Bad Bunny performed during the Super Bowl LX halftime show with Lady Gaga on February 8, 2026, and the chart impact was basically instant. His song “DtMF,” the title track from his album Debí Tirar Más Fotos [I Should Have Taken More Photos], jumped from #10 all the way to #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. That’s not just a chart bump. That’s a massive cultural moment. This is only his second #1 hit in his career the first was “I Like It” with Cardi B and J Balvin back in 2018. “DtMF” had previously peaked at #2 in January 2025 when the album dropped, so this Super Bowl performance essentially gave it the final push it needed to break through.
What makes this historically significant is that “DtMF” is only the fourth all or mostly Spanish-language song ever to top the Hot 100. That’s not a lot of company. The others were “La Bamba” by Los Lobos, “Macarena (Bayside Boys Mix)” by Los Del Rio, and “Despacito” by Luis Fonsi & Daddy Yankee featuring Justin Bieber. But here’s the crucial distinction: “DtMF” is the first solo Spanish-language song to reach #1. The other three were either group efforts or featured collaborations. Bad Bunny’s doing this solo, which is genuinely groundbreaking for Latin music representation on the Billboard Hot 100.
The chart dominance doesn’t stop at #1 Bad Bunny has basically taken over the top 10
He’s got three more songs in the top 10, all of which he performed during the halftime show. “Baile Inolvidable” [Unforgettable Dance] is sitting at #2. “Nuevayol” (a Puerto Rican nickname for New York) is at #5. “Tití Me Preguntó” [Auntie Asked Me] is at #7. That’s four Bad Bunny songs in the top 10 simultaneously. That’s not just success. That’s chart dominance. The halftime show wasn’t just a performance showcase it was a commercial demonstration of Bad Bunny’s current cultural moment.
This proves something that the music industry has understood for decades but keeps underestimating: the Super Bowl halftime show is still the ultimate marketing tool. A 13-minute performance to over 100 million viewers doesn’t just get people talking. It moves the needle on charts. It reintroduces songs to audiences who might not be following your current work. Bad Bunny’s performance was so impactful that three songs he performed collectively occupy three spots in the top 10.
The domino effect extends beyond Bad Bunny, though his impact is the main story
Taylor Swift’s “Opalite,” which climbed as high as #2 last year after The Life of a Showgirl album release, jumped from #11 to #8 after being released as an official single with a new video. That’s a much smaller movement than Bad Bunny’s explosion, but it shows that the chart is still moving based on artist activity and visual releases.
What’s genuinely remarkable about Bad Bunny’s achievement is the timing and the cultural moment it represents. Spanish-language music has been growing in influence on the Billboard Hot 100, but reaching #1 as a solo artist with an all-Spanish song is still a significant milestone. This isn’t just about chart success. It’s about representation. It’s about validating that Spanish-language music can command mainstream attention in America.
Bad Bunny performed one of the biggest stages in the world and immediately proved why he deserves to be there. The charts confirmed it.

