in the following year. She told the publication: "Putting a tour together is fun, but it's a great effort and you have to put everything on the balance and decide what the fans really want to hear, what songs you want to hear and how much production you want. In the end, the more production you have, the higher the ticket price. I want the tickets to be affordable. But to me, the most important thing is the repertoire. That's why I think [my next tour] will be the tour of a lifetime, because I have so many songs."
Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran Tour was officially announced by Shakira during her appearance as a special guest during Bizarrap's set at Coachella on 13 April 2024. Three days later, Live Nation announced concerts in North America starting that November, with additional concerts added due to demand in Palm Springs, Miami and New York City, respectively. In October 2024, Shakira's official website revealed concerts in the Latin America region; additional concerts were subsequently added in several cities eight days later.
Shakira announced plans to postpone the North American concerts, due to the "overwhelming demand", as well as the "need for larger venues". Following her announcement, the upgraded concerts and venues were announced for May and June 2025 by Live Nation. Additional concerts in Atlanta, Houston and Phoenix were announced on 10 December 2024. On 5 February 2025, it was announced Shakira would headline the Sueños Music Festival. Later that month, it was announced Brazilian DJ Dennis would serve as a supporting act for the tour's opening night. Billboard reported that "an exclusive and unique performance" from the 20 February concert will be featured as part of the Lo Nuestro Awards on Univision. On 14 February, a concert in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, was announced; the concert was postponed due to operational issues, and later rescheduled. On 16 February, Shakira cancelled her concert in Lima, Peru, for that same day, due to hospitalization; a rescheduled date was announced the following day, with a third concert added.
On 25 February 2025 Chilean singer Antonella Sigala was announced as the supporting act for the shows in Santiago; the concerts were postponed the evening of the first show. Natalie Pérez served as the supporting act for the 7 and 8 March 2025 concerts in Buenos Aires. Throughout March 2025, additional concerts across various cities in Mexico were announced, for a record total of 22 concerts in that country. In April 2025, additional concerts in East Rutherford and Miami were announced, as well as four additional concerts in Mexico. Puerto Rican singer and songwriter Gale announced she would serve as a supporting act for the 12 and 13 April concerts in Medellín. Wyclef Jean was announced as supporting act for shows in Charlotte (13 May 2025) and Boston (29 May 2025), respectively. On 18 April, Live Nation announced Pitbull as the supporting act for her second show at MetLife Stadium on 16 May.[better source needed]
On 29 May 2025, hours before the Boston show, the concert was cancelled due to "unforeseen circumstances". According to reports, Will.i.am was set to make an appearance during the concert. Subsequently, Shakira's performance at WorldPride in Washington, D.C. was cancelled. On 13 June 2025, the San Antonio show was cancelled less than one hour prior to its start, with the venue citing "ongoing issues". In a statement from Live Nation, the event was postponed due to "structural issues"; the show was later rescheduled for 5 July. That same day, it was announced the 20 June concert in Inglewood, California, had been postponed, following the Los Angeles protests. On 19 June, two additional shows in Mexico were announced. The following day, two additional concerts were announced in California—one in Fresno and an additional date in Inglewood; Black Eyed Peas served as support act for the concerts in Inglewood. In July 2025, fifteen concerts in Latin America were announced. The following month, the 26 September concert was cancelled, due to "circumstances beyond [their] control".
Pitbull and Gale also returned as support acts for select concerts in August and September 2025, respectively. In September, a third concert in Buenos Aires was announced. In November and December, concerts in Córdoba, Argentina; El Salvador; and Mexico were also announced. In December 2025, Meri Deal, Ángela Torres, and Tizishi were the supporting acts for the concerts held in Uruguay, Buenos Aires, and Cordoba, respectively.
Production
Rehearsals for the tour started around mid-August 2024, with Shakira announcing them with a series of pictures through her social networks. On another teaser from Shakira through Instagram, aimed at Latin America, the singer performs at Electric Air Studios a new arrangement for her 1997 single "Antología," accompanied by her longtime collaborator, Luis Fernando Ochoa. In late October, Shakira posted, also through her Instagram account, another teaser video, this time aimed at North America, singing at the same aforementioned studio her 1996 hit single "Pies Descalzos, Sueños Blancos." During an interview for Brazilian website GShow, Shakira revealed the latter song, plus other signature hits of hers, such as "Estoy Aquí" and "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)", would be included to the set list, with the tour being described by herself as "the biggest show of [her] career, the most comprehensible one," whose rehearsals include a daily 12-14 hour full schedule of preparations along with her crew, to perform "these most, most relevant concerts of [her] musical lifetime." Later on, she also revealed the members for her band, most of them already longtime collaborators of her, such as musical director and guitarist Tim Mitchell, drummer Brendan Buckley and piano and keyboard player Albert Menéndez, with also the addition of bass player Donald Alford II.
In an interview for GQ España, Shakira has described the current process of her tour: "It's the most ambitious tour of my entire career, the biggest production I've had so far. Not because the public asks for it, but because I deserve it after so many years working in this world. I deserve the tour of my life. I'm throwing the house out the window. I am happy because I will be able to take a tour of the different stages of my artistic life, until today. It will be the longest show I’ve ever done with the biggest screen and everything you can imagine. More is more and better!"
On 21 January 2025, Shakira moved from the USA to Mexico to finish her last rehearsals before tour properly kicks off in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Shakira was actively involved in the production, ensuring that every element reflected her "vision". 45 people worked on the Blink-produced visuals, which included a realistic projection of the singer that was made by Los Angeles-based creative studio Actual Objects. Artist Isabella Mebarak claimed that a likeness analysis of the singer was conducted to resemble her features. The "first of its kind" CGI animated version of Shakira is shown during the interludes. Artificial intelligence was also used during the process to produce the on-screen interlude visuals.
The tour features an "elaborate production", including 160’ screens and a diverse set of props, such as a pole attached to a giant "S" used during the "Soltera" performance. This set element was constructed by specialty fabricators ShowFab. According to Chilean media outlet Culto, the cost of producing each concert is estimated to be more than US$3 million. Preparations lasted about 10 months. Attire and accessories were mostly custom-made by fashion houses and designers, such as Indian Anamika Khanna and Atelier Versace. Shakira worked with company Yellow Studio to design "a stage that evolves along with the show". The stage includes hydraulic platforms and a 25-meter ramp. The creative direction for the stage was handled by the Squared Division.
Critical reception
Olivia Petty of The San Diego Union-Tribune praised Shakira's performance and versatility, but criticized the on-screen visuals: "The apparently AI-generated visuals that filled the transitions between some songs left much to be desired, feeling out of place and generally unappealing to the eye."
Ticket sales
In North America, during the pre-sale period of Shakira's North American arena leg, the tickets of most of the shows were sold out. The tickets vary widely in prices, between circa $200 and $2000 (excluding VIP or other add-on tickets), depending on the cities. Due to overwhelming demand, Shakira added extra shows in Palm Springs, Miami and New York City. Meanwhile, her shows in Phoenix, Inglewood, San Antonio, Dallas, Charlotte, Washington DC, and Chicago were mostly sold out. In Miami, she was supposed to extend the record of being the female artist to perform most shows in Kaseya Center, 11 in total. However, the whole leg was moved to May 2025 due to Live Nation's decision to upgrade the several North American shows to stadiums.
In Argentina, Peru and Chile, she broke the record by selling all the tickets in 40 minutes. With multiple shows completely sold out, new dates were promptly added to several cities. In Colombia, the second stadium date in Bogotá was sold out in 1.5 hours. In Barranquilla, Shakira moved the first show date from February 21 to 20 because it clashed with La Guacherna. However, the first date was quickly sold out due to high demand, which prompted the city's mayor, Alex Char, to announce that the carnival celebration would be moved to February 22, so a second date could be scheduled. In total, two million fans registered for the ticket notification. The singer promised she will bring the tour to most of the Latin American countries due to the overwhelming demand.
In Mexico City, she is the first female artist to perform seven sold-out shows at Estadio GNP Seguros, breaking the record previously held by Taylor Swift with four. She is also the first artist to ever perform seven shows of the same tour at the venue, breaking the record previously held by RBD with six. The stadium is named as "Shakira stadium" on Google Maps, honoring her record-breaking achievement.[unreliable source?] In an article, Billboard claimed the seven shows in Mexico City would gather crowds of "about 455,000 people in total". Ticketmaster Mexico reported that 2.5 million people visited its website to search for tickets to Shakira’s concerts since the tour was announced in the country last October.
Commercial performance
Box office
Live Nation reported that in less than two hours of sale in Latin America, 950,000 tickets were sold across 18 stadiums, which broke the all-time record for ticket sales among female artists. With more than 30 shows ahead, Live Nation revealed in 17 March 2025 that more than two million tickets have already been sold. In March 2025, Billboard reported that $32.9 million were made from the first six shows, which had sold over 282,000 tickets. The outlet also projected the tour to finish with over $200 million in total grosses with shows announced as of 27 March 2025. In May 2025, Billboard published their midyear report, covering concerts, including her first seven nights at Estadio GNP Seguros that March.
Additional reports in May were made, as well as in the months of June, July, and September 2025. In October 2025, Billboard reported the tour had earned US$327.4 million and an attendance of 2.5 million within its first 64 concerts. making it the highest-grossing Latin tour ever by a woman ever, as well as the second highest-grossing Latin tour ever. In their year-end report for 2025, Billboard recognized the tour as the fifth-best tour of the year. Similarly, Pollstar named the tour as the fifth-most lucrative tour of 2025, with an average gross of US$5 million based on 64 reported shows.
Venue records
| Dates | Venue | Country | Description | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 February 2025 | Estádio Olímpico Nilton Santos | Brazil | First Spanish speaking act to perform a solo show on a single tour. | |
| 13 February 2025 | Estádio do Morumbi | The first Spanish speaking act to ever perform in the stadium | ||
| The first Spanish speaking act to perform in the stadium with two different tours | ||||
| Biggest day attendance in 21st century by a solo female artist (65,922) | ||||
| Highest-grossing boxscore report for one single night in the stadium's history as a female artist. | ||||
| 17 February, 15–16, 18 November 2025 | Estadio Nacional | Peru | First female act to perform more than two solo shows on a single tour. | |
| Fastest ticket sales ever in Peru as a female artist (40 minutes). | ||||
| 20–21 February 2025 | Estadio Metropolitano Roberto Meléndez | Colombia | First female act to perform two shows on a single tour. | |
| Most career shows by a solo act (five concerts throughout her career). | ||||
| Biggest two-day attendance by a solo female artist (97,873) | ||||
| Highest-grossing boxscore report in the stadium's history. | ||||
| 24 February 2025 | Estadio Atanasio Girardot | Most career shows by a female solo act (three concerts throughout her career). | ||
| 26–27 February 2025 | Estadio El Campín | Most career shows by a solo act (eight concerts throughout her career). | ||
| Biggest two-day attendance as a female artist (82,897) | ||||
| Highest-grossing boxscore report in the stadium's history. | ||||
| 2-3 March 2025 | Estadio Nacional Julio Martínez Prádanos | Chile | Fastest ticket sales ever in Chile as a female artist (40 minutes). | |
| Most career shows by a solo act (seven concerts throughout her career). | ||||
| 7–8 March 2025 | Campo Argentino de Polo | Argentina | Fastest ticket sales ever in Argentina as a female artist (40 minutes). | |
| Most career shows by a solo act (three concerts throughout her career). | ||||
| 12–13 March 2025 | Estadio BBVA | Mexico | First female act to perform in the stadium; first female act to perform two shows on a single tour. | [original research?] |
| Most career shows by a female solo act (two concerts throughout her career). | ||||
| 16–17 March 2025 | Estadio Akron | First female act to perform two shows on a single tour. | ||
| Most career shows by a solo act (two concerts throughout her career). | ||||
| 19, 21, 23, 25, 27–28, 30 March, 26–27, 29–30 August, 18 September 2025; 27 February 2026 | Estadio GNP Seguros | First female act to perform five to twelve shows on a single tour. | ||
| Most career shows by a solo act (seventeen concerts throughout her career). | ||||
| First female tour with more than ten stadium shows in a single city. | ||||
| 13 May 2025 | Bank of America Stadium | United States | First Latin act to headline a concert. | |
| First Latin female act to perform a show in the venue. | ||||
| 20 May 2025 | Fenway Park | First Latin female act to headline a concert. | ||
| 11 June 2025 | Globe Life Field | First Latin female act to headline a concert. | ||
| 26 June 2025 | Snapdragon Stadium | First Latin act to headline a concert. | ||
| 30 June 2025 | Oracle Park | |||
| 7 August 2025 | Valley Children’s Stadium | First musician to ever hold a concert at the stadium. |
Impact
Economy, commerce and local business
In January 2025, LATAM Airlines Group's Brazilian branding announced an additional flight on 12 February of the same year, from Confins Airport to Guarulhos Airport ahead of Shakira's concert the following day, to accommodate the increase in passenger demand. That same month, their Colombian branding added eight additional flights to Barranquilla, from Bogotá and Medellín, to meet the demand for Shakira’s concert and the carnival in her hometown. In a press release, Brazilian travel agency Decolar reported a 67% increase in demand for flights to Rio de Janeiro and a 24% increase in demand for flights to São Paulo during the period of the singer's shows in those cities in relation to the same periods in 2024.
In Mexico, the tour also set a historic precedent by boosting tourism and generating millions in economic revenue across the three major cities of the country. According to data from Ticketmaster, between 30% and 40% of attendees at Shakira’s concerts in Mexico travel from another state in the country to one of the three cities hosting the shows, as well as international travelers from the United States, El Salvador, Colombia, and Peru. In Monterrey, the hotel demand was increased by 66%. In Guadalajara, the two shows led to double hotel occupancy, with approximately 40,000 rooms booked per night. This generated around 80 million pesos (about $4 million) in direct hotel revenue and contributed an estimated 900 million pesos (around $44.4 million) in total tourism revenue. The seven sold-out shows at Estadio GNP Seguros are projected to have an economic impact of 5.5 billion pesos (around $275 million), according to the CDMX Secretariat of Tourism, as reported by Billboard Español.
Barranquilla's local government estimated that Shakira's shows generated Col$66.8 billion in "economic movement", of which Col$18 billion were "irrigated" by a chain of transactions of local businesses in the city. The Oxford Economics study took into account the subsequent purchases of products and services derived from tourism activities such as hotels, gastronomy, transportation, commerce and services. According to Forbes Colombia, the singer's shows in the country generated an economic impact of approximately Col$206 billion ($US49,6 million).
According to Billboard, the first seven sold out shows in Mexico City generated around 20,000 jobs in logistics, security, transportation, and production, benefiting workers across various sectors such as hospitality, restaurants, and airlines, as well as street vendors and small businesses near the venues. In July 2025, Shakira pledged to donate a portion of the proceeds from her 5 July concert in San Antonio to Hill Country disaster relief fund following the floods in Central Texas.
Honors
- After finishing off her two sold out shows in Barranquilla, the mayor of the city Alejandro Char decided to honor Shakira by changing one of the main roads in the city, Avenida 72 to Avenida Shakira. According to the mayor, this initiative seeks to honor the artist's career and highlight her impact on the culture and international recognition of Barranquilla.
Controversy
Cancellations and postponements
Several media outlets noted the high number of cancelled and postponed shows during the North American and Latin American legs of the tour, citing "production and logistic issues". The last-minute suspensions of shows in Medellín and Santiago, as well as cancellations in Boston and Washington, D.C., stirred controversy and speculation. In response to the cancellation in Washington, D.C., which was to be part of WorldPride, Mayor Muriel Bowser shared a public message to the singer, telling her to "get yourself here". Following the postponement of the 13 June concert in San Antonio, fans cited their frustration with the lack of communication regarding the cancellation, which happened less than one-hour prior to show time.
Following the postponement of the 20 June concert in Inglewood, California, due to the June 2025 Los Angeles protests, fans spoke out against the continued lack of communication from the singer. Preceding the cancellation of the 26 September show in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, which was originally rescheduled from 2 April, fans expressed concern about the lack of information as advertising for the event had been withdrawn from the media and public spaces in the prior weeks.
Animal abuse by Barranquilla City Council
Several Colombian animal rights advocates denounced that more than 100 stray cats that used to live in the surroundings of Estadio Metropolitano Roberto Meléndez were allegedly killed by the Alejandro Char administration days prior Shakira's concerts at the venue, in an effort to "embellish" the city for tourists.
Set list
This set list is from the 11 February 2025 concert in Rio de Janeiro.
- Intro (Caloris)[dubious – discuss]
- "La Fuerte"
- "Girl Like Me"
- "Las de la Intuición"
- "Estoy Aquí"
- "Empire"
- "Inevitable"
- "Te Felicito"
- "TQG"
- "Don't Bother"
- "Acróstico"
- "Copa Vacía"
- "La Bicicleta"
- "La Tortura"
- "Hips Don't Lie"
- "Chantaje"
- "Monotonía"
- "Addicted to You"
- "Loca"
- "Soltera"
- "Cómo Dónde y Cuándo"
- "Última" / "Ojos Así"
- "Pies Descalzos, Sueños Blancos"
- "Mama África" (Chico César cover)
- "Antología"
- "Poem to a Horse"
- "Objection (Tango)"
- "Whenever, Wherever"
- "Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)"
- "She Wolf"
- "Shakira: Bzrp Music Sessions, Vol. 53"
Alterations
- During the 20 February 2025 concert in Barranquilla, Shakira performed "Te Olvidé" with Chelito de Castro, and special guest Tatiana Angulo Fernández. She also performed a mashup of "Chantaje" and "En Barranquilla me quedo".
- During the 19 March 2025 concert in Mexico Cty, Shakira performed "Ciega, Sordomuda" and "El Jefe".
- During the 25 March 2025 concert in Mexico City, Shakira performed "Ciega, Sordomuda" and "El Jefe", and performed "(Entre Paréntesis)" with Grupo Frontera.
- During the 12 April 2025 concert in Medellin, Shakira performed "Chantaje" with Maluma.
- Beginning with the 13 May 2025 concert in Charlotte, "Underneath Your Clothes" was added to the set list; additionally, Shakira performed "La Tortura" with Alejandro Sanz, and "Hips Don't Lie" with Wyclef Jean, respectively.
- During the 15 May 2025 concert in East Rutherford, Shakira performed "Monotonía" with Ozuna.
- During the 16 May 2025 concert in East Rutherford, Shakira performed "Te Felicito" with Rauw Alejandro.
- During the 20 May 2025 concert in Montreal, Shakira performed "Je l'aime à mourir" by Francis Cabrel.
- During the 6 June 2025 concert in Miami Gardens, Shakira performed "La Tortura" with Sanz, "Monotonía" with Ozuna, and "Copa Vacía" with Manuel Turizo.
- During the 22 June 2025 concert in Phoenix, "Si Te Vas" was performed.
- During the 4 August 2025 concert in Inglewood, "Men in This Town" was performed.
- During the 26 August and 18 September 2025 concerts in Mexico City, Shakira performed "Soltera" with Danna.
- During the 30 August 2025 concert in Mexico City, Shakira performed "Día de Enero" with Belinda.
- During the 25 October 2025 concert in Cali, Shakira performed "Sin Sentimiento" with Grupo Niche.
- During the 1 November 2025 concert in Bogotá, "La Pared" was performed with the Bogotá Philharmonic Orchestra.[better source needed]
- During the 15, 16 and 18 November 2025 concerts in Lima, "La Pared" was performed with the Lima Philharmonic Orchestra.
- During the 8 December 2025 concert in Buenos Aires, "Día Especial" was performed in tribute to Gustavo Cerati, which featured an AI-generated video of Cerati.
Tour dates
| Date (2025) | City | Country | Venue | Supporting act | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11 February | Rio de Janeiro | Brazil | Estádio Olímpico Nilton Santos | Dennis | 35,180 / 35,180 | $2,896,941 |
| 13 February | São Paulo | Estádio do Morumbi | — | 65,922 / 65,922 | $6,444,211 | |
| 17 February | Lima | Peru | Estadio Nacional | 47,674 / 47,674 | $6,626,028 | |
| 20 February | Barranquilla | Colombia | Estadio Metropolitano Roberto Meléndez | 97,873 / 97,873 | $11,263,570 | |
| 21 February | ||||||
| 26 February | Bogotá | Estadio El Campín | 82,897 / 82,897 | $12,309,377 | ||
| 27 February | ||||||
| 7 March | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Campo Argentino de Polo | Natalie Pérez | 115,000 / 115,000 | $13,250,843 |
| 8 March | ||||||
| 12 March | Guadalupe | Mexico | Estadio BBVA | — | 88,201 / 88,201 | $12,453,145 |
| 13 March | ||||||
| 16 March | Zapopan | Estadio Akron | 70,264 / 70,264 | $11,539,806 | ||
| 17 March | ||||||
| 19 March | Mexico City | Estadio GNP Seguros | 780,000 / 780,000 | $76,018,118 | ||
| 21 March | ||||||
| 23 March | ||||||
| 25 March | ||||||
| 27 March | ||||||
| 28 March | ||||||
| 30 March | ||||||
| 4 April | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional Sports Park | Antonella Sigala | 131,985 / 131,985 | $14,237,591 |
| 5 April | ||||||
| 7 April | ||||||
| 12 April | Medellín | Colombia | Estadio Atanasio Girardot | Gale | 73,217 / 73,217 | $7,503,853 |
| 13 April | ||||||
| 13 May | Charlotte | United States | Bank of America Stadium | Wyclef Jean | 47,406 / 47,406 | $4,454,350 |
| 15 May | East Rutherford | MetLife Stadium | — | 99,876 / 99,876 | $13,798,380 | |
| 16 May | Pitbull | |||||
| 20 May | Montreal | Canada | Bell Centre | — | 13,224 / 13,224 | $2,444,413 |
| 22 May | Detroit | United States | Little Caesars Arena | 13,034 / 13,034 | $2,202,308 | |
| 24 May | Chicago | Grant Park | — | |||
| 26 May | Toronto | Canada | Scotiabank Arena | 13,458 / 13,458 | $2,888,000 | |
| 2 June | Atlanta | United States | State Farm Arena | 11,371 / 11,371 | $2,588,638 | |
| 4 June | Orlando | Camping World Stadium | 45,182 / 45,182 | $6,277,851 | ||
| 6 June | Miami Gardens | Hard Rock Stadium | 85,840 / 85,840 | $13,173,719 | ||
| 7 June | ||||||
| 11 June | Arlington | Globe Life Field | 38,534 / 38,534 | $5,138,848 | ||
| 15 June | Houston | Toyota Center | 22,101 / 22,101 | $4,629,511 | ||
| 16 June | ||||||
| 22 June | Phoenix | PHX Arena | 23,016 / 23,016 | $5,635,838 | ||
| 23 June | ||||||
| 26 June | San Diego | Snapdragon Stadium | 28,630 / 28,630 | $5,241,515 | ||
| 28 June | Paradise | Allegiant Stadium | 47,058 / 47,058 | $6,677,413 | ||
| 30 June | San Francisco | Oracle Park | 35,431 / 35,431 | $6,561,645 | ||
| 5 July | San Antonio | Alamodome | 46,350 / 46,350 | $6,573,453 | ||
| 4 August | Inglewood | SoFi Stadium | Black Eyed Peas | 92,239 / 92,239 | $10,601,486 | |
| 5 August | ||||||
| 7 August | Fresno | Valley Children's Stadium | — | 27,835 / 27,835 | $2,709,871 | |
| 11 August | Tijuana | Mexico | Estadio Caliente | 35,536 / 35,536 | $4,084,602 | |
| 14 August | Hermosillo | Estadio Héroe de Nacozari | 26,782 / 26,782 | $3,156,924 | ||
| 17 August | Chihuahua | Estadio UACH | 32,503 / 32,503 | $4,701,539 | ||
| 20 August | Torreón | Estadio Corona | Pitbull | 29,573 / 29,573 | $4,156,343 | |
| 23 August | Monterrey | Parque Fundidora | — | 29,311 / 29,311 | $4,171,658 | |
| 26 August | Mexico City | Estadio GNP Seguros | ||||
| 27 August | ||||||
| 29 August | ||||||
| 30 August | ||||||
| 2 September | Querétaro | Estadio Corregidora | 54,068 / 54,068 | $7,230,361 | ||
| 3 September | ||||||
| 6 September | Zapopan | Estadio Akron | 67,435 / 67,435 | $9,365,442 | ||
| 7 September | ||||||
| 11 September | Puebla | Estadio Cuauhtémoc | 76,727 / 76,727 | $8,057,898 | ||
| 12 September | ||||||
| 18 September | Mexico City | Estadio GNP Seguros | Gale | |||
| 24 September | Boca del Río | Estadio Luis "Pirata" Fuente | — | 29,878 / 29,878 | $4,027,195 | |
| 25 October | Cali | Colombia | Estadio Olímpico Pascual Guerrero | 77,875 / 77,875 | $7,167,325 | |
| 26 October | ||||||
| 1 November | Bogotá | Vive Claro | – | – | ||
| 8 November | Quito | Ecuador | Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa | – | – | |
| 9 November | ||||||
| 11 November | ||||||
| 15 November | Lima | Peru | Estadio Nacional | – | – | |
| 16 November | ||||||
| 18 November | ||||||
| 22 November | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional | – | – | |
| 28 November | Asunción | Paraguay | Estadio ueno La Nueva Olla | – | – | |
| 29 November | ||||||
| 3 December | Montevideo | Uruguay | Estadio Centenario | Meri Deal | – | – |
| 4 December | ||||||
| 8 December | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Jose Amalfitani Stadium | Ángela Torres | – | – |
| 9 December | ||||||
| 11 December | ||||||
| 14 December | Córdoba | Estadio Mario Alberto Kempes | TiziShi | – | – | |
| 15 December | ||||||
| Date (2026) | City | Country | Venue | Supporting act | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12 February | San Salvador | El Salvador | Estadio Mágico González | — | – | – |
| 14 February | ||||||
| 15 February | ||||||
| 21 February | Tuxtla Gutiérrez | Mexico | Estadio Víctor Manuel Reyna | – | – | |
| 24 February | Mérida | Estadio Carlos Iturralde | – | – | ||
| 27 February | Mexico City | Estadio GNP Seguros | – | – | ||
| Total | 2,738,486 / 2,738,486 (100%) | $332,259,989 | ||||
Cancelled shows
| Date | City | Country | Venue | Reason | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 November 2024 | Palm Desert | United States | Acrisure Arena | Production changes and demand to upgrade from arenas to stadiums in several markets | |
| 3 November 2024 | |||||
| 17 November 2024 | Dallas | American Airlines Center | |||
| 14 December 2024 | Chicago | United Center | |||
| 29 May 2025 | Boston | Fenway Park | Unforeseen circumstances | ||
| 31 May 2025 | Washington, D.C. | Nationals Park | Complications following the Boston cancellation | ||
| 26 September | Santo Domingo | Dominican Republic | Estadio Olímpico Félix Sánchez | Unforeseen circumstances |
See also
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