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World Cup ticket prices are falling as availability stays unclear

Posted on June 05, 2026, updated on June 05, 2026

World Cup ticket prices are falling in many lower-demand matches, availability is still shifting, and Fifa’s claim that the tournament is “sold out” does not match what fans are seeing. Some tickets are now well below face value on official resale and secondary markets, especially for games involving smaller nations, while marquee fixtures and host-nation matches remain much harder to buy.

What is going on

The main issue is that Fifa did not publish a clear pricing structure early enough, and it used variable pricing with extra premium categories added later. That has left fans unsure what a fair price is, while some who bought tickets in the ballot later found themselves issued lower-value seats further from the pitch. BBC Sport also notes that the attorneys general of New York and New Jersey have launched an investigation into Fifa’s ticket practices over allegations of inflated prices and misleading fans.

Availability is uneven

High-profile matches involving teams like Argentina, Brazil, England, Germany and Spain are expected to sell well. But for many less popular fixtures, thousands of tickets are still available, including on Fifa’s own resale platform and on secondary marketplaces. Even some host-nation games are not fully sold out, with the Mexico v South Africa opener still showing more than 500 seats on Fifa’s face-value site at a very high price.

Why prices are dropping

Demand is simply not matching Fifa’s pricing for many games. BBC Sport found examples where lower-bowl seats with a face value of £620 were available for about £171 on Fifa’s resale site for Jordan v Algeria, and similar discounts appeared on SeatGeek and StubHub. For Czech Republic v South Africa, seats with a face value of £342 were listed below £190 on secondary sites.

That suggests Fifa may be struggling to clear inventory at its original prices. There is also speculation that tickets are being pushed onto secondary sites, although it is impossible to verify who is listing them or why.

Empty seats could be an issue

If prices do not fall enough, the biggest World Cup ever could still end up with visible empty sections for some matches. Fifa has a strong incentive to avoid that, because unsold seats bring in no revenue and create bad optics. The pattern seen at the Club World Cup, where tickets were heavily discounted late on, shows how quickly prices can collapse when demand is weak.

What to watch next

The key question is whether more prices are cut as kickoff approaches or whether Fifa keeps trying to move tickets through official resale and marketplace channels. For now, the picture is one of confusion, changing availability, and growing pressure on Fifa to explain how its ticket system is working.

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