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2026 FIFA World Cup
19APR

Brussels takes up the fan complaint

3 min read
11:22UTC

The European Commission confirmed on Thursday 28 May that it had received the fan groups' competition complaint against FIFA and would assess it, ending a silence that had run past the procedural deadline.

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Key takeaway

Brussels logging the complaint gives FIFA a third pricing front it cannot quietly outlast.

The European Commission, the European Union's competition authority, confirmed on Thursday 28 May that it had received the complaint filed by Football Supporters Europe and Euroconsumers against FIFA under Article 102 of the EU treaty, the provision that bars a dominant firm from abusing its market position, and said it would assess the case 1. Brussels had let the procedural deadline pass without registering a case number, and that quiet had itself been the story when Lowdown reported it on Monday 11 May . The acknowledgement ends it.

The Commission has not opened a formal investigation yet. It has agreed only to look at whether the complaint clears the bar for a probe, a screening step that can run for months and end in either a case or a dismissal. What it cannot now do is leave the file in limbo, because a logged acknowledgement starts a record the complainants and the press can track. For FIFA the change is that a regulator it could previously treat as silent has put itself on the clock.

The acknowledgement matters most for how it stacks the pressure. FIFA now faces three pricing fronts at once: the subpoenas issued in New York and New Jersey the same week, the Washington DC consumer probe opened in April, and this EU competition file. Each turns on a different legal theory in a different jurisdiction, which means FIFA cannot settle one and close the others.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The European Union has rules that stop powerful companies abusing their market position to harm consumers. One of them, Article 102 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, applies when an organisation is so dominant that it can set prices without facing real competition. In March, a fan group called Football Supporters Europe and a consumer organisation called Euroconsumers filed a formal complaint saying FIFA broke this rule by raising World Cup ticket prices unfairly. The EU had 30 days to formally acknowledge the complaint, but missed that deadline. On 28 May the Commission confirmed it has the complaint and will look at it. That does not mean it has found anything wrong; it has only agreed to assess the case. A full investigation and any enforcement action would take years.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Formal Commission acknowledgement converts the complaint from a political communication into a live regulatory file, requiring FIFA to preserve relevant documents.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    If the Commission opens a formal Article 102 investigation and defines a World Cup ticket market, it would create a framework applicable to every future major sports event hosted in EU territory.

    Long term · Suggested
  • Risk

    A pre-tournament enforcement move, theoretically open to the Commission through interim measures, remains very unlikely given its reluctance to intervene in a live sporting event.

    Immediate · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #12 · Squads land, subpoenas follow

ESPN· 29 May 2026
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