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Buy tickets for concert Bad Bunny - 23.01.2026., Atanasio Girardot, Medellin, Colombia Buy tickets for concert Bad Bunny - 23.01.2026., Atanasio Girardot, Medellin, Colombia

CONCERT

Bad Bunny

Atanasio Girardot, Medellin, CO
23. January 2026. 20:00h
2026
23
January
Photo by: Domagoj Skledar/ arhiva (vlastita)

Tickets and passes for Bad Bunny concert in Medellín, Colombia – Estadio Atanasio Girardot ticket sales

Ticket sales for Bad Bunny in Medellín focus on the one-day concert at Estadio Atanasio Girardot. Get the key details for tickets, start time 8:00 PM, venue access by Metro, and practical tips for arriving and leaving the stadium area in Laureles and La 70. Use this page for ticket purchase and to plan your concert night from entry to the final encore

Bad Bunny arrives in Medellín with a stadium-filling tour

On January 23, Medellín turns into the center of the Latin urban scene as Bad Bunny brings his concert spectacle to Estadio Atanasio Girardot, with the announced start at 20:00. This is a concert for which the ticket is valid for 1 day, so the whole story is concentrated into one evening and one big production, with no room for a second chance. Public interest has been rising for weeks because this date is part of a broader run of performances in the city, which usually means tickets are sought in waves and ticket sales accelerate as the concert day approaches. Bad Bunny is an artist whose live shows regularly combine the massive energy of reggaeton with precisely directed moments for the audience, so an evening is expected in which people sing, dance, and chant from the first beats to the final encore. Secure your tickets for this event right away!

Medellín as a stage for urban music

It’s no accident that the concert is taking place in Medellín, a city that in recent years has further cemented its status as a regional and global hub for urban and Latin sound, from local clubs to stadium productions. When an artist like Bad Bunny includes Atanasio Girardot on the route, it is usually read as confirmation that the city can handle a huge crowd logistically, while also offering a cultural context in which reggaeton and Latin trap are not just a trend, but part of the city’s everyday life. Media in Colombia already emphasized at the announcement that, due to the high demand for the first date, an additional run of performances in the same venue was added, which shows how quickly tickets can disappear when a date appears that the audience experiences as the event of the season. That effect often draws visitors from other cities and countries, so ticket sales don’t depend only on the local market, but on the entire region that sees Medellín as a natural place for a big show. In that atmosphere, buying tickets also becomes planning the trip, accommodation, and moving around the city, which is another reason to secure tickets in time.

Bad Bunny and the story of a tour that crosses genres

Bad Bunny has long been more than just a reggaeton star—he’s an author whose projects are watched as cultural events that push the boundaries of Latin pop and urban music, from sound to visual identity. His tour tied to the album Debí Tirar Más Fotos has been described in announcements as a world stadium route stretching across multiple continents, and that kind of format demands a production in which every detail, from scenography to the pace of the setlist, is tailored to a massive audience. Critics read the album as a more personal and thematically layered step forward, with an emphasized reliance on Puerto Rican musical roots and a contemporary urban-pop approach, which in a concert context often turns into dramaturgy with strong emotional peaks. Over the past year, Bad Bunny has also been further awarded and closely followed by the media, which boosts interest among audiences who want to “catch” the moment while the tour is in full swing. For visitors, that means tickets are not just entry to a concert, but entry into a production that gets retold, recorded, shared, and compared from city to city. Tickets for this concert are selling out fast, so buy your tickets in time.

What the audience can expect from the repertoire

New songs and hits that have defined the last decade

Although each night on the tour can bring small surprises, the framework is clear: the audience usually gets a mix of current songs from the album Debí Tirar Más Fotos and a string of earlier hits that turned Bad Bunny into a global phenomenon. That mix matters because in a stadium there are both those who follow every new single and those who come for songs that have grown into a shared chorus of an entire generation, from summer anthems to club bangers. In practice, that means a setlist built in waves: a strong start to raise the energy, a middle section with emphasized groove and “perreo” moments, and a finale that often leans on the most recognizable choruses. That’s precisely why tickets have added value for fans who want to be in the stands or on the floor in moments when the whole stadium sings with one voice, because the experience in a crowd isn’t the same as listening at home. When it was announced that the concert starts at 20:00, for the audience that’s a clear signal for how to plan arrival and when to expect the main part of the evening, and earlier entry usually makes it easier to find your way in a large venue. Buy tickets via the button below and plan your evening so you don’t miss either the first or the last wave of energy.

Stadium rhythm, visual production, and atmosphere

Bad Bunny’s performances in recent years have become increasingly “stadium” in the full sense of the word, with an emphasis on big visuals, powerful sound, and direction that must work both for the audience close to the stage and for those in the highest sections. In that format, the atmosphere is not only the result of the music, but also of the way the crowd moves, responds to the artist’s cues, and turns certain songs into a shared ritual—from raised phones in slower moments to chanting and dancing when the tempo speeds up. Medellín is a city where the audience for urban music can be especially loud and rhythmic, so it’s expected that even simple “call and response” moments will gain extra weight, precisely because reggaeton here is part of the local going-out culture. In that context, ticket sales are not just an administrative item but an indicator of how quickly capacity is filling and how densely the stadium will “breathe” in one rhythm, which directly affects the experience. For those who want to be closer to the stage, tickets often mean a different evening dynamic, because the floor brings more movement and stronger interaction, while the stands offer an overview and a sense of the production’s scale. If you want to feel the full effect of the crowd’s stadium choreography, tickets are key because the crowd itself becomes part of the scenography.

Atanasio Girardot as a place that changes its face depending on the event

Estadio Atanasio Girardot is not just a football stadium, but a symbol of the city’s infrastructure that has for decades carried both Medellín’s sporting and cultural story, and its opening in 1953 and major renovation ahead of international competitions made it one of the most recognizable venues in Colombia. Capacity is cited in various sources at around 40 thousand spectators, and for concerts the experience changes further because the pitch turns into a floor area and the stands become a huge amphitheater that can “amplify” the crowd’s energy. The stadium is part of a broader sports complex that includes other facilities, so the zone around it before an event can turn into a great pedestrian river, with meeting points, waiting, and shared warm-up. The official address often used in city and institutional registers is Calle 48 # 73-10, which makes it easier to orient yourself when arriving by taxi or ride-hailing apps, but also when planning walking routes from nearby neighborhoods. When a venue like this fills up for a concert, the feeling is different than at arena shows: the sound is broader, the choruses are more massive, and the audience in every section contributes to the same picture—another reason to secure tickets while they’re available.

How to get there, where to move, and what to consider

Arriving by public transport and city connections

For a large number of visitors, the most practical approach is public transport because the stadium is located in an urban part of the city and is connected by metro, which is especially important when major crowds are expected before and after the concert. In its information for Line B, Metro de Medellín states that the line connects San Javier and San Antonio and includes stops relevant for moving toward the western part of the city, and the Estadio station—an established orientation point for arriving in this zone—is located near the stadium. That connectivity also helps visitors staying in other parts of the city because transfers within the metro system are simpler to plan than driving through traffic jams. If you arrive earlier, the advantage of the metro is that it drops you into a zone where it’s easy to “catch” the event’s rhythm, and it’s close enough that you don’t have to walk for miles. In practice, this way of arriving often also makes the return easier, provided you keep operating hours and platform crowds in mind, so it’s smart to plan your exit from the stadium with a bit of patience. Tickets are for 1 day, but the evening’s logistics can last, so it’s good to view buying tickets and planning your arrival as a single whole.

Entry, timing, and the experience in the stands

On the day of the concert, the most important thing is to think about timing: even though the start is announced for 20:00, large gatherings mean that entry checks, screenings, and finding your section can drag on, especially if you arrive at the last minute. That’s why, in practice, it’s recommended to arrive earlier to avoid stress and so that a 1-day ticket truly “works” for you, instead of spending part of the evening in line. Atanasio Girardot is a large venue and the experience differs depending on the section, so it’s good to know in advance where the main approaches are and where the points are where the crowd naturally lingers. The stands offer an overview and a sense of scale, while the floor is more intense and physically demanding because there is more standing and moving, and in both cases the same rule applies: the earlier you enter, the easier it will be to “catch” your place and the crowd’s rhythm. On nights with high demand, ticket sales often reflect in the congestion around entrances, so tickets aren’t just “passes,” but also a key for planning movement and avoiding bottlenecks. Secure your tickets for this event right away!

Laureles, La 70, and the city’s energy after the concert

One of the special features of this location is that the stadium is situated in an area known for a lively urban rhythm, with neighborhoods where, after big events, you can feel the city’s pulse and where the crowd often continues socializing. Carrera 70, popularly “La 70,” is highlighted in many guides and descriptions as a nightlife street near the Estadio station, with a string of bars and places to go out before and after events, which is typical for stadium nights in Medellín. That doesn’t mean the concert is an “opening act” for going out, but that the city around the stadium is used to large waves of people and that the atmosphere spills from the stands onto the streets, with lots of music and spontaneous euphoria. For visitors who are not from Medellín, this can be an added value because along with purchased tickets they also get the chance to experience a neighborhood often described as a more accessible and more local alternative to the most touristy zones. At the same time, it’s smart to keep basic travel discipline: agree on a meeting point, watch your personal belongings, and plan your return, especially when a large crowd disperses at the same time. Buy tickets via the button below and put together an evening so that, along with the concert, you also feel Medellín in its most vibrant, music-driven version. Sources:
- Live Nation LatAm, Bad Bunny event in Medellín and the Estadio Atanasio Girardot venue
- Shazam, concert listing with a 20:00 start time and performance date
- EL PAÍS (América Colombia), information on dates in Medellín and the context of demand
- Pitchfork, announcement of the Debí Tirar Más Fotos World Tour and the tour context
- Pitchfork, critical review of the album DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS and the thematic framework
- Songkick, details on the stadium location and capacity
- The Stadium Guide, stadium history, capacity, and arrival guidelines
- INDER Medellín, institutional directory with the address Calle 48 # 73-10 (Puerta No. 7)
- Metro de Medellín, information about Line B and stations relevant for arrival
- Travel2Latam, description of the Atanasio Girardot sports complex and the city context

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9 hours ago, Author: Culture & events desk

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