
Summary
- Bad Bunny and J Balvin performed together for the first time in four years, officially ending their public dispute in front of a sold-out crowd in Mexico City
- The “Debí Tirar Más Fotos World Tour” concluded its Mexican leg with eight sold-out shows, totaling over half a million fans and featuring guests like Natanael Cano and Feid
- Following this historic finale, the tour is set to expand into Chile, Peru, Argentina, and Brazil in early 2026 before moving to international dates in Europe and Asia
In a moment that shifted the landscape of Latin music, Bad Bunny concluded his record-breaking “Debí Tirar Más Fotos World Tour” with a surprise for the ages. During his eighth and final sold-out night at Mexico City’s GNP Seguros Stadium on December 21, 2025, the Puerto Rican superstar welcomed J Balvin to the stage, publicly signaling the end of a years-long rift that had captivated the industry since 2021.
The atmosphere among the 66,000 fans reached a fever pitch as the two icons shared a long embrace, trading heartfelt apologies and mutual praise. Balvin, draped in a jacket honoring the Virgin of Guadalupe, declared, “I feel supremely proud of Benito Martínez Ocasio for what he’s doing, for what he represents, because he’s taking Latinos all over the world, because I know he is a healer, a hard worker who we always knew would become one of the biggest stars in music. The past is the past, we have matured, both you and I,” acknowledging Benito’s role as a global healer and pioneer for Latino culture. Bad Bunny mirrored the sentiment in a fan video, revealing that while they had reconciled privately weeks prior, “Thank you for those words. You know the feeling is mutual, I respect you a lot, I love you a lot, and likewise, if at any point I failed in something, I already apologized a long time ago. People don’t know, but we had a conversation several weeks ago, but we were waiting for the perfect moment to share the stage, and I’m glad it happened here in Mexico. Colombia, Mexico, Puerto Rico!”
The duo revisited their joint legacy, performing the chart-topping anthem “La Canción” alongside other Oasis-era hits like “Qué Pretendes” and “I Like It.” This reconciliation was the crown jewel of an eight-night residency that saw over 520,000 attendees, officially cementing Bad Bunny as the third-most successful act in the stadium’s history. As the tour prepares to head to South America, Europe, and Asia in 2026, the image of the two titans standing together represents a unified front for the future of reggaeton.