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2026 FIFA World Cup
11MAY

World Cup resale prices fall 37%

3 min read
10:30UTC

Group-stage World Cup tickets on the secondary market are down roughly 37% from 60 days out, with the Bay Area off 59%, as New York and New Jersey attorneys general press FIFA over MetLife pricing and the European Commission logs a competition complaint.

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Key takeaway

FIFA's 500-million-requests defence for its pricing is contradicted by a 37% resale collapse six days before kickoff.

Cheapest group-stage resale prices have fallen roughly 37% against where they sat 60 days out, with the San Francisco Bay Area down 59% and Canada vs Bosnia-Herzegovina down 36% from face value 1. Group-stage tickets on StubHub start from $162. Value held only for knockouts and any Argentina or Brazil match, where resale supply stayed thin.

Infantino cited 500 million ticket requests to justify the record dynamic pricing . The slide is concentrated in exactly the group-stage tier that figure was meant to support, which means the demand FIFA banked on has not converted to sales before a ball is kicked. Empty seats in low-demand fixtures would show on a broadcast reaching 6 billion viewers.

StubHub and SeatGeek have denied collusion allegations raised on social media; the claim is unproven and the platforms reject it. The legal exposure runs through the price data, not that denial. New York Attorney General Letitia James and New Jersey Attorney General Jennifer Davenport subpoenaed FIFA on 27 May over MetLife ticketing , after average prices rose 34% across 90 of 104 matches 2. The European Commission confirmed receipt of a separate Article 102 competition complaint on 28 May . FIFA has answered neither in public.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Resale ticket prices are what you pay on sites like StubHub when you buy from someone who already bought a ticket and wants to sell it. If lots of people are trying to sell and few want to buy, prices fall. World Cup group-stage resale prices fell 37% compared to what they were two months ago. In the San Francisco Bay Area, where team interest is lower, they fell 59%. Meanwhile, the state legal officers of New York and New Jersey (the Attorneys General) have sent legal demands; called subpoenas; to FIFA, asking for documents about how they priced tickets to the eight matches at MetLife Stadium, including the Final. They allege FIFA created new expensive ticket categories after people had already bought tickets, driving prices up unfairly. The European Union has also received a formal competition complaint on similar grounds. StubHub and SeatGeek, the main resale platforms, denied any allegation that they coordinated to manipulate prices; those claims circulated on social media but have not been proved.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

FIFA's pricing model for 2026 was constructed around the 500-million-requests metric Infantino cited publicly on 6 May . That figure conflates unique ticket requests with individuals: someone who requested 12 tickets for family members counts as 12 requests. The published figure systematically overstated true unique-buyer demand, and FIFA's dynamic pricing algorithm was calibrated against an inflated demand signal.

The post-sales addition of 'Front Category 1' and 'Front Category 2' premium tiers extracted additional revenue from buyers who had already purchased Category 1 tickets at a lower price, by reassigning the best seats to higher-priced new tiers. This is the specific conduct the NY/NJ AG subpoena documents ; it is distinct from the general resale collapse, which is a secondary-market consequence.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The resale price collapse hands the NY/NJ AG subpoena file concrete secondary-market data contradicting FIFA's 500m-requests demand defence, potentially accelerating a consent decree negotiation.

    Short term · Reported
  • Consequence

    Visibly empty seats at group-stage matches; which resale data at minus-37% suggests are a real risk; will generate broadcaster-level coverage damaging FIFA's case that demand justified its pricing.

    Immediate · Reported
  • Precedent

    If the European Commission accepts the Article 102 TFEU complaint as substantive, it will be the first time EU competition law has been applied directly to World Cup ticketing, establishing a regulatory precedent for all future tournaments with European fan bases.

    Long term · Reported
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