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2026 FIFA World Cup
19APR

FIFA's Final Ticket Window Crashes on Opening

2 min read
11:22UTC

FIFA's fourth and final ticket sales phase opened on 1 April at 11:00 EDT and immediately failed; fans were routed into the wrong queue and faced waits exceeding 90 minutes. FIFA's response was to say the links were 'functioning properly' without explaining the queue failures.

SportAssessed
Key takeaway

FIFA's ticket crash hands FSE the consumer harm evidence their EU complaint was built around.

FIFA's fourth and final ticket sales phase launched on 1 April 2026 at 11:00 EDT and crashed on opening. Fans were directed into the wrong queue, labelled 'PMA late qualifier supporters,' and faced waits exceeding 90 minutes; WFAA Dallas reported fans still stuck in line at 14:30 local time. FIFA's only public response was to say the links were 'functioning properly,' without acknowledging the misdirected queue or explaining the delays.

Football Supporters Europe and Euroconsumers filed a formal EU Article 102 competition complaint against FIFA on 24 March, eight days before this window opened . FSE had specifically demanded a price freeze and transparency measures before any further sales. Neither happened. April 1st's crash now gives FSE concrete consumer harm evidence from the exact window they asked to be paused. Dynamic pricing, the cause of the original complaint , remained in operation throughout.

Neither FIFA nor the European Commission has responded to the outstanding complaint. Two institutional bodies are waiting for the governing body to engage, and FIFA's public posture during the crash suggests no engagement is coming. Fans seeking the last available tickets received queue misdirection and a 90-minute wait; the tournament sold out behind a system that could not handle day-one demand.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Buying a ticket to the World Cup is done through FIFA's own website. On 1 April, they opened the last window to buy tickets before the tournament. The website crashed immediately. Fans were routed into the wrong queue and waited over 90 minutes without explanation. FIFA's public response was to say the links were working fine, without explaining the wait. A week earlier, a group of European football fans' organisations had filed a legal complaint against FIFA over their ticket pricing and sales practices, specifically asking for this sales window to be paused. FIFA did not pause it. The crash on opening day strengthened the legal complaint.

What could happen next?
  • FSE's Article 102 complaint now has concrete consumer harm evidence from the exact date they identified in March; the European Commission's response timeline is the remaining unknown.

  • FIFA's public denial that anything was wrong, while fans reported 90-minute waits, is consistent with its response pattern to ticketing complaints; this posture will feature in any regulatory submission.

First Reported In

Update #4 · 48 Teams, Four Debutants, One Missing Champion

Washington Post· 1 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
FIFA's Final Ticket Window Crashes on Opening
The crash provides Football Supporters Europe with precisely the consumer harm evidence they cited when demanding this sales window be paused; the complaint they filed on 24 March {{EVREF:/t/2026-fifa-world-cup/2/football-supporters-europe-fse-and-euroconsumers-lodged-a/}} now has a concrete incident from the exact date they identified.
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