FIFA World Cup 2026: How to buy tickets and full price guide

Building on FIFA's recent introduction of affordable $60 (£45) Supporter Entry Tier tickets amid fan backlash, applications for the expanded 48-team World Cup across the USA, Canada and Mexico are open via lottery. Register by January 13 on the official portal for matches from June 2026, with prices ranging from £45 supporter tickets to £5,016 for the final's premium seats.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup features 104 matches from June 11 to July 19. Following criticism of initial high prices and dynamic pricing—as detailed in prior coverage—FIFA launched the Supporter Entry Tier at around £45 ($60) for qualified teams' top fans, available for every match via national associations.

To apply, create a FIFA ID and register by January 13 at the official ticketing site. Select matches and categories for the lottery draw (not first-come-first-served). Successful applicants are notified late January and charged in February 2026. Remaining tickets go on general sale in spring, with a resale marketplace later.

Prices vary by stage and category (Category 1: premium; Category 4: affordable, plus supporter tier):
- Group stage: £44-£104 (Cat 4/supporter) to £305-£461 (Cat 1)
- Opening matches: £55+ (Cat 4/supporter) to £447 (Cat 1)
- Round of 32: £78 (supporter) to £409-£558 (Cat 1)
- Round of 16: £126 to £521-£730
- Quarter-finals: £204 to £893-£1,322
- Semi-finals: £313 to £1,862-£2,455
- Final: £1,512 (Cat 4/supporter) to £5,016 (Cat 1)

This system balances accessibility with demand, prioritizing official channels. Debutants like Cape Verde, Curacao, Jordan and Uzbekistan join established sides; England and Scotland have qualified.

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Illustration of excited fans holding $60 World Cup tickets in a packed stadium, highlighting FIFA's new affordable supporter tier amid backlash.
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FIFA adds $60 supporter entry tier for 2026 World Cup amid ticket backlash

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In response to fan outrage over high prices, FIFA has introduced a $60 'supporter entry tier' for all 104 matches of the 2026 World Cup, including the final. Representing 10% of each national team's allocation, these tickets target loyal fans amid 20 million requests.

FIFA has introduced $60 'Supporter Entry Tier' tickets for the 2026 World Cup in response to widespread criticism over high costs driven by dynamic pricing. While welcomed as a step forward, fan groups argue the measure falls short, offering limited access for loyal supporters. The tournament, set for June 11 to July 19 across the USA, Canada, and Mexico, features 48 teams and 104 matches.

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While FIFA's new $60 Supporter Entry Tier addresses some backlash on 2026 World Cup prices, critics highlight limited availability, high costs for full tournament attendance, visa barriers, and accessibility issues—especially under looming U.S. policy changes.

A week after announcing a $60 'supporter entry tier,' FIFA continues to face sharp criticism over 2026 World Cup ticket prices reaching $6,300 for the final. Experts argue the limited low-cost seats fail to address resale inflation, opaque inventory, and broader affordability barriers, threatening the tournament's accessibility across 16 North American host cities.

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FIFA received five million ticket applications in the first 24 hours of the random selection draw for the 2026 World Cup, spanning over 200 countries, even as fan groups continue criticizing soaring prices.

The FIFA World Cup 2026 has broken records with more than 150 million ticket requests submitted during the first half of its Random Selection Draw phase. Fans from over 200 countries have shown unprecedented demand, oversubscribing the tournament by 30 times. This surge highlights the global excitement for the expanded 48-team event across North America.

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FIFA launched the second phase of ticket sales for the 2026 World Cup on Monday, October 27, 2025, offering another one million tickets through a randomized Early Ticket Draw. The draw runs until Friday, October 31, at 11 a.m. ET and includes priority access for residents of host countries the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Successful entrants will receive time slots to purchase single-match tickets starting November 12.

 

 

 

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