Bad Bunny

Interactive: Bad Bunny’s DtMF album route through Puerto Rico

Follow Bad Bunny’s DtMF album locations across Puerto Rico. Interactive map with coordinates, photos, weekend road trip routes. 

A guitar in front of la Escuela Libre de Música, coffee in the Ciales mountains, bomba and plena echoing through Loíza.

📝 Read here in Spanish

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Google Maps led us to discover the places that inspired «Debí Tirar Más Fotos», Bad Bunny’s new album, through coordinates hidden throughout the island. Behind each point on the map are stories to tell: from the nighttime buzz of La Placita to the sound of the sea at Los Tubos, every corner is part of the Puerto Rico that Benito wants to show the world. 🇵🇷

At Platea, we found the coordinates for you and created a map with all the photos, including three routes you can recreate as weekend road trips.

Below, find more information about everything you can do near the places where Benito takes us.

Platea tip: On the map, use two fingers to move and zoom. Press the purple icons for additional location information and click the arrow that appears with the data to go to the pin in your Google Maps app. In the main menu, choose the route you want to see.

VOY A LLeVARTE PA PR 

It’s no coincidence that Bad Bunny mentions this historic neighborhood – it’s a call to rediscover the island, specifically the unique atmosphere of Río Piedras. Among the businesses that make the neighborhood pulse, like El Boricua and the university energy, Bad Bunny promises to show an authentic Puerto Rico that goes beyond tourist pins.

📍Also on Platea:

    BAILE INoLVIDABLE

    This song’s name appears on the guitar case of someone walking past the Ernesto Ramos Antonini Free Music School (ELMERA). A group of students from this school is known to have musicalized all the songs that fuse salsa in «Debí Tirar Más Fotos.» Additionally, veteran actor Jacobo Morales, who had a prominent role in the artist’s videos, is an ELMERA graduate.

    📍Also on Platea:

    • Dance salsa as a couple at these 9 places around the island
    • The Bad Bunny effect: contemporary plena and bomba artists you should know
    • 5 historic salsa events in Puerto Rico

      TURiSTA

      This song appears at coordinates leading to Guavate, a spot that, like the song’s story, invites you to enjoy without complications. Here it seems Benito is playing with double meaning: just as tourists visit the island seeking good times without delving into its complexities, there are people who pass through our lives as temporary visitors. Why Guavate? It’s a place everyone, locals and visitors alike, enjoys equally, even if just passing through.

      📍Also on Platea:

        LO QUE LE PASÓ A HAWAii

        “No, no suelte’ la bandera ni olvide’ el lelolai…”

        Fun fact: this was the most complicated song to find on the map because the title only appears in the Google Earth version. Coincidence? You’ll find it as a newspaper cover at a bus stop in Cayey, painted with the Puerto Rico flag. 🇵🇷

        📍También en Platea

        KETU TeCRÉ

        This song title appears on the map on someone’s shirt walking toward the Market Plaza in Santurce, where multiple vendors sell local products daily. At night, the variety of places to eat, dance, and listen to music make La Placita the ideal spot to hang out with friends.

        📍También en Platea

        WELTiTA

        Bad Bunny takes us to the coast where he grew up with WELTITA, whose title you’ll find stuck on a beach chair in front of Los Tubos in Manatí. Ready for sun and sand? 🏝️ We are too.

        📍También en Platea

        LA MuDANZA

        “Un día Tonito lo invitó pa’ hacer una mudanza Pa’ buscarse alguito, par de peso’ pa’ algo alcanza…” 

        Before catapulting as one of the world’s most famous singers, Bad Bunny dreamed of making music from his hometown, Vega Baja. Over the years, the artist has returned to his Almirante Sur neighborhood to share with the community.

        On Google Street View, this title appears on the side of a truck near a pizzeria, paying tribute to the story he narrates at the beginning of this song.

        📍También en Platea

        KLOuFRENS

        One of the album’s songs for reggaeton lovers. On the map, this title appears over two people (probably ‘kloufrens’) eating with a panoramic view at Casita Vieja restaurant in Ciales.

        BOKeTE

        It’s worth complaining about potholes, and Bad Bunny knows it. You’ll find this song’s name on the map on a sign pointing to a tremendous pothole on the street, in a community near Emilio Fagot Avenue. But Ponce isn’t all potholes! Here 👇🏽 we leave you options to explore La Perla del Sur.

        📍También en Platea

        CAFé CON RON feat. Pleneros de la Cresta

        The spot everyone’s talking about in Old San Juan shares the name of one of Benito’s most popular album songs. Its spaces evoke Puerto Rican culture and tradition, with cocktails paying homage to the album through names like: Favorito de mi ex, Un COCO, and Capicú.

        📍También en Platea

        DtMF

        This Bad Bunny song gets us dancing to the rhythm of typical Puerto Rican plena. In this case, the song name appears on the map right at the entrance of Taller de Bomba N’Zambi in Loíza, a project dedicated to preserving and celebrating another pillar of our culture: Puerto Rican bomba. 

        📍También en Platea

        EoO

        Bad Bunny and Google Maps take us to El Yunque, near the Angelito trail, with this old-school reggaeton flow track. When was the last time you visited our tropical forest?

        📍También en Platea