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    Home»Industry & Technologies»World Cup Final Tickets Hit $2.3M On FIFA’s Own Resale Platform
    Industry & Technologies

    World Cup Final Tickets Hit $2.3M On FIFA’s Own Resale Platform

    By April 25, 20263 Mins Read
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    The numbers sound fake, but they’re very real. According to the latest reports, four tickets for the FIFA World Cup 2026 Final are listed on FIFA’s official resale platform at $2,299,998.85 each.

    This isn’t from some unofficial resale marketplace, but FIFA’s own system.

    The match will be played on July 19 at MetLife Stadium, and the seats in question are not even the most exclusive in the building. They’re Category 1 tickets located in Section 124, Row 45, behind the goal in the lower tier.

    These aren’t hospitality packages or private suites. They’re standard high-tier seats.For comparison:

    • Official face-value tickets sold directly by FIFA peaked at around $10,990
    • Similar resale seats are listed at around $16,000
    • And then there are these, at nearly $2.3 million

    It shows how wide (and wrong) the gap has become between normal pricing and what the resale market is now allowing.

    Why prices can go this high

    Even though sellers set their own prices, FIFA still takes a cut. The governing body charges a 15% commission on both the buyer and the seller. If one of these tickets actually sells at the listed price, FIFA could take in close to $600,000 from a single transaction.

    It’s probably part of why the system works the way it does.

    In previous World Cups, resale prices were capped at face value. That’s no longer the case.

    FIFA has adopted a dynamic pricing model for 2026, closer to what’s used in North American sports and concerts. On the official resale platform, there is effectively no upper limit on how much a ticket can be listed for.

    Combine that with massive demand, and prices can spiral. FIFA has already reported more than 150 million ticket requests during early sales phases, and over 5 million tickets sold so far, with a final sales push launched on April 22.

    These $2.3 million listings don’t mean anyone will actually pay that amount. But that’s not really the point. The fact they exist and on FIFA’s own platform shows how far pricing has moved.

    This year’s FIFA World Cup is set to be the biggest in history, hosted across North America. Demand is huge, money is flowing, and the system now allows prices to go wherever the market takes them.

    For a tournament that’s supposed to belong to fans, being there in person is starting to look like something only a handful of people in the world can afford.

    Read also: Pep Guardiola Hits Out at World Cup 2026 Prices: ‘Football Is for the Fans’

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