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2026 FIFA World Cup
19APR

Two states subpoena FIFA over tickets

3 min read
11:22UTC

The attorneys general of New York and New Jersey subpoenaed FIFA on Thursday 28 May for ticket-pricing records covering eight MetLife matches, alleging premium seat tiers were created after sales had closed.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

The legal danger to FIFA is when the seat tiers changed, not the headline prices.

Letitia James and Jennifer Davenport, the attorneys general of New York and New Jersey, issued subpoenas to FIFA on Thursday 28 May, compelling it to hand over internal ticket-pricing and seat-category documents for eight matches at MetLife Stadium, including the final on Sunday 19 July 1. A subpoena is a legal order to produce records, and these are the first compulsory US instruments aimed at FIFA over its World Cup pricing. The allegation is precise: FIFA created premium "Front Category" seat tiers after sales had closed, and variable pricing lifted prices by roughly 25% across more than 90 matches between October 2025 and April 2026.

The AGs are probing the sequence, not dynamic pricing as a concept. A buyer who paid for a Category 1 seat and was then reshuffled behind a goal has a consumer claim that turns on what the seller promised at the moment of purchase, not on whether a market was rigged. That is a narrower and in some ways harder test for FIFA than any antitrust case, because it asks what one buyer was told rather than whether competition was harmed, and a state attorney general can pursue it without proving monopoly power.

The political climate for the action was primed weeks earlier, when Gianni Infantino cited 500 million ticket requests to defend the pricing while sidestepping the question of how far the ceiling had risen . The subpoenas convert that grievance into a documentary demand. FIFA has not commented on the two states' probe.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When you buy a ticket to a concert or sports event, the price is normally set before sales open and stays put. FIFA did something different for this World Cup. After many tickets had already sold, it created new premium seating categories that cost more, sometimes about 25% more, for comparable seats. New York and New Jersey's attorneys general, the states' chief law-enforcement officials, say this was unfair and possibly illegal. On 28 May they sent FIFA a subpoena, a legal demand to hand over internal documents on how it made these pricing decisions. This matters because a subpoena is a court-backed legal demand, not a voluntary request. FIFA must respond. The attorneys general want to know whether FIFA planned the premium tiers all along and hid them from customers.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    FIFA now faces compulsory document production in a US jurisdiction for the first time over commercial rather than criminal conduct, a procedural precedent that could apply to future tournaments.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Risk

    Internal FIFA documents about the Front Category decision, if produced, could show whether the premium tiers were planned before sales opened and then concealed, which would bear directly on a deceptive-practice claim under New York law.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    State AG action against FIFA's commercial practices sets a template for host-state enforcement at future US-based tournaments, including the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

    Long term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #12 · Squads land, subpoenas follow

ESPN· 29 May 2026
Read original
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