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2026 FIFA World Cup
19APR

Resale Drops Below Face on 76 of 78 US Games

4 min read
11:22UTC

World Cup resale prices have fallen below FIFA's own face value on 76 of 78 US matches, with one Houston game listing near $200 against a $700 face. An economist flagged a bulk-dump pattern.

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Key takeaway

Buying at FIFA's official price now costs more than the resale market on almost every US match.

Resale prices have dropped below FIFA's own face value on 76 of the 78 US matches, a sharp move from the 37 percent average decline reported a week ago 1. The inversion means anyone who bought at the official price now holds a ticket worth less than the same seat costs on the open market today. Jordan against Algeria in Santa Clara shows the steepest fall, with comparable seats around 64 percent below face; Saudi Arabia against Cape Verde in Houston lists near $200 against a roughly $700 face value, so an official buyer paid about three and a half times the current resale price.

Boston University economist Florian Ederer identified large blocks of contiguous seats appearing on SeatGeek in a pattern consistent with bulk dumping 2. Both SeatGeek and StubHub deny any distribution deal with FIFA, and no such arrangement has been established. Around 80 percent of hospitality providers report bookings behind forecast. The mechanism behind the collapse is FIFA's own pricing policy: it kept no resale price caps for the United States and Canada, having capped resale at face value for Qatar 2022, so nothing stops a holder undercutting the official tier to recover any cash before kickoff.

The data feeds straight into the legal exposure already building. The New York and New Jersey attorneys general have subpoenaed FIFA over MetLife pricing , and the European Commission is separately assessing a fan-group complaint . A market that prices the governing body's tickets below its own floor hands both inquiries the evidence that the pricing model, not demand, set the numbers.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A ticket to most World Cup matches in the US now costs less to buy on the resale market, where fans buy from other fans, than the original price FIFA charged. On 76 of the 78 games played in the US, resale prices have dropped below what FIFA asked in the first place. For the Jordan vs Algeria match in California, the discount is around 64%. An economist at Boston University spotted large blocks of seats for sale together on the resale platform SeatGeek, a pattern that suggests someone who bought many tickets at once is now trying to sell them below cost. Both SeatGeek and StubHub deny any official arrangement with FIFA. The attorneys general of New York and New Jersey have already asked FIFA to hand over its internal ticket-pricing documents.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

FIFA's decision not to install resale price caps for US and Canadian venues removed the floor mechanism that Qatar 2022 used to prevent secondary market collapse. The Qatar model had compulsory resale via FIFA's own portal at capped prices; the US model deferred to open secondary markets because North American rights-holders and stadium operators lobbied against the cap on revenue grounds.

The 'Front Category' tier insertion after the final sales phase closed drove face-value prices 25–50% above their initial ceiling. Buyers in the original Category 1 tiers paid for seats that were retrospectively reclassified beneath a new premium layer, generating a buyer-resentment effect that suppressed secondary-market willingness to pay even for non-premium seats in the same sections.

Bosnia University economist Ederer's bulk-seat finding points to a third cause: a distribution channel that placed large ticket blocks with corporate or sponsor accounts who had no intention of attending, and who are now liquidating at below-cost rather than holding. This is not market failure in the abstract sense, it is a specific consequence of FIFA's bulk-allocation policy for sponsors and media organisations, which operates outside the public sales tiers.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The resale inversion feeds directly into the NY and NJ attorneys general subpoenas (ID:3755) and the European Commission's Article 102 assessment (ID:3756). Live resale data showing 76 of 78 US matches below face value is the strongest evidence yet that FIFA's original pricing was not set at market-clearing levels, strengthening both legal files.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Empty or near-empty lower-tier sections in group games, particularly non-marquee fixtures, will be the most visible image of the ticketing failure during the broadcast window. FIFA's 48-team expansion creates many fixtures between unfamiliar nations with limited US fan bases; the resale collapse is concentrated precisely in those matches.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Precedent

    FIFA's deliberate removal of Qatar 2022-style resale price floors for the US and Canada market will be evaluated as a governance decision in any regulatory review. The 2026 outcome may prompt FIFA's member associations to demand resale-cap obligations in future tournament hosting agreements.

    Long term · Assessed
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