Music

All the Highlights From Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Show

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Photo credit: Getty images

Bad Bunny brought Puerto Rican culture to the Bay Area during his Apple Music Super Bowl LX halftime show. Headlining the show on Sunday, February 8, 2026, at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, he delivered his first-ever solo halftime set performed in Spanish. Although, this wasn’t the first time Bad Bunny sang at a Super Bowl halftime show. Back in 2020, he sang “I Like It” and “Chantaje” with Shakira, who co-headlined that year alongside Jennifer Lopez in Miami.

Photo: Getty images

He kicked off his performance with his 2022 hit, “Tití Me Preguntó”. The stage was transformed into a Puerto Rico-inspired neighborhood, featuring a mini casita from his San Juan residency last summer, and sugarcane fields symbolizing generations of Puerto Rican farmers and field workers. He was joined on stage by guest celebrities including Cardi B, Karol G, Jessica Alba, Young Miko, and Pedro Pascal, who partied in the pink casita.

Photo: Getty images

He arrived in a cream custom outfit from Zara, accessorized with a Puerto Rican flag. Styled by his longtime collaborators Storm Pablo and Marvin Douglas Linares, the look included a boxy, football jersey-inspired sweatshirt over a collared shirt, paired with matching chinos, a tie, moto-style gloves, and sneakers. The sweatshirt featured his family name, Ocasio, and the number 64.

Photo: Getty images

The night came with a surprise, as a real wedding took place on the rooftop set. Bad Bunny reportedly invited the couple to marry at the game after they had invited him to their own wedding. Lady Gaga also joined him on stage, as she performed her Grammy-winning track, Die With a Smile. Later, Ricky Martin appeared seated on a white chair resembling the one from Bad Bunny’s 2025 album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos, and performed a verse from Bad Bunny’s protest song Lo Que Le Pasó a Hawaii, which sums up issues like colonialism, gentrification, and the displacement of locals in Puerto Rico.

Photo: Getty images

At the end of his performance, Bad Bunny mentioned several countries across the Americas while their flags appeared behind him. He then held up a football that read, “Together, We Are America,” and written on the screen was his Grammy acceptance line: “The only thing more powerful than hate is love.” He closed the show with the title track from his Grammy-winning album, Debi Tirar Mas Fotos.

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