Argentina •
Argentine cumbia •
Cumbia villera, a subgenre of Argentine cumbia born in the slums •
Cumbia santafesina, a musical genre that emerged in Santa Fe, Argentina
Bolivia • Bolivian cumbia
Chile •
Chilean cumbia •
New Chilean cumbia Colombia •
Colombian cumbia •
Bullerengue •
Porro •
Cumbia vallenata, a fusion genre that mixes elements of cumbia and vallenato, both of Colombian origin •
Merecumbé, a fusion genre that mixes Colombian cumbia and Dominican merengue
Costa Rica •
Costa Rican cumbia Ecuador •
Ecuadorian cumbia •
Turbocumbia El Salvador •
Salvadoran cumbia •
Cumbia marimbera, a subgenre of Cumbia that is widely popular in Southern Mexico and Central America
Guatemala •
Guatemalan cumbia •
Cumbia marimbera, a subgenre of Cumbia that is widely popular in Southern Mexico and Central America
Honduras •
Honduran cumbia •
Cumbia marimbera, a subgenre of Cumbia that is widely popular in Southern Mexico and Central America
Mexico •
Mexican cumbia •
Southeast cumbia or chunchaca, a variant of Mexican cumbia •
Northern Mexican cumbia or cumbia norteña, a variant of Mexican cumbia, developed in northeastern states Mexico and some parts of Texas (former Mexican territory) •
Cumbia sonidera, a variant of Mexican cumbia, popular in
Mexico City and central Mexico •
Cumbia marimbera, a subgenre of Cumbia that is widely popular in Southern Mexico and Central America •
Cumbia pegassera, a variant of Mexican cumbia that is primarily popular in Northern Mexico and the United States. •
Tecnocumbia, a subgenre of cumbia that combines elements of cumbia and electronic music. •
Cumbia rebajada, a subculture originating in
Monterrey, but popular worldwide, that uses significantly slowed-down versions of accordion-based Colombian cumbia records.
Nicaragua •
Nicaraguan cumbia •
Cumbia chinandegana •
Cumbia marimbera, a subgenre of Cumbia that is widely popular in Southern Mexico and Central America
Panama •
Panamanian cumbia; A subgenre that involves Panamanian folk dance and the cumbia musical genre, developed by enslaved people of African descent during the expansion of Spanish rule in Panama and later syncretized with American Indigenous and European cultural elements.
Paraguay •
Cachaca, a fusion of cumbia sonidera, norteña, vallenato and cumbia villera
Peru •
Peruvian cumbia also known as
chicha or psychedelic cumbia • also known as Andean cumbia or Andean tropical music •
Amazonian cumbia or jungle cumbia, a popular subgenre of Peruvian cumbia, created in the Peruvian Amazon •
Cumbia piurana, a set of styles and sub-genres linked to cumbia that have been produced in Piura, a region on the north Peruvian coast, since the mid-1960s •
Cumbia sanjuanera, a subgenre of cumbia piurana •
Cumbia sureña, a subgenre of Peruvian cumbia, a fusion of Andean cumbia and techno
United States •
American cumbia •
Tex-Mex cumbia •
Tejano or Tex-Mex music, a popular music style that fuses elements of cumbia with other genres of Mexican and American origin that developed in Texas and Mexico in the 20th century. •
Cumbia rap, a variant of cumbia that is popular in the United States and Latin America that includes elements of hip-hop and rap
Uruguay •
Uruguayan cumbia Venezuela •
Venezuelan cumbia == Footnotes ==