— Tyler, the Creator closed Lollapalooza Brasil 2026 with a solo performance that reviewers called the festival’s most commanding show across all three days
— The three-day festival at São Paulo’s Interlagos circuit drew an estimated 270,000 people, with headliners Sabrina Carpenter, Chappell Roan, and Lorde across the weekend
— The 13th Brazilian edition of the festival generated significant economic impact, with São Paulo estimating average visitor spending of R$2,000 ($345) per attendee
Lollapalooza Brasil 2026 ended Sunday night the way the best festivals do — with one performer alone on stage, holding tens of thousands of people in the palm of his hand. Tyler, the Creator closed the 13th edition of the festival at São Paulo’s Autódromo de Interlagos with a solo set that needed nothing more than pyrotechnics, two acclaimed albums, and sheer charisma. The Rio Times, the Latin American financial news outlet, reports on a weekend that cemented Latin America’s largest music festival as a cultural and economic force.
Tyler, the Creator Delivers Festival Highlight
After the elaborate stage productions of Sabrina Carpenter and Chappell Roan earlier in the weekend, Tyler’s stripped-back approach stood in deliberate contrast. Dressed in red to match the cover art of his latest album Don’t Tap The Glass, the Grammy-winning rapper commanded the Budweiser stage alone — no backing band, no dancers, no elaborate set pieces. The crowd, which had been filtering over from Lorde’s set on the neighboring Samsung Galaxy stage, quickly filled the space.
What made the performance remarkable was Tyler’s ability to pivot between emotional registers. He had the audience dancing to Sugar On My Tongue, then brought them to tears with Like Him, a reflection on growing up without his father. He interacted with the crowd in broken Portuguese, attempted an endearing “te amo” that drew cheers, and improvised chants of “São Paulo” before launching into Tamale.
The setlist drew from his two most recent albums — the energetic Don’t Tap The Glass and the more introspective Chromakopia — before dipping into older hits like Earfquake and Are We Still Friends? He closed with See You Again, his signature melodic rap farewell, 15 years after his last Brazilian appearance with Odd Future in 2011.
Three Days of Pop, Rock, and Rap
The three-day festival ran March 20–22 and featured over 70 acts across four stages. Friday belonged to Sabrina Carpenter, whose theatrical headlining set opened the weekend with visual spectacle and pop-chart precision. Saturday was dominated by Chappell Roan, the genre-bending phenomenon whose packed crowd confirmed her status as one of pop music’s most exciting live performers.
Sunday’s undercard also delivered standout moments. Lorde returned to Interlagos a decade after her first Brazilian festival appearance, delivering an intimate set on the second stage. Djo — better known as Stranger Things actor Joe Keery — drew a massive afternoon crowd on the back of his viral hit End of Beginning, while Turnstile’s hardcore energy gave the Budweiser stage its most physical show of the day.
Lollapalooza Brasil’s Growing Economic Footprint
Organizers reported 185,000 attendees across Friday and Saturday alone, with Sunday expected to push the weekend total beyond the 240,000 mark set in 2025. São Paulo’s municipal government estimates each out-of-town visitor spends roughly R$2,000 ($345) on accommodation, food, and transport — making the festival a significant economic driver for a city whose entertainment economy already leads Latin America.
Day passes started at R$469 ($81), with three-day passes significantly higher. The city deployed a 24-hour public transit operation, though long queues at Autódromo station — with reported waits exceeding two hours on peak nights — highlighted the infrastructure strain that accompanies an event of this scale. As São Paulo’s modern arenas and festival venues continue to attract record crowds, the gap between cultural ambition and transport capacity remains the city’s most visible growing pain.

