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FIFA Releases Thousands More 2026 World Cup Tickets as Resale Prices Soften for Some Matches

Availability on FIFA’s official portal rose from 20,500 seats on Wednesday to 37,000 before easing to 33,000 on Thursday morning. The increase follows a sharp decline from over 100,000 tickets at the end of May.

Newsweek
1 source·Jun 4, 7:14 AM·1m read
FIFA Releases Thousands More 2026 World Cup Tickets as Resale Prices Soften for Some Matchesbusinessinsider.com
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Com. The new supply still leaves far fewer tickets than the more than 100,000 available toward the end of May. Over 40,000 tickets disappeared from the main platform without explanation in late May.

Newsweek reported that FIFA has faced accusations of selectively distributing tickets across resale sites to influence demand and pricing. SeatGeek and StubHub both denied involvement in any such strategy, though StubHub confirmed that blocks of seats had appeared on resale platforms in recent days. FIFA has not commented on the latest increase or the late-May drop.

Newsweek contacted the organization by email for comment. FIFA uses dynamic pricing that adjusts fares based on demand. An analysis by The Athletic found that prices across key ticket categories rose 34 percent between October and April, with some more than doubling.

Resale prices have recently softened for some fixtures amid signs of weaker-than-expected demand. com. Boston University economist Florian Ederer noted unusual clusters of newly available seats on SeatGeek, including large blocks for that fixture.

As of Thursday morning, a ticket in section 610 for the same match cost $380 on FIFA’s official site but $184 on SeatGeek. Resale prices for most other games rose over the same period. In late May, New York Attorney General Letitia James and New Jersey Attorney General Jennifer Davenport subpoenaed FIFA as part of a joint investigation into its World Cup ticketing system.

An announcement from the New York attorney general’s office stated that recent press reports indicate fans may have been misled about seat locations and that FIFA’s public statements and ticket releases may have contributed to soaring prices. A. S.

Consumer protection laws. FIFA has been releasing additional inventory in staged drops and says it will continue releasing tickets in phases leading up to and during the tournament.

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CorroborationModerate · 1 source

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