
Brando Benifei
Italian MEP and S&D internal market coordinator leading European Parliament scrutiny of FIFA ticket pricing.
Last refreshed: 11 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Can Benifei's parliamentary question convert a competition complaint into binding EU law before the World Cup?
Timeline for Brando Benifei
Filed MEP question E-001336/2026 on EU response to FIFA pricing with 24 colleagues
2026 FIFA World Cup: Brussels gives no case number on Article 102 fileMentioned in: DG COMP's 23 April acknowledgement clock
2026 FIFA World CupMentioned in: KCUR documents Kansas City seat reservation
2026 FIFA World CupLed 24 MEPs in submitting written question E-001336/2026 proposing Digital Fairness Act remedy for FIFA pricing
2026 FIFA World Cup: 24 MEPs name Digital Fairness Act- Who is Brando Benifei and what is he doing about FIFA ticket prices?
- Benifei is an Italian S&D MEP who led 24 MEPs in formally questioning the European Commission on whether FIFA's Dynamic pricing and dark patterns breach EU competition law, naming the Digital Fairness Act as a possible legislative fix.Source: European Parliament
- What is parliamentary question E-001336/2026?
- A written question submitted on 31 March 2026 by 24 MEPs led by Brando Benifei asking the European Commission whether FIFA's World Cup ticket pricing breaches Article 102 TFEU and whether the Digital Fairness Act should ban Dynamic pricing for live events.Source: European Parliament
- Could the Digital Fairness Act stop FIFA dynamic pricing?
- MEPs are proposing that the Digital Fairness Act, currently in negotiation, include an explicit ban on Dynamic pricing for live events, which would apply to FIFA and other major sports bodies selling tickets in the EU.Source: European Parliament
- Who is Brando Benifei and what is he doing about FIFA tickets?
- Benifei is an Italian S&D MEP and internal market committee coordinator. He led 24 MEPs in submitting question E-001336/2026 in March 2026, asking the European Commission whether FIFA's World Cup Dynamic pricing breaches Article 102 TFEU and whether the Digital Fairness Act should ban it.Source: Lowdown
- What is MEP question E-001336/2026 about?
- E-001336/2026 is a written question submitted by 24 MEPs led by Brando Benifei asking whether FIFA's World Cup ticketing breaches Article 102 TFEU and whether the Digital Fairness Act should ban Dynamic pricing for live events. Unanswered as of 11 May 2026.Source: Lowdown
- What is the Digital Fairness Act and how does it relate to FIFA?
- The Digital Fairness Act is a proposed EU regulation targeting dark patterns and unfair commercial practices online. MEPs led by Benifei are pushing for it to include a ban on Dynamic pricing for live events, using FIFA's World Cup ticket scandal as the primary evidence.Source: Lowdown
Background
Brando Benifei is an Italian Member of the European Parliament representing the Socialists and Democrats (S&D) group, serving as the group's coordinator on the internal market committee. On 31 March 2026 he led 24 MEPs in submitting written question E-001336/2026 to the European Commission, asking whether FIFA's Dynamic pricing and dark patterns breach Article 102 TFEU and the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive, and whether the forthcoming Digital Fairness Act should include a ban on dynamic pricing for live events. The question remained unanswered by DG COMP as of 19 April.
Benifei is a Florentine politician, born 1985, first elected to the European Parliament in 2014. He has served multiple terms and built a profile on digital regulation and consumer rights. As S&D coordinator on the internal market committee, he has direct institutional standing over the Digital Fairness Act negotiations and the broader EU platform-regulation agenda.
The E-001336/2026 question is part of a coordinated legislative push that spans the Article 102 complaint filed by Football Supporters Europe and Euroconsumers on 24 March. By naming the Digital Fairness Act specifically, Benifei is attempting to convert a competition-law complaint into primary legislation — a FAR more durable remedy than a Commission enforcement action.
As of 11 May 2026, question E-001336/2026 remains unanswered. DG COMP has issued no case number on the complaint Benifei's question references, and the 30-day acknowledgment deadline passed on 23 April. The legislative pathway via the Digital Fairness Act remains the live institutional track.