Concert Tour Name: | World's Hottest Tour |
Border: | yes |
Artist: | Bad Bunny |
Location: | North America • South America |
Type: | Continental |
Album: | Un Verano Sin Ti |
Number Of Legs: | 2 |
Attendance: | 1,854,457 |
Gross: | $314 million |
Last Tour: | El Último Tour del Mundo Tour (2022) |
This Tour: | World's Hottest Tour (2022) |
Next Tour: | Most Wanted Tour (2024) |
The World's Hottest Tour[1] was the fourth concert tour by Puerto Rican rapper and singer-songwriter Bad Bunny and his first stadium tour, in support of his fourth studio album Un Verano Sin Ti (2022). DJs Alesso & Diplo were opening acts on select dates. The tour included 43 concert dates in a span of four months.[2] Announced through his social media accounts on January 24, 2022, a few days before he began his tour of El Último Tour del Mundo, the stadium tour visited fourteen countries in the Americas. The tour consisted of two legs, the first in the United States and the second in Latin America. Following the announcement of the dates, many shows were quickly sold out and more dates were added.
The World's Hottest Tour was the third highest-grossing tour of 2022, with earnings of over $314 million dollars for the year's 43 shows and around 1.9 million ticket sales. It thus became the highest-grossing tour in history by a Latin American act.[3]
In early 2021, Bad Bunny announced his third concert tour El Ultimo Tour Del Mundo. The tour broke records in tickets sales and the date were sold out quickly.[4] The tour grossed nearly $117 Million in North American Arenas and was the highest-grossing tour by a Latin artist in Billboard Boxscore history and selling over 575,000 tickets.[5] [6] Also, it was the fastest selling tour since 2018.[7] El Ultimo Tour del Mundo was the top-selling album of 2021 in the United States and won Best Urban Music Album at the 22nd Annual Latin Grammy Awards and Best Música Urbana Album at the 64th Grammy Awards.
On January 24, 2022, Bad Bunny announced his upcoming stadium tour and album to be released sometime of that year via social media.[8] The album, titled Un Verano Sin Ti, was released in May 2022 and debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, becoming the second all-Spanish language album to do so.[9]
Initially, the first announcement of the tour was composed of 29 dates in total, including 17 in the United States in stadiums.[10] Following the announcement, six more shows were added due the high demand of the tickets, including second dates on in Miami, Houston, Los Angeles, San Diego and Las Vegas.[11] For the Chile concerts, 80,000 tickets were sold out in minutes, however, over 1.6 millions of fans were waiting to buy tickets.[12] In Santo Domingo, the first concert was sold out in its first day of sales, and a second date was added.[13] In Peru, 400,000 fans were reported to be waiting online to buy tickets for the second date.[14] [15] In Costa Rica, the tickets were sold out within minutes of being released for sale.[16] In Mexico City only, it is estimated that approximately 4.5 millions of fans queued to purchase one of the 115,000 tickets officially available, making it the concert tour with the biggest demand in the history of the country.[17]
The first show at the Camping World Stadium in Orlando, was reported sold out and holds the record as the venue's highest-grossing show. When the tour started, 16 of 21 dates on the first leg in the United States were reported sold out, selling over 725,000 tickets.[18] In August 2022, the tour grossed over US$91 million of dollars.[19] In total, the World's Hottest Tour grossed $232.5 million and sold 944,000 tickets from just 21 shows in the U.S[20]
Prior to the first show in Mexico City, on December 9, 2022, what appeared to be a massive overselling of tickets through Ticketmaster caused many fans to be denied entry the day of the concert. Ticketmaster México claimed that an "unprecedented" number of counterfeit tickets were sold, which led to online overcrowding of the server and a subsequent crash of the operating system; consequentially, this fiasco delayed entrance to the venue for legitimate ticket-holders. The Office of the Federal Prosecutor for the Consumer (PROFECO) is seeking 100% compensation, plus a 20% added compensation for those affected.[21]
This set list is representative of the show on 5 August 2022 in Orlando. It is not representative of all concerts for the duration of the tour.[22]
City | Country | Venue | Opening acts | Attendance | Revenue | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Leg 1 – United States | |||||||
August 5 | Orlando | United States | Camping World Stadium | Alesso | 47,670 / 47,670 | $10,585,066 | |
August 8 | Cumberland | Truist Park | 38,207 / 38,207 | $8,678,799 | |||
August 12 | Miami Gardens< | --Do not change to Miami. The venue's address is in Miami Gardens.--> | Hard Rock Stadium | 97,655 / 97,655 | $21,900,878 | ||
August 13 | |||||||
August 18 | Boston | Fenway Park | 34,486 / 34,486 | $7,003,692 | |||
August 20 | Chicago | Soldier Field | 50,854 / 50,854 | $14,109,590 | |||
August 23 | Washington, D.C. | Nationals Park | Deorro | 38,481 / 38,481 | $7,936,521 | ||
August 27 | New York City< | --Per Bad Bunny's website--> | Yankee Stadium | Diplo | 84,865 / 84,865 | $22,757,636 | |
August 28 | |||||||
September 1 | Houston | Minute Maid Park | Alesso | 83,518 / 83,518 | $19,557,149 | ||
September 2 | |||||||
September 4 | Benjamin Franklin Parkway | ||||||
September 7 | San Antonio | Alamodome | Alesso | 50,193 / 50,193 | $12,342,663 | ||
September 9 | Arlington | AT&T Stadium | 54,637 / 54,637 | $12,384,432 | |||
September 14 | Oakland | RingCentral Coliseum | 42,702 / 42,702 | $10,784,001 | |||
September 17 | San Diego | Petco Park | 79,123 / 79,123 | $20,038,705 | |||
September 18 | |||||||
September 23 | Las Vegas< | --I think it was per Bad Bunny's website--> | Allegiant Stadium | 92,440 / 92,440 | $22,098,725 | ||
September 24 | |||||||
September 28 | Phoenix | Chase Field | 49,421 / 49,421 | $11,176,255 | |||
September 30 | Inglewood< | --Do not change to Los Angeles. The venue's address is in Inglewood.--> | SoFi Stadium | Diplo | 99,816 / 99,816 | $31,096,479 | |
October 1 | |||||||
Leg 2 – Latin America | |||||||
October 21 | Santo Domingo | Dominican Republic | Estadio Olímpico Félix Sánchez | 79,032 / 79,032 | $7,738,992 | ||
October 22 | |||||||
October 28 | Santiago | Chile | Estadio Nacional de Chile | Young Cister & Pailita Pablito Pesadilla | 110,362 / 110,362 | $6,080,508 | |
October 29 | Pailita Pablito Pesadilla | ||||||
November 4 | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Estadio José Amalfitani | Dani Ribba Rei | 85,345 / 85,345 | $5,588,125 | |
November 5 | |||||||
November 11 | Asunción | Paraguay | Estadio General Pablo Rojas | Milk Shake Kaese | 58,017 / 58,017 | $2,107,935 | |
November 13 | Lima | Peru | Estadio Nacional del Perú | Tourista DJ Towa DJ Steve | 83,086 / 83,086 | $8,721,775 | |
November 14 | |||||||
November 16 | Quito | Ecuador | Estadio Olímpico Atahualpa | 28,998 / 28,998 | $2,997,726 | ||
November 18 | Medellín | Colombia | Estadio Atanasio Girardot | DJ Agudelo888 | 80,393 / 80,393 | $5,021,660 | |
November 19 | |||||||
November 20 | Bogotá | Estadio El Campín | 35,178 / 35,178 | $3,710,757 | |||
November 22 | Panama City | Panama | Estadio Rommel Fernández | DJ Riki Silvera | 27,085 / 27,085 | $1,955,449 | |
November 24 | San José | Costa Rica | Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica | In Betwin Jurgen Dorsam DJ Tocuma | 52,851 / 52,851 | $4,450,577 | |
November 26 | San Salvador | El Salvador | Estadio Cuscatlán | 18,927 / 18,927 | $1,513,890 | ||
November 29 | San Pedro Sula | Honduras | Estadio Olímpico Metropolitano | 35,148 / 35,148 | $2,263,224 | ||
December 1 | Guatemala City | Guatemala | Explanada Cardales de Cayalá | Ale Q Ben Carrillo | 20,005 / 20,005 | $2,067,136 | |
December 3 | Monterrey | Mexico | Estadio BBVA | Mr. Pig | 90,084 / 90,084 | $17,456,717 | |
December 4 | |||||||
December 9 | Mexico City | Estadio Azteca | Uzielito Mix | 115,878 / 115,878 | $10,308,460 | ||
December 10 | |||||||
Total | 1,864,457 / 1,864,457 (100%) | $314,445,480 |