Flow Fest 2025: Latin Music Legends and Rising Stars Light Up Mexico City
November 24, 2025
Flow Fest 2025 in Mexico City delivered a high-energy blend of legends and rising stars, with Don Omar headlining Saturday to a massive welcome alongside performances from Álvaro Díaz, Myke Towers, Wisin, El Alfa, Jowell & Randy, Lunay, Lenny Tavárez, Young Cister, Easykid, Yailin La Más Viral, and a special headliner Nicky Jam.
Mexico reaffirmed its status as a global hub for urban Latin culture, as Flow Fest emerged as a premier platform for both legacy acts and digital-native artists, marking one of its strongest editions to date.
Sayuri & Sopholov delivered a high-energy cumbia-meets-reggaetón set, while Belakath closed Sunday on the main stage with hits like La Reina del Reggaetón Mexa and Reggaetón Champagne, followed by emotional moments at the end of her performance.
Natanael Cano made history as the first headliner from a non-urban genre, performing corridos tumbados and inviting Gabito Ballesteros for duets such as El Boss, AMG, and Perlas Negras.
Don Omar delivered one of Flow Fest 2025’s most electrifying performances with hits like Dale Don, Hasta Abajo, and Ella y Yo, reaffirming his lasting influence in urban music.
The festival amplified its cultural footprint via social media, with viral moments on Instagram, TikTok, and X, including Young Miko crowd-surfing and Bad Gyal engaging with fans, while Natanael Cano’s crossover performances signaled a broader evolution in Latin music.
J Balvin closed the festival in the early hours of Sunday, delivering a career-spanning set that included Doblexxor, Loco Contigo, and Con Altura, with collaborations from Farruko and Jowell & Randy and appearances by El Malilla, El Bogueto, and Yeri Mu.
Carlos Vives headlined the Sessions Stage and later joined Wisin for Nota de Amor, highlighting cross-genre collaborations that punctuated the festival.
Flow Fest underscored industry trends: the enduring dominance of veteran reggaetón, the rising prominence of women in Urbano, and ongoing genre-blending propelled by artists like Natanael Cano and Omar Courtz.
Sunday showcased the future of Latin music with performances by J Balvin, Young Miko, CrisMJ, Bad Gyal, De La Ghetto, Sech, Omar Courtz, Maria Becerra, Natanael Cano, and a notable crossover moment as Cano blended corridos tumbados with reggaetón.
Flow Fest 2025 featured two days of Latin urban music at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez, with an expanded production and sponsor activations, drawing approximately 163,000 attendees in total.
The festival spanned five stages and highlighted a mix of urban and regional Mexican acts, underscoring Flow Fest’s status as a premier Latin urban music event.
Wisin teamed with El Bogueto for a historic duet and performed with Carlos Vives, while Young Miko closed Sunday’s Sprite Stage with a high-energy party set.
Álvaro Díaz announced a new album titled OMAKASE for 2026 during his Saturday set, adding a notable announcement to the festival’s lineup.
Summary based on 2 sources
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Sources

Billboard • Nov 24, 2025
J Balvin, Don Omar & More: 10 Best Performances From Coca Cola Flow Fest 2025, Ranked
LaMezcla.com | Music News, DJ Mixes, Mixtapes, Radio, Latin Music, Events • Nov 24, 2025
Coca-Cola Flow Fest 2025: Full Recap of Mexico’s Biggest Urban Festival | LaMezcla.com