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Perreo and Reggaeton Dance

The danced culture of a Puerto Rican popular music

Cultural context2 min read12 citations

Perreo stands as the principal social dance associated with reggaeton, a form of popular dance music that took shape in Puerto Rico after emerging from the Spanish-language reggae scene of Panama in the late 1980s.[1] Puerto Rican artists came to dominate and popularize the form from the early 1990s onward, and the culture surrounding the genre encompassed its own distinct dance styles.[2] Within that culture perreo, also known as sandungueo, emerged as the most recognizable movement style, distinguished by its overtly sensual character.[3]

The dance cannot be separated from the musical lineage that produced it. Reggaeton evolved out of dancehall while absorbing elements of hip hop and of Latin American and Caribbean music, and its vocals combine toasting or rapping with singing, generally delivered in Spanish.[4] Perreo's physical grammar mirrors that hybridity, for its movement is heavily indebted to Jamaican dancehall while bearing the further imprint of salsa, merengue, and other Latin rhythms.[5] The result is a dance that reads as both Caribbean and broadly pan-Latin, anchored to the percussive pulse that defines the genre.

Geography and reception shaped the dance's trajectory as much as its choreography did. Across the Spanish-speaking Caribbean, reggaeton ranks among the genres of widest popular appeal, and that region is where perreo first circulated most densely.[6] By the 2010s the genre had grown markedly throughout Latin America while gaining acceptance in mainstream Western music circles, carrying its associated dance practices to audiences far larger than its early club scene.[7]

The genre's leading figures illustrate how perreo's musical vehicle traveled. The Puerto Rican singer and producer Don Omar, frequently called the "king of reggaeton," is counted among the most influential exponents in the genre's history, his significance owing in part to his role in carrying reggaeton toward a global audience.[8] His commercial reach, with record sales estimated near seventy million copies, together with his recognition by Billboard and Rolling Stone as a legend of the form, underscores the scale at which the music—and the dance attached to it—spread.[9]

Later artists extended that reach into new markets and registers. Bad Bunny is widely described as among the greatest Latino rappers, and his rise to prominence in 2016 helped Spanish-language music achieve broad global reach.[12] A Puerto Rican performer credited with bringing Spanish-language rap to mainstream global prominence, he headlined the halftime show of Super Bowl LX in February 2026, a marker of how far reggaeton-adjacent music had reached into the largest Western stages.[10] In Spain, the singer Bad Gyal built her career on a fusion of reggaeton, dancehall, and trap, evidence that the genre and its danced culture had taken root well beyond the Caribbean basin.[11]

References

  1. 1.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  2. 2.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  3. 3.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  4. 4.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  5. 5.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  6. 6.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  7. 7.Reggaeton - Wikipediaen.wikipedia.org
  8. 8.Don OmarWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  9. 9.Don OmarWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  10. 10.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  11. 11.Bad GyalWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia
  12. 12.Bad BunnyWikipedia contributors, Wikipedia

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APA

Bailar Editorial Team. (2026). Perreo and Reggaeton Dance. Bailar Biblioteca. Retrieved June 18, 2026, from https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/cultural-context/perreo-and-reggaeton-dance

MLA

Bailar Editorial Team. “Perreo and Reggaeton Dance.” Bailar Biblioteca, 2026, bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/cultural-context/perreo-and-reggaeton-dance. Accessed 18 June 2026.

Chicago

Bailar Editorial Team. “Perreo and Reggaeton Dance.” Bailar Biblioteca. Accessed June 18, 2026. https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/cultural-context/perreo-and-reggaeton-dance.

BibTeX

@misc{bailar-reggaeton-perreo-and-reggaeton-dance, author = {{Bailar Editorial Team}}, title = {{Perreo and Reggaeton Dance}}, year = {2026}, howpublished = {Bailar Biblioteca}, url = {https://bailar.site/biblioteca/encyclopedia/reggaeton/cultural-context/perreo-and-reggaeton-dance}, note = {Accessed: 2026-06-18} }

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