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Is Bad Bunny’s Casita from the Super Bowl Halftime Show a Real Place, and Can You Visit?

- - Is Bad Bunny’s Casita from the Super Bowl Halftime Show a Real Place, and Can You Visit?

Natalia SenanayakeFebruary 10, 2026 at 6:06 AM

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Bad Bunny performing at the Super Bowl LX Halftime Show on Feb. 8, 2026.

Kevin Mazur/Getty

Bad Bunny featured his famous “La Casita” stage during his Super Bowl LX Halftime Show performance on Sunday, Feb. 8

The set piece is modeled after a real home in Humacao, and is a nod to traditional Puerto Rican homes

La Casita was featured in Bad Bunny’s short film Debí Tirar Más Fotos and inspired one of the main stages at his residency and world tour

Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl LX Halftime Show performance incorporated a number of elements from his historic residency — including the iconic “La Casita” that many fans know and love.

Following his multiple Grammy wins earlier this month, Bad Bunny, whose full name is Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, took to the Big Game to headline the 2026 Apple Music Halftime Show at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Sunday, Feb. 8.

After opening with his hit 2022 song "Tití Me Preguntó," he then ran to the top of La Casita to perform his 2020 anthem, “Yo Perreo Sola.” The song kicked off with a cameo from a number of celebrities hanging out at the symbolic house, including Pedro Pascal, Cardi B, Jessica Alba, Karol G, Young Miko and more.

The house, which doubled as Bad Bunny’s stage during part of the performance, will look familiar to fans who have been closely following this era of his career, especially since the release of his sixth solo studio album, Debí Tirar Más Fotos, on Jan. 5, 2025.

Celebrity guests at Bad Bunny's Super Bowl halftime show performance

Kevin Mazur/Getty

The real home — which belongs to 84-year-old Puerto Rican resident Román Carrasco Delgado — is located on the island's southeastern coast in the town of Humacao and was featured in Bad Bunny’s Debí Tirar Más Fotos short film.

It later inspired one of the main stages at the star’s 31-day “No Me Quiero Ir de Aquí” residency at the Coliseo de Puerto Rico José Miguel Agrelot in San Juan.

The real-size replica of the home, which has since been dubbed La Casita, became an iconic symbol of the residency, as well as a place where celebrities have been invited to watch the concert — a tradition Bad Bunny kept alive for his halftime show performance.

La Casita is a cultural emblem, reflecting a traditional house style found across the island both in urban and rural areas, per The New York Times.

While the stage was inspired by an actual home in Puerto Rico, it is best fans don’t try to visit the real-life property.

PEOPLE previously reported that Carrasco Delgado, the owner of the home, had reportedly filed a $1 million lawsuit against Bad Bunny for the use of his home in the short film and residency.

The lawsuit claims, in part, that the use of his home for both of Bad Bunny’s projects caused him “emotional distress,” as a “large number of people” now visit his property every day to take pictures and videos, turning it into a tourist attraction.

Bad Bunny performing on top of La Casita at his residency in August 2025

GDA via AP Images

According to the Times, Mayna Magruder Ortiz — the designer of La Casita, as featured in the residency — said the replica of the home in the concert arena varied from the original to match its new function. Spaces like the kitchen kept its original layout but was converted into a bar where guests could hang out during the show.For the Big Game's La Casita, Bad Bunny's team brought in production designer Julio Himede, as well as creative and show director Harriet Cuddeford, to recreate the magic and success of the star's Puerto Rican residency all the way in San Francisco, per Architectural Digest.

The design team also worked closely with Puerto Rican designer Mónica Monserrate, who led production for the residency. The group worked hard to ensure the stage at the Super Bowl paid homage to Bad Bunny’s home island — something the artist has always been proud to do.

Bad Bunny performing at the Super Bowl LX Halftime Show

Neilson Barnard/Getty

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“He and his team have done a beautiful job of creating an incredibly rich, textured world around Debí Tirar Más Fotos. We checked everything with [Monserrate] and really took the time, the care, the love to learn from Benito and his people about who they are,” Cuddeford told the outlet.

While keeping this in mind, Himede noted that they had to adjust certain aspects of the original stage to make it work for a live television production.

“We spent a lot of time looking at the color of the casita so it would look great on camera,” Himede said. “The residency and his tour are not necessarily designed for the camera. We had a television show to do, and a live show, as well, so we adjusted the colors.”

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