Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
2026 FIFA World Cup
24MAR

DG COMP's 23 April acknowledgement clock

2 min read
19:01UTC

Four days until the European Commission's 30-day window closes without a case number. A spokesperson's line is that the filing will be assessed 'under standard procedures'.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

The 23 April window tests whether DG COMP logs the complaint formally or lets it lapse.

The European Commission's 30-day deadline to formally acknowledge the Football Supporters Europe (FSE) and Euroconsumers Article 102 complaint, filed on 24 March , closes on 23 April. As of 19 April, no DG COMP case number has been registered. A Commission spokesperson said the filing will be assessed 'under standard procedures' and stopped there.

DG COMP is the Commission directorate that runs EU competition cases; a case number is the procedural marker that moves a complaint from the inbox to the queue. Without one, the complaint is not yet formally on the register, which is what makes the 23 April date a test rather than a formality. If the Commission clears the window, it signals the file has crossed the administrative threshold for substantive review. Silence past the window does not close the file, but it puts the Commission's calendar publicly behind Brussels' own political calendar around the tournament.

Article 102 enforcement against a sports governing body requires a dominance-and-market test Brussels has not previously run in court. That legal gap is precisely why the 24 MEPs led by Brando Benifei have also named the Digital Fairness Act as a parallel remedy, giving Brussels two routes to act. The DC-based consumer protection investigation opened alongside the 13 April final-match ticket ceiling adds a second jurisdiction; the 30-day window therefore lands as the first publicly visible test of which regulator moves first.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When a formal competition complaint is filed with the European Commission : the EU's executive body : the Commission has 30 days to acknowledge it officially by assigning a case number. Football Supporters Europe and Euroconsumers filed their complaint on 24 March. The 30-day deadline falls on 23 April. As of 19 April, no case number has appeared. A spokesperson said the filing will be assessed 'under standard procedures' : which is the Commission's way of neither confirming nor denying it is taking the matter seriously. Missing the 30-day window does not close the file, but it does mean there will be no emergency order freezing FIFA's prices before the April ticket sales close.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The Commission's reluctance to open a case reflects a structural problem with EU competition law applied to sport. Article 165 TFEU explicitly requires EU institutions to take account of the 'specific nature of sport' when applying EU law, and the Court of Justice of the European Union's 2023 European Super League judgment : while broadly affirming that competition law applies to sport : left open significant carve-outs for rules that are 'inherent and proportionate' to the proper functioning of sporting competition.

A DG COMP case against FIFA's ticketing would require the Commission to argue that dynamic pricing for a global sports event is not 'inherent' to that event's commercial structure, an argument without precedent.

The market-definition problem compounds this. BEUC, the European consumer advocacy organisation, has noted in its submissions on the Digital Fairness Act that defining the 'relevant market' for World Cup tickets requires establishing that FIFA faces no meaningful competitive constraint : which it does not, as it is the only seller of the specific product, but establishing that formally requires legal argument the Commission's competition lawyers have not made for a governing body before.

First Reported In

Update #8 · Three clocks running against kickoff

European Parliament· 19 Apr 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
DG COMP's 23 April acknowledgement clock
Brussels has three working days to log the Article 102 complaint formally before the procedural window lapses; silence past the deadline does not close the file but signals the queue is longer than the political calendar.
Different Perspectives
Brazilian Football Confederation
Brazilian Football Confederation
Carlo Ancelotti's CBF named a 55-man preliminary squad on 9 May including Neymar, absent since October 2023, with the final 26 announced 18 May. Rodrygo and Militão were ruled out; the inclusion of Neymar serves both the coaching staff's tactical options and CBF's commercial interests in the home-continent cycle.
Confederation of African Football
Confederation of African Football
CAF issued no public statement on the $15,000 visa bond affecting five qualified African nations, named by Al Jazeera on 5 May. Per BBC Africa Sport, CAF privately encouraged federations to use bilateral diplomatic channels rather than issue a collective protest, reflecting the body's institutional dependency on FIFA's commercial framework.
Giovanni Malagò / Serie A
Giovanni Malagò / Serie A
Malagò reached 48% confirmed FIGC assembly bloc on 10 May after Lega B and Lega Pro signalled support, driven by Serie A clubs' need for parliamentary access to three debt-reduction reforms. A pre-vote majority before the 13 May declaration deadline would make the 22 June election ceremonial.
Football Supporters Europe / Euroconsumers
Football Supporters Europe / Euroconsumers
The Article 102 TFEU complaint filed on 24 March remains unacknowledged by DG COMP 18 days past the procedural deadline; MEP Brando Benifei and 24 colleagues filed a parliamentary question E-001336/2026 demanding an explanation from the Commission.
Human Rights Watch
Human Rights Watch
HRW's 11 May deadline for host cities to publish rights action plans passed with 12 of 16 cities non-compliant. HRW disputes FIFA's position that internal submission satisfies the transparency requirement, arguing fans cannot read what protections their city have committed to.
UNITE HERE Local 11
UNITE HERE Local 11
Filed NLRB and California AG complaints naming FIFA on 8 May, describing a SoFi Stadium strike as 'pretty realistic'. The filings follow five weeks of FIFA non-response to its April letter and test whether a Swiss event organiser can be bound by US employment and privacy law through its licensee chain.