FIFA's 'Front Category' tiers were withheld from the original Category 1 allocation, then released at double the price after the 'fourth and final' sales phase had closed. Category 1 holders who bought seats described as 'the highest-priced, located primarily in the lower tier' found themselves downgraded in practice, with corners and behind-goal positions assigned.
This is the third distinct consumer harm in three weeks: the 1 April system crash , the eight-hour queues , and now post-sale tier manipulation. Each adds to the evidence file in the FSE/Euroconsumers Article 102 complaint , which originally cited uncapped dynamic pricing .
FIFA's position, that seat maps were 'indicative,' is legally significant because EU consumer protection law evaluates what a reasonable buyer would have understood at the point of purchase. FIFA's own September documentation described Category 1 as 'the highest-priced seats, located primarily in the lower tier.' Creating a superior tier from withheld inventory after sale is closer to unfair commercial practice under Directive 2005/29/EC than simple dynamic pricing.
The European Commission has still not formally acknowledged the complaint. Sixty-two days before kickoff, FIFA has no regulator capable of imposing real-time constraints.
