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Shakira gathered about two million people on Copacabana at one of the biggest free concerts in Rio

Find out how Shakira's free concert on Copacabana Beach grew into a huge musical, tourist and economic event for Rio de Janeiro. We bring an overview of the performance before about two million people, guest appearances by Brazilian musicians, organizational challenges, the expected economic impact and the circumstances that marked the preparations for the spectacle.

Shakira gathered about two million people on Copacabana at one of the biggest free concerts in Rio
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar - illustration/ arhiva (vlastita)

Shakira turned Copacabana into a huge stage in front of about two million people

Shakira held one of the biggest concerts of her career in Rio de Janeiro, performing on Copacabana Beach before an audience that city authorities estimated at about two million people. The free concert was held on Saturday, May 2, 2026, as part of the Todo Mundo no Rio program, a city initiative that turns the famous coastline into a stage for major international music events. The Colombian star's performance lasted almost three hours and covered a selection of songs that have marked more than three decades of her career, from early Latin-pop hits to newer songs connected with the album Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran.

The concert was conceived as an event open to a broad audience, with no ticket charge, which once again placed Copacabana at the center of global music attention. According to statements by city authorities and reports by international media, the audience began arriving hours before the start of the program, and the huge sandy area in front of the stage gradually turned into a mass of visitors. The performance began later than the announced time, at around 11 p.m. local time, and before the singer came out, the audience was further warmed up by visual effects and drones that wrote messages in Portuguese in the sky.

Shakira opened the concert in an atmosphere of strong euphoria, addressing the audience in an emotional way and recalling her first arrivals in Brazil. In one of her addresses, she emphasized that she had first arrived in Brazil as a very young performer, with the ambition of singing before the local audience, while now, in front of her, stood a sea of people on one of the most famous beaches in the world. That moment gave the concert additional symbolic weight, because Brazil is one of the markets where Shakira very early developed a strong fan base outside the Hispanophone space.

The setlist combined early hits, global successes and the newer phase of her career

The central part of the concert consisted of songs that turned Shakira into one of the most recognizable Latin American pop performers in the world. The repertoire included major hits such as Hips Don't Lie, Whenever, Wherever, La Tortura and She Wolf, as well as newer material connected with the album Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran, released in 2024. A particularly strong audience reaction was also caused by the performance of the song BZRP Music Sessions #53, which in recent years has become one of the most discussed songs in her catalog.

The concert had a clear dramaturgy: it relied on nostalgia, but did not remain trapped in the past. Shakira built the performance around the rhythms for which she is recognizable, from Latin pop and reggaeton to dance-pop arrangements, while at the same time fitting the newer songs into a broader narrative about personal strength, breakup, public pressure and return to the stage. The album Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran marked her first fully Spanish-language studio project after a long period, so the concert in Rio also had an important promotional role as part of the world tour of the same name.

In musical terms, the concert functioned as a retrospective of a career that developed from Latin American beginnings, through a breakthrough on the Anglo-American market, to the present phase in which Shakira once again emphasizes the Spanish language and Latin American identity. That combination was especially evident in Rio, a city that for decades has built its international image through music, carnival, beach spectacles and large public events. For many visitors who came to the city because of the concert or found themselves in its center, an important part of the experience was also the search for accommodation in Rio de Janeiro, especially in areas connected with Copacabana and public transport.

Guests on stage and the Brazilian musical context

The concert was not only Shakira's solo performance, but also a carefully staged encounter with the Brazilian music scene. Caetano Veloso and Maria Bethânia, two important figures of Brazilian popular music, joined her on stage, giving the event an additional cultural dimension. Their appearance connected the global pop spectacle with the tradition of Brazilian music and confirmed the organizers' ambition that the concert should not be only a tourist magnet, but also an event that communicates with the local cultural identity.

Particular attention was also drawn by Anitta, one of the best-known Brazilian pop performers of today. Her performance with Shakira on the song Choka Choka further emphasized the Latin American connection between different music markets and audiences. Such a choice of guests was not accidental: Shakira performed in Rio before an audience that knows both international pop and the domestic musical tradition well, so the inclusion of Brazilian names gave the concert a clearer local character.

It is precisely this combination of an international star and Brazilian guests that is one of the key features of the new model of large concerts on Copacabana. In recent years, the City of Rio de Janeiro has been systematically developing the idea of a large free concert as an event that connects tourism, public space, the music industry and international promotion. After Madonna in 2024 and Lady Gaga in 2025, Shakira's performance in 2026 confirmed that Copacabana has become a kind of open mega-venue for global pop spectacles.

The city expects a strong economic impact

According to a study by the City of Rio de Janeiro, prepared by the city's Office for Economic Development and the tourism organization Riotur, Shakira's concert was expected to generate approximately 800 million Brazilian reais in economic impact. A more precise projection from the study states a potential of around 776.2 million reais, with an expected audience of approximately two million people. That estimate includes visitor spending on accommodation, food, transport, shopping and various services connected with the large event.

City authorities stated that the expected audience consisted mostly of residents of Rio de Janeiro and its metropolitan region, while a smaller but economically important part consisted of domestic and international tourists. According to the same estimates, tourists from other parts of Brazil and abroad spend significantly more per day than the local audience, especially because of overnight stays, hospitality services and transport. For that reason, concerts of this kind have an effect that goes beyond the evening of the performance itself and spills over into hotels, restaurants, bars, shops, taxis and app-based transport, public transport and informal street sales.

For Rio de Janeiro, the May date is particularly important. In official data, the city emphasized that concerts on Copacabana in previous years increased tourist activity in a period that can be strategically used outside the best-known seasonal peaks such as carnival and New Year's Eve. In that context, Shakira's concert is not only a musical event, but also part of a broader policy of branding the city as an international center of large public events.

The economic logic of the Todo Mundo no Rio program rests on the assumption that free access to the concert does not mean an absence of revenue for the city economy. On the contrary, the organizers count on the spending of a large number of people before, during and after the event, as well as on international media visibility that a classic tourist campaign could hardly achieve with the same intensity. That is why, in the days around the concert, the practical dimension of staying in the city was also emphasized, including accommodation near Copacabana, the availability of public transport and traffic restrictions in the event zone.

Security, traffic and organization of the event for a million-strong audience

Organizing a concert for about two million people required an extensive operational plan. The City of Rio de Janeiro announced special traffic measures, including additional bus lines toward Copacabana, extended operation of the metro and light rail, and traffic and parking restrictions in parts of the city. The official plan also mentioned the use of hundreds of surveillance cameras, many of which were installed along the coast and in the streets around the event site.

Such measures are not only a logistical addition, but a prerequisite for the concert to be held at all in an open urban space. Copacabana is physically huge, but at the same time it is surrounded by a densely built-up urban area, hotel zones, roads and residential streets. The arrival and departure of a mass of people in a short period of time creates pressure on public transport, emergency services, cleanliness, security and the supply of basic necessities. That is precisely why city authorities have increasingly presented such events in recent years as operations planned at the level of major sports and international gatherings.

The official plan for Shakira's concert fitted into the experience Rio had gained during earlier large events, including carnival, New Year's celebrations, the World Cup, the Olympic Games, G20 and BRICS. Mayor Eduardo Cavaliere said ahead of the performance that Rio has a long tradition of large events and that such events create jobs, revenue and the city's identity. Although such statements are part of the political communication of city authorities, the figures on expected spending show why concerts of this format are increasingly viewed as an instrument of economic policy, and not only as a cultural program.

A tragedy during preparations cast a shadow over the spectacle

Before the concert, a serious accident also occurred during the preparation of the stage. According to an Associated Press report, work on the stage construction was temporarily stopped after the death of 28-year-old worker Gabriel de Jesus Firmino. According to the available information, the police were investigating the circumstances of the accident and the possible responsibility of the company in charge of the stage, including issues of compliance with occupational safety regulations.

Work continued after the interruption, and the organizers expressed support for the family of the worker who died and for the teams involved in building the stage. According to reports available before the concert, Shakira did not publicly comment on the worker's death. That event served as a reminder that large spectacles, although most often visible to the public through the prism of stars, audiences and tourism figures, depend on a large number of workers in production, security, technical work and logistics.

In the journalistic and public context, that circumstance remains an important part of the story about the concert. Million-person outdoor events bring strong promotion and economic benefits, but at the same time raise questions of responsibility, working conditions and organizational transparency. In the case of Shakira's concert, the available information indicates that the investigation was focused on the circumstances of the technical preparation of the stage, while the concert itself was held according to plan.

Copacabana as the stage of a new era of mass concerts

Shakira's performance continues a series of large free concerts on Copacabana that have attracted international attention in recent years. In 2024, Madonna held the final concert of her Celebration tour there, and in 2025 Lady Gaga performed before an exceptionally large audience on the same coastline. Comparisons with those performances are inevitable because the city is building the Todo Mundo no Rio program precisely on the continuity of spectacles that bring a new global name every year.

For Rio de Janeiro, this is a strategy with several goals. The first is tourism-related: to increase the number of arrivals, overnight stays and spending in the city. The second is media-related: to ensure that images of Copacabana, the stage and the million-strong audience travel around the world. The third is cultural-political: to confirm that public space can be a place of mass culture accessible without a ticket. In that model, the concert is not closed inside a stadium or arena, but takes place in one of the most recognizable urban landscapes of Latin America.

Shakira fit into that concept almost naturally. As a Colombian performer who built a global career by crossing linguistic, musical and market boundaries, she represented for Rio a performer who could attract both the local audience and international visitors. Her popularity in Brazil has a long history, and the concert on Copacabana served as the crown of her relationship with an audience that has followed her since the early phases of her career.

A major concert as a tourist, cultural and media event

Although music was at the center of the evening, the concert simultaneously functioned as a tourist and media event. The streets around Copacabana were filled with sellers of food, drinks and various necessities, while visitors tried to secure a better view of the stage. Such a scene is typical of large public events in Rio, where formal organization and the informal economy often exist side by side.

For visitors coming from outside the city, an important part of planning such events relates to transport, safe movement and the accommodation offer in Rio de Janeiro. That is precisely why city authorities emphasize traffic schemes, public transport operation and access restrictions to individual zones in official materials. A large concert on the beach is not only a matter of arriving at the performance, but also of organizing a multi-day stay, especially when a large number of tourists is expected.

Shakira's concert on Copacabana also showed how much pop music today is connected with urban development, public security and tourism strategy. At a time when cities compete with each other for large events, international attention and visitor spending, concerts of this format become part of a broader economic and symbolic competition. In that competition, Rio de Janeiro uses what it has most strongly: a recognizable landscape, experience with mass gatherings and a globally readable cultural identity.

Shakira's return to the big world stage

The performance in Rio was held as part of the Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran world tour, with which Shakira returned to large concert formats after a longer period without a global tour. The tour is connected with an album that strongly marked her newer career and public image, especially because of themes of personal renewal, female experience and emotional resilience. During the concert in Rio, the singer emphasized precisely that message several times, speaking about the strength of women and the ability to continue after a fall.

Such a narrative fit well into the energy of the evening. The audience did not come only to hear the hits, but also to participate in an event that had the character of a collective celebration. On stage, Shakira combined dance, voice, choreography, visual effects and personal story, and Copacabana gave her a scenography that no enclosed hall can fully replace. In the final part of the concert, when the biggest hits and newer songs followed one another, it became clear that Rio had gained another event that will be counted among the most visible musical moments of the year.

For Shakira, it was a performance that confirmed her status as a performer capable of carrying events of huge scale. For Rio de Janeiro, it was another test of a model in which public space, international stars and the tourism economy form a unique stage. According to the available data, the concert fulfilled the organizers' basic ambition: it attracted a million-strong audience, brought strong international visibility and strengthened Copacabana as one of the most important places for large free concerts in the world.

Sources:
- City of Rio de Janeiro – official estimate of the economic impact of Shakira's concert and expected audience on Copacabana (link)
- City of Rio de Janeiro – operational plan for the concert, traffic measures, surveillance and event organization (link)
- CBS News / Associated Press – report on the concert, audience estimate, start of the performance and songs performed (link)
- Pitchfork – overview of the concert, guest performances and connection with the Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran tour (link)
- Associated Press – report on the accident during stage preparation and continuation of work ahead of the concert (link)

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The editorial team for arts, music and events brings together journalists and volunteers who have spent years living alongside stages, clubs, festivals and all those spaces where art and audience meet. Our writing comes from long-standing journalistic experience and genuine involvement in cultural life: from endless evenings in concert halls, from conversations with musicians before and after performances, from improvised press corners at festivals, from premieres that end with long discussions in theatre corridors, but also from small, intimate events that attract only a handful of curious people yet remain engraved in their memory for a lifetime.

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