KCUR, the Kansas City public radio station, reported on 16 April that FIFA secretly reserved the most favourable mid-pitch seats for Pitchside Lounge hospitality packages at $3,350 per ticket, and only assigned precise section-and-row numbers to pre-purchased Category 1 tickets in April 2026, months after initial sales 1. A KCUR journalist who bought Category 1 was placed behind the southeast goal.
The reclassification matters because it turns a pricing debate into a product-description one. Category 1 buyers paid for a seating map, then received seats that had already been withheld from that map. EU Directive 2005/29/EC on unfair commercial practices asks what a reasonable buyer understood at the moment of purchase, which is a tighter legal test than the Article 102 competition argument running alongside it. The Kansas City Argentina v Algeria group match saw Category 1 rise 87% to $765; Ecuador v Curaçao rose 22%. A family of four on Category 1 now pays over $3,000 for a single group match in Kansas City.
The final-match Front Category 1 ceiling reached $10,990 on 13 April , a 163% rise on the pre-closure ceiling in three weeks , . FIFA has still issued no public statement explaining the reclassification. KCUR's documentary record is what Brando Benifei's MEPs and the FSE/Euroconsumers complaint can cite at Commission level, and what the Washington DC consumer-protection investigation can cite in US court; FIFA's silence about the Pitchside Lounge inventory sits on both files as admissible background.
