
Alejandro Sanz did not need a warm-up act to command Kaseya Center on Thursday night. The Spanish singer-songwriter sold out the Miami arena as part of the ongoing "¿Y Ahora Qué? Tour," his first appearance in South Florida since September 2023.
The sellout was not a surprise to anyone tracking this run. Sanz, a 24-time Latin GRAMMY winner and one of the most consistent arena draws in Spanish-language pop, has been building a remarkable record on this tour. According to Billboard, Sanz has long held an unusually devoted following in the United States, particularly in markets with large Latin American and Caribbean populations like Miami. That loyalty showed up at full volume Thursday night.
Alejandro Sanz Brings "¿Y Ahora Qué? Tour" Back to Familiar Ground
The Miami date continues a streak that has run through nearly every U.S. stop on this second leg of the tour. Chicago, Washington, Newark, and Brooklyn have all produced sellouts before Miami joined the list. The tour itself began in September 2025 in Mexico, where Sanz performed 24 dates, including six consecutive sold-out nights at the Auditorio Nacional in Mexico City, one of Latin America's most storied concert venues. The run then moved through Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, and Argentina before crossing into the United States in early April.
Kaseya Center, which opened in 1999 as the American Airlines Arena and rebranded in 2022, has hosted some of the largest concerts and sporting events on the East Coast. Sanz performed there during his Sanz en Vivo U.S. Tour in 2023, and Thursday's show confirmed the venue has become one of his reliable Miami homes.
The Album Behind the Sold-Out Nights
The setlist drew from "¿Y Ahora Qué +?," the expanded edition of the EP that won the Latin GRAMMY for Best Contemporary Pop Album. The record includes "El vino de tu boca," "Mil motivos," a duet with Carín León, and "Bésame," the widely circulated collaboration with Shakira. That last track in particular has extended Sanz's reach into audiences that might not have followed his catalog since his peak commercial years in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when albums like "Más" and "El Alma al Aire" made him one of the best-selling Spanish-language artists in the world, as documented by Rolling Stone en Español.
The combination of legacy material and the newer collaborative tracks gives the tour a setlist capable of holding a full arena for two-plus hours. The sold-out nights suggest the formula is working.
For Sanz, Miami is not just another date on a long routing. South Florida's Cuban, Venezuelan, Colombian, and Argentine communities have made the city one of his most reliable markets for over two decades. Thursday night confirmed that standing has not faded.
The "¿Y Ahora Qué? Tour" continues its North American run with additional U.S. dates still ahead.





