There's a particular kind of week in Ibiza when the island stops speaking the universal language of four-to-the-floor techno and starts rolling its R's instead. This is one of them. Latin music in Ibiza has never been louder than it is right now, and from June 21 to 28, 2026, the White Isle is moving to reggaeton, R&B, Latin house and the raw, hand-clapping pulse of flamenco. Whether you want a stadium-sized superstar moment or a free glass of wine and a guitar in a village courtyard, this is the week to follow the rhythm.
Below are the nights worth building your week around — a spread that runs from a world-premiere headline show all the way to the quiet, soulful corners of the countryside that most visitors never find.
J Balvin & DJ Snake Premiere "Pardon My Spanish" at Ushuaïa
If there's one event everyone will be talking about, it's this. Reggaeton's global ambassador J Balvin joins forces with French superstar DJ Snake for the world premiere of a brand-new concept, Pardon My Spanish, at the open-air amphitheatre of Ushuaïa Ibiza in Playa d'en Bossa. The two scored one of the biggest crossover anthems of the last decade together, so seeing them share a stage under the Ibiza sky — sunset bleeding into neon — is a genuine bucket-list moment for fans of urban and Latin sound.
Doors open at 17:00 on Sunday June 21, and because Ushuaïa is a daytime-into-evening venue, you get the rare gift of dancing to festival-grade production while the sun is still warm. Tickets start from around €60, and for a debut of this scale they will move fast. Arrive early, wear something you can sweat in, and stake out a spot near the stage before the amphitheatre fills.
Reggaeton & Latin House Light Up the Clubs
The Latin takeover doesn't end with one headline. Across the island, a whole circuit of reggaeton and Latin-house nights is hitting its summer stride.
Over in Ibiza Town, Travieso at Lío turns the glamorous waterfront cabaret-club into a Latin-tinted playground every Sunday. The format is pure Ibiza theatre: a dinner that melts into a club, with reggaeton crossover hits, Latin house and a touch of Afro-house carried by performers, percussionists and a tight residents team. Free guestlist is available, doors from 20:30 — go for the show, stay for the dancing.
For something rawer and later, Morenita debuts this season at Swag Ibiza Club in San José, a brand-new Sunday residency built around fresh attitude and irresistible Latin flavour (from €30, doors near midnight). And if you can stretch your week to Friday June 26, Puro Reggaeton lands at Es Paradis in San Antonio — no apologies, no genre-hopping, just an entire night of pure reggaeton inside one of the island's most beautiful pyramid-roofed clubs (tickets €45–50). It's the most concentrated dose of perreo you'll find all week.
Sunday R&B by the Pool at Ibiza Rocks
Not everything Latin-adjacent happens after dark. One of the most joyful daytime parties of the week is R&B Affair at Ibiza Rocks in San Antonio, where Sundays are given over entirely to 2000s and throwback R&B. Think nostalgia, sunshine and a poolside crowd singing every word — the soundtrack of an entire generation, served beside the water.
It kicks off at 14:00 (Sunday June 21, and again on the 28th if you miss it), with tickets between €32 and €48. This is the gentlest entry point of the week: no late night required, just sunscreen, a swimsuit and a willingness to belt out classics you forgot you knew. It pairs beautifully with a slow morning and an even slower recovery.
Flamenco's Free Village Trail Across Sant Josep
Here's the part the guidebooks miss. While the clubs roar, the villages of Sant Josep quietly host one of Ibiza's most authentic and entirely free live-music traditions: a rolling programme of flamenco on the terraces of rural bars and restaurants. No ticket, no guestlist, no velvet rope — just guitar, cante, hand-claps and the duende under the open sky.
This week alone you can catch the group Tabanco at Can Bernat Vinya (Sunday June 21, 21:00), the trio Amoralí at Cas Costas in Sant Jordi (Tuesday June 23, 20:00), and the much-loved Querencia, who pop up across several countryside terraces through the week — including a special San Juan flamenco night at Can Toni Beach on June 23 as the island celebrates midsummer. Most start around sunset, the wine is local and inexpensive, and the atmosphere is warm, intimate and gloriously unpretentious.
If you only do one "Latin" thing this week, make it one of these. It's the sound of Spain at its most honest, and it costs nothing but the price of a drink.
How to Do Latin Week in Ibiza Right
A few local pointers to make the most of it. Book the big rooms — Ushuaïa and the Friday reggaeton night — in advance, because the marquee Latin acts sell through quickly in peak season. For the free flamenco evenings, arrive early to grab a table on the terrace and plan to order dinner; these are restaurants first and venues second, and supporting them is what keeps the tradition alive.
Mind the geography, too. Playa d'en Bossa, San Antonio, Ibiza Town and the Sant Josep countryside are spread across the island, so check the late-night Discobús routes or pre-book a taxi if you're chaining venues in one night. And pace yourself: the smartest week balances one big show with a couple of free, low-key evenings, leaving room for a beach morning in between.
From a global superstar premiere to a guitar on a village terrace, this is Ibiza speaking Spanish — loudly, proudly and for every budget. Browse the full June 21–28 line-up, grab your tickets and find every set time on ibiza-calendar.com, your local guide to what's really on across the island. ¡Nos vemos en la pista!