The most
expensive World Cup tickets in history. A resale market with no price cap for
the first time ever. And millions of fans chasing 6.5 million seats across
three countries. Here's what you need to know before you spend a dollar.
Let's start
with the number that catches most people off guard: $6,730. That's
the starting price for a Category 1 ticket to the World Cup Final at MetLifeStadium on July 19. For comparison, the same category ticket at Qatar 2022 cost
a maximum of $1,605. That's a 320% increase, and it tells you everything you
need to know about just how much demand FIFA is anticipating for this
tournament.
But before
you close this tab in shock, the full picture is more nuanced. There are still
ways to attend matches at prices that won't require refinancing your home. The
key is understanding the system, the phases, and critically, what to avoid.
The Price Reality: What Tickets Actually Cost
FIFA operates
a tiered pricing system with four main categories. Category 1 gets you the best
seats; Category 4 gets you in the building. Group stage and knockout round
pricing are structured differently, and the final carries its own premium tier.
Here's a practical breakdown:
Worth
flagging: FIFA eliminated fixed Category 4 "cheap seats" for 2026,
shifting instead to "variable pricing." In practice, this means the
entry-level price point can fluctuate based on match demand. Group stage
matches between smaller nations remain the most accessible; anything in the
knockout rounds involving major footballing nations will cost significantly
more.
"The 2026 World Cup will feature the most expensive ticket prices in tournament history, but group stage matches still start as low as $60. The gap between floor and ceiling has never been wider."
Understanding the Four Sales Phases
FIFA
structures its ticket sales in distinct phases. Knowing where we currently are
in that process shapes exactly what options you have right now. Here's the full
timeline:
Phase 1: Lottery Draw Completed
Visa cardholders only. Fans registered interest in specific matches; a random selection determined who could purchase. Around 1 million tickets were made available in this phase.
Phase 2: General Lottery Completed
Open to all fans with a FIFA ID. Same random allocation system applied for matches, FIFA randomly selected who received ticket offers. Completed February 2026.
Phase 3: First Come, First Served Completed
Remaining inventory opened for direct purchase. No randomization whoever was in queue when tickets became available got them. Moved fast.
Phase 4: Last-Minute Sales Currently Active
Started April 1, 2026. Real-time inventory purchases as tickets become available through cancellations, reallocations, and newly released stock. This is the last official FIFA channel. Check fifa.com/tickets regularly.
The bottom
line for right now: the last-minute phase is your primary official option. FIFA
releases inventory in batches with no predictable schedule, so monitoring the
official site is the only reliable strategy. Set reminders. Check often.
The New Resale Landscape: No Price Cap, New Rules
Here's
where 2026 breaks from every previous World Cup. For the first time, FIFA's
official resale marketplace has no price ceiling. In Qatar 2022 and
every tournament before it, resellers on the official platform could only list
at face value. This time, sellers can name their price. That's a significant
shift, and it's already driving resale prices well above face value for
high-demand matches.
You can
access FIFA's official resale portal at fifa.com/tickets. For USA
and Canada matches, the FIFA marketplace handles resale directly. Mexico
operates under different local regulations, so resale for Mexican venue matches
works through a separate system.
What About StubHub and Secondary Markets?
StubHub has
2026 World Cup listings active now and prominently references FIFA's official
transfer process for ticket delivery. Their FanProtect Guarantee covers valid
tickets or provides replacements if something goes wrong. That said, prices on
secondary markets for knockout stage matches are already eye-watering. Treat
any secondary purchase as a premium, not a bargain. The official FIFA resale
portal remains the safer starting point.
⚠️ Scam Warning - Read Before Buying Anything
FIFA explicitly warns that third-party ticket sales outside official channels are strongly discouraged, and scams are widespread. If you're buying outside of FIFA.com or recognized secondary platforms like StubHub, verify everything carefully. Too-good-to-be-true prices for sold-out knockout matches are almost always exactly that.
Practical Buying Tips for What's Left
Set up your FIFA ID at fifa.com now if you haven't. You need it to purchase tickets, and importantly to use them at the venue.
Check the Last-Minute phase regularly. Inventory appears unpredictably as holders cancel or FIFA releases additional stock.
Group stage matches at less-glamorous venues are your best bet for last-minute availability at manageable prices.
If you want guaranteed multi-match attendance, FIFA's Hospitality packages through On Location are still available, but they are expensive; they bundle tickets, food, and access without the lottery risk.
When buying on the official resale portal, compare carefully. Prices vary significantly for equivalent seats.
You cannot buy tickets for two different matches on the same date. FIFA's system won't allow it.
Seat assignment for allocated tickets happens roughly one month before the tournament starts. Don't expect to choose your specific seats at purchase time.
The Merchandise Angle: Jerseys, Balls, and Official Gear
If getting
into a match isn't in the budget, or if you want to supplement the experience, the 2026 merchandise market is significant. Search trends show strong US
demand for jerseys, official match balls, and branded merchandise, particularly
around the "fifa world cup 2026 album" (Panini sticker collections
are a World Cup tradition), replica balls, and team kits.
A few pointers worth knowing: official merchandise is available through FIFA's store and licensed retailers. Team jerseys from national football associations are the safest purchase for authenticity. Bootleg gear is everywhere, lower price, lower quality, and none of the money reaches the sport. The Panini sticker album for 2026 is already in high demand and sells out periodically, so if that's something you want, grab it sooner rather than later.
Streaming: How to Watch If You Can't Be There
Search data
shows strong interest from US fans in streaming options, particularly
cord-cutters asking about watching matches without cable. Without making
specific recommendations that could be outdated by the time you read this, the
key channels to check are: Fox Sports and Telemundo hold US broadcast rights.
Both have streaming apps and are available through most major streaming
bundles. Sports bars across the US, especially in host cities, are already
booking out for high-profile matches. If you're planning to watch in a group
setting outside the host cities, reserve early.
The Bottom Line
Getting
into a 2026 World Cup match isn't easy, and it isn't cheap, but it's not
impossible. The last-minute phase is active right now, group stage matches
remain the most accessible, and the official FIFA resale marketplace gives you
a legitimate secondary route. The mistakes to avoid are straightforward: buying
from unverified third parties, assuming resale prices are capped (they're not),
and waiting until June when whatever's left will be significantly more
expensive.
The World
Cup comes to North America for the first time since 1994. For a generation of
US fans who've watched it on screens in European or South American time zones,
this is the moment. Whether it's a group stage match in Kansas City or the
final at MetLife, being there will be worth it.
Know Your Venues Too
Before you decide which match to chase a ticket for, make sure you know what each stadium offers in terms of size, atmosphere, location, and what makes each one special.
