All the U.S. Tours From Latin Artists Announced for 2026 (Updated)

A running list of U.S. tours by Latin artists for 2026, with context on 2025’s touring highs and the visa-related hurdles that reshaped routing. Includes confirmed dates for artists such as Juanes, Rosalía, Omar Courtz, Ricardo Montaner and others.

Updated May 6, 2026. This running list tracks U.S. dates announced by Latin artists so far for 2026. It is selective only in the sense that it includes confirmed U.S. shows; tours are removed once they conclude. Below I try to give some context about what last year meant for touring and why these 2026 routings matter.

2025 felt like the year Latin touring crossed another threshold. Shakira’s Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour — produced by Live Nation — became not just a commercial behemoth but a benchmark: Billboard Boxscore credits the first 64 of 82 dates with $327.4 million and 2.5 million tickets sold, making it the highest grossing Latin tour by a woman and the second-highest Latin tour overall. At the other end of the creative spectrum, Rauw Alejandro’s Broadway-tinged Cosa Nuestra Tour turned concept into cash, grossing $91.7 million and marking the biggest touring chapter of his career so far.

But last year also exposed fractures. Several regional Mexican acts faced visa revocations or delays that led to cancellations — Julión Álvarez’s situation was particularly visible — and groups like Grupo Firme and Los Alegres del Barranco publicly grappled with the same bureaucratic headaches. Those disruptions changed lineups, altered festival bills and reminded the industry that touring growth is not just about demand; it’s also logistical and political.

With that in mind, the 2026 slate feels like both continuation and repair. There are pop megastars moving arenas again, veteran songwriters mapping theater runs, and regional acts trying to reassert footing in the U.S. market. Below is the current, updating list of announced U.S. tours by Latin artists. I include the billed tour name and confirmed U.S. dates where available, and note when legs begin later in the year.

Andrés Cepeda — Bogotá La Gira

May 10 – Chicago @ The Riviera Theatre
May 12 – Lynn, MA @ Lynn Auditorium
May 13 – New York @ The Beacon Theatre
May 15 – Elizabeth, NJ @ The Ritz
May 16 – Washington @ The Lincoln Theatre
May 18 – Atlanta @ Variety Playhouse
May 19 – Tampa, FL @ Ferguson Hall
May 21 – Orlando, FL @ Steinmetz Hall at Dr. Phillips Center
May 22 – Miami @ James L. Knight Center
May 24 – Dallas @ Majestic Theatre
May 26 – San Francisco @ Palace of Fine Arts
May 27 – Glendale, CA @ Alex Theatre
May 30 – Seattle @ Neptune Theatre
May 31 – Denver @ Paramount Theatre

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Bad Gyal — Más Cara World Tour

U.S. leg starts in October. Dates to be announced.

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Chuwi — Primavera Tour

April 16 — San Diego @ House of Blues San Diego
April 17 — Tucson, AZ @ La Rosa
April 18 — Phoenix @ VIVA PHX
April 19 — Las Vegas @ B-Side at House of Blues
April 23 — Los Angeles @ The Roxy
April 24 — Santa Ana, CA @ Constellation Room
April 25 — San Francisco @ The Independent
May 2 — El Paso, TX @ Sol Summit Music Festival
May 3 — Chicago @ Outset
May 5 — Toronto @ Lee’s Palace
May 7 — New York @ Racket
May 8 — Washington, D.C. @ 9:30 Club
May 9 — Pittsboro, NC @ Shakori Hills GrassRoots Festival
May 13 — Tampa, FL @ Crowbar
May 15 — Miami @ ZeyZey
May 16 — Orlando, FL @ The Beacham

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Hermanos Espinoza — Linaje Tour

July 24 — San Diego @ SOMA
July 25 — Los Angeles @ YouTube Theater
July 31 — Atlanta @ Coca Cola Roxy
Aug. 1 — Charlotte, NC @ Ovens Auditorium
Aug. 6 — New York @ Palladium Times Square
Aug. 8 — Chicago @ Rosemont Theatre
Aug. 14 — San Antonio, TX @ Freeman Coliseum
Aug. 15 — Houston @ Smart Financial Centre
Aug. 16 — Dallas @ The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory
Aug. 20 — Phoenix @ Arizona Financial Theatre
Aug. 21 — El Paso, TX @ Plaza Theatre
Aug. 27 — San Jose, CA @ San Jose Civic
Aug. 28 — Fresno, CA @ William Saroyan Theatre
Aug. 30 — Wheatland, CA @ Hard Rock Live
Sept. 3 — Chesterfield, MO @ The Factory
Sept. 4 — Fayetteville, AR @ Ozark Music Hall
Sept. 5 — Oklahoma City @ The Criterion

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Juanes — Juanes World Tour

Starts May 2 — El Paso, TX @ Michelada Fest, with a fall run across major theaters and arenas. Notable stops: Sept. 12 — Nashville @ Ryman Auditorium; Sept. 18 — Newark, NJ @ Prudential Center; Oct. 16 — Los Ángeles, CA @ The Kia Forum; Oct. 22 — San Diego, CA @ Gallagher Square at Petco Park.

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Karol G — Viajando Por El Mundo TropiTour

U.S. leg starts in July. The Colombian star remains one of the few reggaetón acts whose arena routing feels safe amid shifting market tastes; expect big productions and festival crossovers.

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Laura Pausini — Yo Canto World Tour

May 14 – San Juan, PR @ Coliseo De Puerto Rico
May 16 – Miami, FL @ Kaseya Center
May 21 – Orlando, FL @ Kia Center
May 23 – Dallas, TX @ Texas Trust CU Theatre
May 28 – Los Angeles, CA @ Peacock Theater
May 30 – Chicago, IL @ Rosemont Theatre
June 6 – Nueva York, NY @ The Theater At MSG

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Omar Courtz — Por Si Mañana No Estoy Tour

Aug. 19 — San Jose, CA @ SAP Center
Aug. 21 — Inglewood, CA @ Kia Forum
Aug. 23 — San Diego @ Viejas Arena
Aug. 26 — Hidalgo, TX @ Payne Arena
Aug. 27 — Houston @ Toyota Center
Aug. 28 — Irving, TX @ The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory
Aug. 30 — Atlanta @ Gas South Arena
Sept. 2 — Baltimore @ CFG Bank Arena
Sept. 3 — Boston @ MGM Music Hall at Fenway
Sept. 5 — Chicago @ United Center
Sept. 8–9 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center (two nights)
Sept. 11 — Miami @ Kaseya Center (two nights)

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Ricardo Montaner — El Último Regreso

Aug. 12 — Atlanta, GA @ Gas South Arena
Aug. 14 — Houston, TX @ Smart Financial Centre
Aug. 15 — Dallas, TX @ Texas Trust CU Theatre
Aug. 20 — Ontario, CA @ Toyota Arena
Aug. 21 — Los Angeles, CA @ Peacock Theater
Aug. 24 — Salt Lake City, UT @ Maverik Center
Aug. 28 — Orlando, FL @ Kia Center
Aug. 29 — Miami, FL @ Kaseya Center
Sept. 3 — New York, NY @ Radio City Music Hall

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Romeo Santos & Prince Royce — Mejor Tarde Que Nunca Tour

April 1 – Milwaukee, WI @ Fiserv Forum; extensive spring routing across arenas with stops at TD Garden, Prudential Center and T-Mobile Arena. This co-headline run highlights bachata’s box-office reliability.

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Rosalía — LUX Tour

June 4 — Miami @ Kaseya Center
June 16 — New York @ Madison Square Garden
June 20 — Chicago @ United Center
June 27 — Las Vegas @ T-Mobile Arena
June 29 — Los Angeles @ Kia Forum

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Siddhartha — Tú y Yo y Tour

Aug. 6 — Los Angeles @ YouTube Theater
Aug. 7 — San Diego @ Observatory San Diego
Aug. 9 — Phoenix @ The Van Buren
Aug. 16 — Chicago @ The Auditorium
Aug. 18 — New York @ Palladium Times Square

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Zhamira — Curita Para el Corazón

April 29–May 1 — San Juan, PR @ Centro de Bellas Artes
May 14 — Miami @ Midline
May 17 — Orlando, FL @ The Beacham
May 19 — New York @ Irving Plaza

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Other artists listed as touring or with U.S. legs announced include Chayanne, Chiquis, Clarent, Intocable, Kali Uchis, Maná, Mon Laferte, Ricardo Montaner (listed above), Romeo Santos & Prince Royce, Soda Stereo and Young Miko. Some of those entries still have international legs or Puerto Rico dates folded into their U.S. schedules; others are tentatively slated for later in the year.

What to watch: who returns to arenas and who settles into theater runs. After the arena-heavy 2025, several mid-career acts are embracing more intimate venues — not a retreat but a recalibration, one that can produce better sound and clearer storytelling. Conversely, stadium and arena routing for the biggest names reinforces the industry’s expectation that Latin acts can carry big productions across the U.S. market.

Practical note: visa headaches that disrupted 2025 touring remain an underreported wildcard. Until those administrative bottlenecks ease, routing decisions will be informed not just by ticket sales data but by immigration realities and the cost of contingency planning.

This list will be updated as new dates are confirmed or canceled. If a tour you expect to see here is missing, it may not yet have U.S. dates announced or it may be slated for later in 2026. For now, the season reads like a cross-section of Latin music in 2026: pop arenas, intimate theater runs, veterans reclaiming stages and newer voices carving space between the two.

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