Madrid in June 2026: Pope Leo XIV, BTS, Linkin Park, OneRepublic, and Free Museum Night
Despite the heat already settling over the Spanish capital, it is no obstacle to festivals, concerts, exhibitions, and much more. La Cotorra runs through the events in June that are worth a trip to Madrid.

Renowned pianist Arkady Volodos comes to Madrid for a solo recital. His playing combines virtuoso technique — which has led some to call him the fastest pianist in the world — with a deep understanding of the musical text.
After a sensational debut at Carnegie Hall, Volodos has performed solo recitals at the world's most prestigious venues, including Vienna and the Salzburg Festival, and with leading orchestras such as the Boston Symphony, the Berlin Philharmonic, the Philadelphia Orchestra, and the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra. One of his recordings was nominated for a Grammy in 2001.
Rachmaninov, Tchaikovsky, and rare recordings of works by Catalan composer Federico Mompou hold a special place in his repertoire. The programme for his Madrid recital will be announced later.

On 3 June, one of the most atmospheric and expansive music festivals in Madrid gets under way. It runs for two months, through to the end of July, with 60 performers giving 50 concerts across a wide range of genres — from pop and indie rock to jazz and electronic music.
Key acts in June include Spanish singer Rigoberta Bandini (4, 5, and 6 June), American artist Ethel Cain (9 June), and the band Ginebras (13 June), among others.
Tickets must be purchased separately for each concert; many are already sold out.
The Papal Visit
6–12 June

Pope Leo XIV will visit Spain — including Madrid and the Canary Islands — from 6 to 12 June. Over the course of the week, he plans to meet with the Spanish monarchs, government representatives, and the clergy, as well as celebrate several Masses and visit a migrant reception centre. In connection with the visit, the Community of Madrid is preparing a cultural programme and extending the operating hours of public transport and museums.
From Thursday 28 May, the Madrid Metro will run a special train decorated with commemorative images of the Pope, operating on Line 4 throughout Leo XIV's visit. Additional services will run on the main lines. Some intercity buses in the Community of Madrid will also be decorated with images connected to the visit.
The contemporary arts complex Teatros del Canal will host a special cultural programme for young people from midnight on 6 June until 5:00 AM on 7 June, featuring singer-songwriter performances, DJ sets, and a selection of Spanish dance numbers performed by dancers from the Spanish Ballet of the Community of Madrid. Exhibitions and shows will also run from 5 to 7 June. A full schedule is available here.
On the night of 6–7 June, 15 museums will open free of charge and late into the evening, including the Prado Museum, the Reina Sofía Arts Centre, the Royal Collections Gallery, and others. The initiative is called "La Noche en Blanco y Amarillo" (The White and Yellow Night); the full schedule is available here.
On 6 June, the Pope will lead a prayer vigil with young people at and around Plaza de Lima, and the following day he will celebrate Mass at Plaza de Cibeles before leading a procession for the feast of Corpus Christi.
The full schedule for Leo XIV's visit to Spain is available on the Vatican website.
Spain World Cup Match Screenings
15, 21 and 27 June
Plaza de Colón
Free entry

On match days for the Spanish national football team at the World Cup, Plaza de Colón will be transformed into a live-viewing space, with games shown on a giant screen. The event is called Plaza Selección. In addition to the large screens, the square will feature rest areas, live music, entertainment for all ages, and food and drink stalls with a wide selection of options.
On 15 June, for Spain's match against Cabo Verde (kick-off at 6:00 PM), Plaza Selección will be open from 12:00 PM to 10:30 PM. The same hours are planned for 21 June, when Spain face Saudi Arabia. On 27 June, for the match against Uruguay (scheduled for 2:00 AM), Plaza Selección will only be open from 12:00 PM to 6:30 PM and there will be no screening of the match.
Entry to screenings is free and open to all, subject to capacity. Further matches may be added to the programme in due course.

Konstantin Kamensky's stage adaptation of Mikhail Bulgakov's celebrated satirical novella comes to Spain for the first time. Audiences are invited to consider why this text — which turned a hundred last year — has taken on new resonance in the contemporary world, and how a generation of Sharikovs and Shvonders has once again found itself at the helm in place of the intellectual embodied by Professor Preobrazhensky.
Konstantin Kamensky is a British theatre director, playwright, and video designer, and a graduate of the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in London. The lead roles are played by Alexander Feklistov and Artur Smolyaninov.
In addition to Madrid, the production will also be staged in Barcelona (8 June), Alicante (10 June), Valencia (two performances on 13 June — tickets for the first have already sold out), and Estepona (15 June).

OneRepublic are an American pop-rock band known around the world. They formed in 2006 in Colorado Springs and rose to fame with the song "Apologize," which reached number three on the UK Official Top 40 chart — despite initially drawing criticism for sounding similar to Coldplay. Their debut album, Dreaming Out Loud, sold three million copies in the United States, and the song received three separate awards and a Grammy nomination.
Other hits include "Counting Stars," "Secrets," "All the Right Moves," "Stop and Stare," "Good Life," "If I Lose Myself," and many more. Lead singer Ryan Tedder is also widely known as a songwriter and producer, having written hits for Beyoncé, Adele, Mariah Carey, and many others. OneRepublic collaborated with Italian electronic group Meduza and German artist Leony on the song "Fire," which became the official song of UEFA Euro 2024.
OneRepublic is currently on their Escape to Europe tour. After Madrid, they head to Luxembourg, Budapest, Prague, and other European cities. The full tour schedule is here.

Linkin Park formed in California in 1996 and became famous for fusing heavy rock, hip-hop, electronic music, and DJ scratching into a single genre. Their hits include "In the End," "Numb," "One Step Closer," "Faint," and "What I've Done," and their albums include Hybrid Theory, Meteora, and Minutes to Midnight. The band has received several Grammy Awards and built an audience of millions worldwide.
The line-up across their first seven studio albums featured vocalist Chester Bennington and drummer Rob Bourdon. Following Bennington's death in July 2017, the band went on a seven-year hiatus, and Bourdon ultimately left the group. In 2024, the band announced their return with new vocalist Emily Armstrong.
Linkin Park is currently touring on the From Zero World Tour, which launched in September 2024 and continues into 2026. Their new album is also called From Zero. Tickets for the Madrid shows are almost entirely sold out, but returns may become available.

The hugely popular South Korean K-pop group BTS are returning after a three-year break during which members pursued solo projects and completed mandatory military service. The group's popularity rests on several factors: they masterfully blend genres — pop, hip-hop, R&B — and constantly experiment with their sound; their world-class choreography, distinctive visual style, and live performances set them apart; and unlike typical pop content, BTS lyrics have depth — they sing about mental health, self-acceptance, societal pressure, youth, and dreams.
BTS opened Korean music up to Western audiences on a remarkable scale. The group has performed at the Grammys, addressed the UN General Assembly, and filled stadiums worldwide.
BTS is now on a world tour to accompany the release of a new studio album, visiting countries across Asia, Europe, North and South America, and Australia. The tour began in April this year with concerts in Goyang (South Korea) and Tokyo (Japan). A total of 79 concerts are planned, though tickets for the near-term dates are almost entirely gone.
Puro Latino Madrid Fest 2026

This is the fourth edition of this Latin American music festival in Spain, bringing together the best in Latin music, reggaeton, trap, and hip-hop. This year's headline act is Puerto Rican rapper and singer Anuel AA — widely credited as the pioneer of Latin trap — performing as part of his new concert tour Real Hasta La Muerte 2. Over his career, Anuel AA has accumulated hundreds of millions of streams on digital platforms, earned multiple platinum certifications, and won numerous Latin music awards, cementing his status as one of the most popular urban music artists in the world.
Other performers include Morad, Ñengo Flow, Kidd Voodoo, and many more. Last year's festival attracted over 70,000 visitors, and this year the organisers hope to make Puro Latino Madrid Fest the biggest Latin American event in the capital.
The full line-up is available here.
PHotoESPAÑA 2026 — Volver a imaginar

PHotoESPAÑA offers the chance to discover the latest trends in photographic art alongside the newest projects from the world's most celebrated artists. The 29th edition of the festival runs from 13 May to 13 September 2026, presenting a wide range of exhibitions by photographers and visual artists. It is dedicated to experimentation, the exploration of the image's boundaries, and reflections on reality and authority.
The programme is divided into two sections: an official programme and an off-festival programme, each with their own prizes. This year's official section includes more than 40 exhibitions, with the overall festival spread across more than 50 venues — not only in Madrid, but in several other Spanish cities and even other European countries.
One of the festival's headline attractions is Viviane Sassen — the world-renowned Dutch artist and fashion photographer celebrated for her unique visual style, which blends the world of high fashion with surrealist fine art. LUX & UMBRA is the title of her first solo exhibition in Spain, spanning more than three decades of her work.
The full programme is available here.