Fans Are Shocked by Bad Bunny’s Unrecognizable Met Gala Transformation

Bad Bunny has never been a stranger to reinvention. From chart-topping albums to genre-bending visuals, the Puerto Rican artist treats identity like a medium, something to shape, shift, and challenge. But the Met Gala demands a different kind of statement, and he certainly delivered with an entrance that had everyone doing a double-take and stopping them mid-scroll.

Bad Bunny transforms into an old man at Met Gala 2026, fans react

Bad Bunny has traded youth for artistry at the 2026 Met Gala, debuting a silvered transformation that has left fans speechless.

The DtMF hitmaker arrived at the star-studded event aged decades beyond his years. With prosthetics adding wrinkles, sun spots, and sagging skin to his face and hands, and his hair and beard turned white, the transformation was uncanny.

As reported by Vogue, the style-forward rapper looked sharply refined in a black tuxedo featuring a statement bow created in collaboration with Zara.

When asked to break down the inspiration behind his look, Bad Bunny told E! News’ La La Anthony on the red carpet what drove his Met Gala transformation. “Part of my life (is) always try to do something different and and this day of the Met is a perfect day to you explore and be creative and express yourself in a different way. So that’s, that’s what I’m doing tonight,” he explained.

When asked how long it took him to create his look, the MONACO singer joked, “53 years, exactly, 53 years.”

Fan reactions poured in on X (formerly Twitter) within moments of Bad Bunny hitting the Met steps. “He looks surprised to himself as well,” tweeted a fan. “This is crazy man,” echoed another. “It’s like I traveled to the future..,” read yet another X comment.

This, however, isn’t Bad Bunny’s first daring Met Gala statement. He has previously arrived at the event in gender-bending ensembles that often pay tribute to his Puerto Rican roots.

In 2025, he wore a chocolate-brown Prada suit paired with gold-crystal-adorned gloves and a woven pava hat made from palm leaves, a direct nod to his heritage.

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