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2026 FIFA World Cup
19APR

World Cup resale market splits in two

2 min read
11:22UTC

Low-demand group fixtures now list at or below the $120 face value on resale, while the cheapest final seat at MetLife floors near $9,200.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Resale splits between sub-face-value dead rubbers and a final-match floor near $9,200 across the same field.

Goal reported on 9 June that low-demand World Cup group-stage fixtures were listing at or below the $120 face value on secondary platforms, the marketplaces where ticket-holders resell, while the cheapest available seat for the final at MetLife Stadium floored at roughly $9,200 1. The two figures mark the spread between the tournament's least and most wanted seats.

The split followed weeks of slide. Resale prices fell 37% across the group stage as New York and New Jersey attorneys-general subpoenaed FIFA over ticketing , and prices dropped below face value on the bulk of US fixtures in a pattern that pointed to holders dumping seats they could not use . The new spread puts a number on both ends at once.

The mechanism is a 48-team field with 104 matches, most of them low-stakes group fixtures. Holders of seats for dead rubbers, games whose outcome no longer affects qualification, sell into a thin market and accept losses below the price they paid. Demand concentrates instead on the final and a handful of marquee ties, where scarcity holds the floor in four figures. The same tournament therefore produces seats below cost and seats at a five-figure premium in the same week, and FIFA's official channel offers no refund route for the fans now underwater on face value.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

When people buy World Cup tickets through FIFA's official system, they pay a fixed price set by FIFA. But there are also secondary markets (resale websites) where people who bought tickets can sell them to other fans at whatever price the market will bear. Before this tournament, FIFA for the first time allowed official dynamic pricing, meaning FIFA itself raised prices after the initial sale window. What happened as the tournament approached was unusual: most group matches became very cheap on the secondary market, often at or below the original face value, because there was too much supply and not enough demand. For example, a ticket with a $120 face value could be bought for $120 or less. But for the final at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on 19 July, the cheapest available seat cost around $9,200. This is not the official FIFA price; it is what resellers are charging on sites like StubHub or SeatGeek. The gap between the cheapest group ticket and the cheapest final ticket, both on the same secondary market, is the widest seen at any World Cup.

First Reported In

Update #17 · Host turns back a World Cup referee

Goal· 9 Jun 2026
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