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2026 FIFA World Cup
10APR

Infantino cites 500m requests, skips the 163% rise

4 min read
16:41UTC

FIFA president Gianni Infantino defended World Cup ticket prices in Spain on 6 May, citing over 500 million ticket requests against fewer than 50 million for 2018 and 2022 combined; he did not address the 163% rise in the final-match ceiling.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

FIFA's demand-side defence omits the supply-side number: the final-match ceiling has risen 163%.

On 6 May, Gianni Infantino defended World Cup ticket pricing at a conference in Spain. FIFA, he said, had received over 500 million ticket requests for 2026 against fewer than 50 million combined for 2018 and 2022, and 25% of group-stage tickets sit under $300. He framed resale at "more than double" face value as market-driven. Yet the defence does not address the 163% rise in the official ceiling for a final-match Front Category 1 ticket since the closure of FIFA's "final" sales window . 1

The demand figure and the supply figure point opposite directions. 69 Members of Congress wrote to FIFA in March demanding lower prices, and Football Supporters Europe called the structure "extortionate", up to seven times higher than 2022 Qatar . FIFA introduced dynamic pricing for the first time in World Cup history; the cheapest final ticket has moved from $4,185 at launch to $10,990 by mid-April. The 30% Commission FIFA takes on its own resale marketplace runs on every transaction at the new ceiling.

Infantino paired a denominator FIFA did not set with a numerator FIFA chose not to mention. 500 million requests describe demand the market generated; the 163% ceiling rise reflects supply decisions FIFA's own pricing committee made between launch and mid-April. A reader who hears only the 500m figure cannot judge whether FIFA's pricing tracks demand or sets it.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

World Cup tickets cost far more in 2026 than in previous tournaments. Gianni Infantino, who runs FIFA, said in Spain on 6 May that this is because demand is so high. FIFA received 500 million ticket requests for this tournament, compared to about 50 million for the previous two combined. What Infantino did not mention is that the most expensive final tickets went up in price by 163% since FIFA's own 'final' sales window closed. A front-row final ticket now costs roughly $10,990. FIFA also earns a 30% commission every time a ticket changes hands on its own resale platform.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The Football Supporters Europe Article 102 complaint (ID:1458) and the MEP question filed by Brando Benifei directly reference the ceiling rise Infantino avoided addressing; if DG COMP assigns a case number, the 163% rise becomes the central exhibit.

  • Precedent

    FIFA's 2026 dynamic pricing model, if unchallenged, sets the commercial template for the 2030 and 2034 World Cups; the absence of an EU competition ruling before kickoff effectively allows the model to run its full commercial cycle.

First Reported In

Update #10 · Tehran names the players

Al Jazeera· 11 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Infantino cites 500m requests, skips the 163% rise
FIFA's demand-side defence sidesteps the supply-side figure: a final-match Front Category 1 ticket has risen 163% since the 'final' sales window closed.
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