Mon Laferte Expands North American Touring With 28-Date Live Nation Run
Mon Laferte is taking her Femme Fatale era deeper into North America. The Chilean-Mexican singer-songwriter and producer has announced a 28-date U.S. and Canada run promoted by Live Nation, beginning July 24 at Place Bell in Laval, Quebec, and closing Nov. 7 at Kia Forum in Los Angeles, with stops including Miami Beach, Orlando, Austin, New York, San Jose, and Seattle. Tickets begin with a Citi presale on March 24 before the general on-sale opens March 27 through Live Nation.
The tour announcement lands at a moment when Laferte is doing more than extending an album cycle. It arrives alongside her new Spotify Sessions EQUAL Edition, a five-song live audiovisual release that reworks material from FEMME FATALE with an all-women ensemble and a jazz-forward performance approach. Spotify said the project marks a Sessions first, with Laferte serving as both artist and musical director while filmmaker Magaly Ugarte handled the visual direction.
That matters because FEMME FATALE does not read like a conventional late-career polish move. For Laferte, it feels more like a deliberate sharpening of identity. The album’s noir tone, cabaret drama, jazz inflections, and bolero undertones push her further away from the easier boxes often applied to Latin pop stars and closer to a lane she has been building for years: theatrical, emotionally volatile, visually authored, and resistant to genre simplification. The new Sessions release doubles down on that positioning instead of softening it for broader streaming appeal.
The routing also suggests scale. Rather than limiting the run to heritage Latin strongholds, the tour moves through a wide North American footprint that includes Quebec and Toronto, East Coast theater markets like Boston and Washington, Florida dates in St. Petersburg, Miami Beach, and Orlando, and a large Western finish that culminates at Kia Forum. That kind of map signals confidence in both ticket demand and audience breadth, especially for an artist whose catalog moves fluidly between alternative Latin, bolero, rock, pop, and jazz language.
It also follows a high-visibility stretch for Laferte beyond the tour circuit. Earlier this year, she headlined at Viña del Mar and received the festival’s Platinum Seagull, the event’s highest honor. She also opened Willy Chavarria’s Paris runway presentation with a live performance of “Femme Fatale,” placing her inside one of fashion’s more politically and culturally charged spaces. Together, those moments show how Laferte’s current phase is operating on multiple levels at once: concert artist, auteur, and cultural symbol.
From an industry standpoint, this is one of the more interesting live announcements in the Latin market right now because it does not follow the dominant playbook. While much of the touring conversation continues to be driven by urbano, música mexicana, and large-scale nostalgia packages, Laferte is expanding a North American run built on authorship, musicianship, and concept. That does not make the move smaller; it makes it more distinctive. In a touring economy increasingly shaped by identity and experience, Laferte’s brand of theatrical intimacy has become its own commercial proposition.
There is also a broader signal here for women in Latin music. Her involvement in Spotify’s EQUAL program is not just a branding add-on; in this case, it lines up with the creative structure of the release itself. The all-female ensemble and Laferte’s role in producing and directing the musical vision give the Spotify Sessions project weight beyond visibility language. It presents feminine authorship as a working method, not just a message.
That is why this tour feels less like maintenance and more like consolidation. Laferte is not trying to reintroduce herself to the market. She is formalizing a fully realized era and proving there is room in the North American Latin touring business for artists whose appeal is built on interpretation, staging, and emotional risk rather than algorithm-first singles alone. In career terms, this looks like a stabilizing and elevating move at the same time: bigger rooms, stronger cultural framing, and a clearer definition of what a Mon Laferte live cycle now means.
Fans across North America will be watching how that vision translates in full arena and theater settings this summer and fall, especially after the cinematic tone of the Spotify Sessions release and the high-art styling of the FEMME FATALEcampaign. The next test is whether this era becomes one of Laferte’s most enduring live statements, not just one of her most visually cohesive ones.
For readers tracking Latin music touring, artist evolution, and the next phase of Mon Laferte’s Femme Fatale run, keep it locked to LaMezcla.com and the LaMezcla Music App for ongoing coverage, updates, and discovery.