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2026 FIFA World Cup
11MAY

Ticket subpoena meets a healed market

4 min read
10:30UTC

The New York and New Jersey attorneys general subpoenaed FIFA over ticket pricing while resale prices were falling; one matchday later the same market has inverted into triple-digit spikes.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

The market the attorneys general subpoenaed has already corrected itself, undercutting a case built on falling prices.

The New York and New Jersey attorneys general subpoenaed FIFA over World Cup ticket pricing while the resale market was in freefall, and that investigation now runs against contradictory evidence 1. A subpoena is a compulsory demand for documents, here aimed at how FIFA priced and sold its inventory. The consumer-harm argument was built on a market that sat below face value on 76 of 78 United States fixtures, down 37% from peak, a week before kickoff . Low-demand fixtures had been trading at or below their $120 face value .

One full matchday reversed it. Ticketdata.com records almost every remaining match rising, several marquee fixtures by more than 100% since opening day 2. United States v Turkey, the 25 June fixture at Los Angeles Stadium, is up 109% to a $2,132 minimum (about £1,700 a seat); Belgium v Iran is up 98% to $823; England v Croatia rose 102%; a round-of-32 tie at Levi's Stadium is up 136%. More than half of the 92 remaining matches now carry a get-in price (the cheapest available resale ticket) above $1,000.

Resale prices track perceived scarcity, not face value. Before kickoff the market priced empty-stadium risk and bulk-dumped corporate inventory; the matchday-1 spectacle, and a 4-1 United States win over Paraguay, replaced that fear with organic demand. A regulator examining dynamic pricing has now watched the same seats swing from below face value to triple-digit premiums in a fortnight. The attorneys general argue inflated pricing against evidence that those seats traded below face value seven days earlier, which complicates any single-snapshot damages claim.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Before the World Cup started, ticket prices on the secondary market had actually fallen below the original face value that FIFA charged. This looked bad for FIFA, and the attorneys general of New York and New Jersey launched an investigation into whether FIFA had unfairly inflated ticket prices. But once the tournament opened and the United States won their first match 4-1, fans suddenly wanted tickets much more. Prices shot back up, with some matches now costing over $2,000 just to get in. The legal question is whether this rebound helps FIFA's defence. Consumer protection lawyers say the investigation can still examine how FIFA set prices in the first place, before speculators ever got involved.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Dynamic pricing, as FIFA introduced it for 2026, creates a structural incentive for speculative over-purchase. When face values are set at premium (the cheapest final ticket at $4,185), the rational speculator calculates whether the gap between face value and expected secondary-market price justifies bulk purchase. That gap was positive in early 2026 when demand indicators were strong, then went negative as over-purchase pressure accumulated.

The secondary collapse before matchday one reflected the unwinding of that speculation, not a collapse in genuine demand. FIFA's dynamic pricing model, unlike a pure auction, does not clear the speculative overhang before sale; it merely resets official prices, leaving the secondary market to do the clearing work. The AG investigation launched during the clearing phase, when secondary prices were at their nadir, and must now contend with post-clearing data.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The AG subpoena investigation must now reframe its theory of harm from secondary-market inflation to primary-market pricing architecture; the case weakens but does not collapse.

  • Opportunity

    FIFA can use post-matchday resale data as a public defence of its dynamic pricing model, pre-empting European Commission Article 102 proceedings that depend partly on a consumer harm narrative.

First Reported In

Update #21 · Three records fall in one afternoon

Yahoo Sports· 17 Jun 2026
Read original
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