Football Supporters Europe (FSE) and Euroconsumers filed a formal competition complaint with the European Commission on 24 March, alleging FIFA abuses its monopoly over World Cup ticketing in violation of Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union 1. The complaint identifies six specific abuses: excessive pricing, bait advertising of $60 tickets that represent roughly 1–2% of available inventory , uncapped Dynamic pricing, opacity on seat locations, artificial urgency tactics, and 15% resale fees charged to both buyer and seller 2. No fan organisation has previously used EU treaty law against football's governing body.
The pricing data in the complaint is specific. The cheapest openly available final ticket costs $4,185 — seven times the equivalent at Qatar 2022 ($595) and 42 times the cheapest Euro 2024 final seat (€95). On FIFA's own resale marketplace, where dynamic pricing debuted for this tournament , FSE documented a single Category 3 final seat listed at $143,750 — more than 41 times its $3,450 face value 3. FIFA takes 30% of every resale transaction 4. Some tickets rose 25% between sales phases with no published cap or methodology.
Article 102 prohibits dominant undertakings from imposing unfair purchase prices or applying dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions. FIFA's position is structurally analogous to cases the Commission has brought against Google and Apple — a single entity controlling access to a product with no substitute. No rival organisation sells World Cup tickets. FSE's Ronan Evain said FIFA's "failure to engage stakeholders has left us no option but to file" 5. Euroconsumers' Marco Scialdone accused FIFA of "treating football like a private luxury by exploiting its monopoly" 6. The remedies sought are specific: a price freeze at December 2025 levels for the April 2026 sales phase and mandatory publication of seat availability 48 hours before each window opens.
The complaint arrives in a politically charged environment. Sixty-nine US Members of Congress already wrote to FIFA demanding lower prices . EU sports commissioner Glenn Micallef publicly criticised FIFA president Gianni Infantino after a Brussels meeting produced no concrete steps on fan safety or access . Whether the Commission accepts the complaint is discretionary, but a refusal to investigate would leave the institution exposed to the charge that it applies competition law to technology firms while granting sporting monopolies a pass. If it proceeds, FIFA faces its first formal defence of ticketing economics under EU competition law — in a jurisdiction where fines can reach 10% of global turnover.
