What’s On in Latin America: Your Week Ahead (June 15–21)
Latin America · What’s On
Key Facts
- Colombia kick off. The Cafeteros make their World Cup debut on Tuesday, June 17.
- A food night. Buenos Aires’ Calesita opens kitchens across the city on Wednesday, June 18.
- Brazil are back. The Seleção face Haiti on Thursday, June 19, chasing a first win.
- Free music Saturday. Lima’s festival crescendos and a Fito Páez tribute plays Buenos Aires on June 20.
- A heavy Sunday. Colombia’s presidential runoff and Mexico City’s rental-registry deadline both land June 21.
The São João weekend is barely over, and the calendar is already full again. Here is What’s On in Latin America in the week ahead, June 15 to 21 — a run of World Cup nights, free concerts, one very good food crawl and a Sunday that decides a presidency.
What’s On in Latin America: the week at a glance
Football frames the week, music fills the middle, and a consequential Sunday closes it. Here is the short version before the detail.
| When | What | Where | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tue Jun 17 | Colombia’s World Cup debut | Watch parties citywide | Group stage |
| Wed Jun 18 | Calesita food night | Buenos Aires | Free entry |
| Thu Jun 19 | Brazil v Haiti | Screens across Brazil | Group stage |
| Sat Jun 20 | Lima’s central concert · Fito Páez tribute | Lima · Buenos Aires | Free |
| Sun Jun 21 | Colombia runoff · CDMX rental deadline | Colombia · Mexico City | Civic |
Football: Colombia debut, Brazil chase form
The week’s first big night is Tuesday, when Colombia open their World Cup campaign — expect packed bars and plazas from Bogotá to Medellín. Two days later, on Thursday June 19, Brazil play Haiti looking to convert a stuttering 1-1 opener into a first win.
Both games screen widely across the region, in fan zones, bars and the festas still running for São João. If you only plan one football night this week, the Colombia opener is the one to be out for.
Music: Lima crescendos, Buenos Aires rocks on
Saturday June 20 is the music peak. Lima’s free Fiesta de la Música reaches its central concert at Parque Kennedy in Miraflores, headlined by French artist R-Wan, while Buenos Aires’ free winter-rock season serves a Fito Páez tribute at the Casa de la Cultura.
Both are free, and both sit inside longer runs — Lima’s festival plays to June 27, the Buenos Aires series to July 4. Across Brazil, meanwhile, the festas juninas keep going, building to St. John’s Day on June 24.
Food and culture: a Buenos Aires food night
Wednesday June 18 brings Calesita, Buenos Aires’ one-night food crawl, when some of the city’s best kitchens open for a single evening of special menus with guest chefs from across Latin America. Entry is free and you build your own route from 8pm to midnight.
For something quieter, Buenos Aires is also marking 40 years since Borges with the exhibition “Borges, ecos de un nombre” at the Centro Cultural Recoleta, a calm counterpoint to a loud week.
The big Sunday: a vote and a deadline
June 21 is the week’s hinge. Colombia holds its presidential runoff, so expect a charged day and demonstrations in the main cities — worth planning around if you live there.
The same day, Mexico City’s mandatory short-term-rental registry reaches its deadline on the calendar reading, the date by which Airbnb hosts and platforms must register or risk being barred. If you host in the capital, do not leave it to the weekend.
Frequently Asked Questions
What’s the biggest event in Latin America this week?
Colombia’s World Cup debut on Tuesday June 17 and the June 21 double-header — Colombia’s presidential runoff and Mexico City’s rental-registry deadline — are the headline moments.
What free things are on?
Plenty: Lima’s Fiesta de la Música central concert, Buenos Aires’ Fito Páez tribute, the Borges-at-40 exhibition and the São João festas across Brazil are all free.
When does Brazil play next?
Brazil face Haiti on Thursday June 19 after a 1-1 draw with Morocco, then Scotland on June 24. The games screen widely in bars and fan zones.
What is Calesita?
It is a one-night food crawl in Buenos Aires on June 18, when top kitchens open with special menus and guest chefs; entry is free and you design your own route.
Why does June 21 matter beyond the football?
Colombia votes in a presidential runoff and Mexico City’s short-term-rental registry hits its deadline — a civic day with real consequences for residents and hosts.
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