Bad Bunny performs historic Super Bowl halftime show celebrating Puerto Rico and Latin America
The Puerto Rican artist became the first solo Latino Spanish-language performer to headline the Super Bowl halftime show, featuring Lady Gaga, Ricky Martin, and numerous celebrity guests.
February 8, 2026
Bad Bunny delivered the Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on Sunday at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, California, becoming the first solo Latino Spanish-language artist to headline the event.
The performance drew heavily from his Grammy Award-winning album "Debà Tirar Más Fotos," which won Album of the Year at the 2026 Grammy Awards one week prior. Bad Bunny opened with "Tità Me Preguntó" before transitioning into "Yo Perreo Sola," performed entirely in Spanish throughout the show.
The stage recreated elements from his 31-show residency celebrating the album, featuring "La Casita," an ode to traditional colorful homes in Puerto Rico's Old San Juan. The set included a marketplace, barbershop, and liquor store, alongside imagery of sugarcane plantations and rooftops. Dancers performed choreography complementing the central performance.
Lady Gaga made a surprise appearance, delivering a salsa-style rendition of "Die with a Smile" wearing a blue dress referencing the Puerto Rican flag and adorned with the Flor de Maga, the territory's official national flower. Fellow Puerto Rican Ricky Martin also appeared as a guest, singing "Lo Que Pasó a Hawaii."
The performance featured numerous celebrity guests dancing on the field, including Cardi B, Jessica Alba, Karol G, Pedro Pascal, Alix Earle, and Young Miko. Venezuelan baseball player Ronald Acuña Jr. also appeared in La Casita. Hospitality mogul David Grutman was present during the show.
Bad Bunny performed additional hits including "DtMF" and referenced reggaeton pioneers such as Tego Calderón, singing a portion of "Gasolina." The performance included imagery addressing Hurricane Maria's lasting effects on Puerto Rico.
During the finale, Bad Bunny held a football inscribed with the phrase "Juntos somos América" (Together we are America). Dancers carried flags of countries throughout the Latin American region while Bad Bunny named them individually, addressing the continent as a whole rather than limiting the reference to the United States. He concluded the performance exclaiming "Seguimos aquÃ" (We are still here).
A couple featured in the halftime show performance got married for real on the field during the event. According to an NBC News reporter, the bride and groom had invited Bad Bunny to their wedding, and he in turn invited them to get married during his performance. Bad Bunny's representative confirmed the news to Variety.