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FIFA faces empty seats as 180,000 World Cup tickets flood resale market

By Editorial Team · Published June 9, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
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FIFA faces empty seats as 180,000 World Cup tickets flood resale market

FIFA faces empty seats as 180,000 World Cup tickets flood resale market

A massive ticket surplus for the 2026 World Cup has driven median resale prices down 20%, with group-stage matches bearing the brunt of fan indifference.

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Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 9, 2026

Nearly 180,000 tickets for the 2026 World Cup are sitting on FIFA’s official resale marketplace, and the tournament hasn’t even kicked off yet. Of those 180,000 listings, roughly 176,000 are tied to the opening group phase. Median resale prices have already dropped 20% in recent weeks, and some match tickets are showing identical “get-in” prices hovering around $69, a clear signal that supply has overwhelmed demand.

FIFA’s resale platform: solving one problem, creating another

FIFA launched its official resale and exchange marketplace back in October 2025, explicitly designed to capture revenue that previously leaked to unauthorized secondary sellers. The platform’s transaction fees, reportedly between 15% and nearly 30%, do not impose price caps, further complicating the ticketing situation.

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The NFT angle: FIFA Collect and right-to-buy tokens

Running parallel to the ticketing headache is FIFA Collect, the organization’s blockchain-based digital collectibles platform. Among its offerings are “Right-to-Buy” NFTs, which grant holders priority access to purchase match tickets. The secondary market for these RTB NFTs shows prices ranging from around $98 for lower-tier collectibles to north of $6,000 for high-demand items. Basic digital collectibles on the platform trade for under $2.

Swiss authorities began reviewing FIFA’s RTB NFT program in October 2025, specifically to assess whether these digital assets carried gambling implications. No direct connection has been established between the NFT program and the current ticket resale surge.

What this means for the market and for fans

For fans, a $69 entry point to watch a World Cup match live is historically cheap. For investors who bought high-end RTB NFTs at $6,000 expecting scarcity premiums, those assets are now tied to tickets that anyone can grab at falling prices.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
This article was originally published on Crypto Briefing and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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