Shakira didn’t just finish the North American leg of her Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran World Tour — she detonated it. Over 22 sold-out stadium and arena shows, the Colombian superstar reminded fans and industry skeptics alike why she remains one of the most dynamic live performers of her generation. From Charlotte to Fresno, she turned each night into a high-voltage celebration of Latin pop’s global dominance, blending choreographic precision with the kind of emotional heat that can’t be rehearsed.
Closing in Fresno’s Valley Children’s Stadium — the venue’s first-ever show — Shakira moved with a fluid command of both the stage and the audience, radiating an effortless confidence that’s earned through decades of reinvention. Just days before, she had made history in Los Angeles as the first Latin female artist to headline and sell out two consecutive nights at SoFi Stadium, pulling in 90,000 fans and a few famous friends: the Black Eyed Peas joined her for the live debut of “GIRL LIKE ME,” a moment that felt as much like a reunion as a victory lap.

Her setlist, already a muscular blend of hits from Pies Descalzos to Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran, flexed deeper cuts like “Men in This Town” — resurrected thanks to a viral fan push — and the bittersweet 90s anthem “Si Te Vas.” These inclusions proved that Shakira’s relationship with her audience isn’t just transactional; she listens, and she delivers. Costume changes from the likes of Balenciaga, Versace, and Etro added visual drama without distracting from the real spectacle: her stamina.
Across 2.5 million tickets sold in Latin America and North America so far, she’s not just leading the biggest Latin tour of 2025 — she’s redefining what that means. The North American shows were dense with special guest appearances from Pitbull to Wyclef Jean, but the throughline was always Shakira herself, alternating between precision-tuned choreography and moments of raw, unfiltered joy.
And she’s not slowing down. A freshly announced second Latin American leg adds more than 30 stadium dates, kicking off August 11 in Tijuana and already moving over 800,000 tickets. In Mexico alone, she’s crossed the one-million-ticket threshold — a feat that solidifies her as a commercial and cultural juggernaut.

Watching Shakira command a stadium is to witness a performer who understands both scale and intimacy. She can pivot from the ecstatic bombast of “Hips Don’t Lie” to the hushed ache of “Antología” without losing an ounce of momentum. The Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran tour isn’t just a career highlight — it’s a reminder that Shakira’s legacy is still in active construction, brick by glittering brick.
For tickets for the second Latin America leg and more tour information, visit shakira.com.