2026 World Cup tickets are in extremely high demand as fans plan travel to Canada, Mexico, and the United States for the first 48‑team World Cup. Early sales phases, official hospitality packages, and the new FIFA Priority Appointment Scheduling System (FIFA PASS) for U.S. visa interviews are already shaping how and when supporters can secure their seats.
This guide will explain how official FIFA ticket sales work, what to know about categories and prices, how to buy standard and hospitality tickets safely, and how visa and travel rules affect access for international fans. By the end, you will understand every key step needed to plan, purchase, and use your 2026 World Cup ticket.
For the 2026 World Cup, standard tickets and hospitality packages are sold through completely separate channels and are designed for very different budgets.
Standard tickets are the core FIFA products sold on the official ticketing portal. They give you a reserved seat for a match and nothing more than basic stadium services. Within standard tickets you will see:
These products are aimed at regular fans who want the most affordable way into the stadium, with categories 1–4 and accessibility options.
Hospitality packages are premium products that combine top‑category match tickets with lounge access, food and drink, dedicated entrances and other extras. They are sold through the official hospitality programme operated for FIFA and can include extras such as in‑stadium clubs, hosted experiences and, in some cases, local add‑ons like events or excursions. Prices are many times higher than standard tickets and are marketed to corporate clients, high‑spend fans and small groups who want a “once in a lifetime” experience.
Travel packages, where offered, typically bolt flights and hotels onto hospitality products via authorised agents, but they are not part of the standard ticketing system.
FIFA has structured 2026 World Cup ticket sales into several phases, all handled online:
Each phase may offer a different mix of products (for example, Venue Specific Tickets are available earlier, while some supporter‑focused products appear later). Entering a draw never guarantees a ticket; it only gives you a chance to buy if selected.
The 2026 World Cup ticket products are tightly defined, so it is important to understand exactly which matches you are buying:
Hospitality products mirror these structures at a premium level. For example, hospitality “Follow My Team” packages can include all three group matches plus a potential round‑of‑32 game, while hospitality venue series cover every match in a chosen stadium, sometimes including later rounds and even the final, depending on the package tier.
FIFA has not yet published the full, final ticket price grid for every match of the 2026 World Cup. However, based on official guidance and the first hospitality and package offers, you can already see the broad pricing tiers that will shape standard tickets.
For group stage matches, entry-level prices are expected to be the lowest of the tournament, with the cheapest seats in Category 4 aimed at local residents in each host country. These are usually significantly cheaper than Categories 1–3 and are often restricted to people who live in the host nation.
From the round of 32 and round of 16 onward, prices rise in each category. Quarter‑finals and semi‑finals are traditionally a clear step up again, reflecting higher demand and fewer matches.
The 2026 World Cup final will be the most expensive ticket in every category. Even the lowest category is likely to cost several times more than a typical group match, while Category 1 seats for the final will sit at the very top of the public price range. Exact figures will only be confirmed when FIFA publishes the official ticketing brochure for standard tickets.
FIFA uses four main public price categories for 2026 World Cup tickets:
Within each stage, Category 1 is the most expensive and Category 4 the cheapest. The gap between categories tends to widen as you move deeper into the tournament. For example, the difference between Category 1 and Category 4 for a group match might be modest, but for a semi‑final or the final it can be dramatic.
Because 2026 is spread across the United States, Canada and Mexico, you should also expect some variation between host cities and stadiums. Larger venues in very high‑demand cities are likely to see higher prices in the top categories than smaller or less central locations, even within the same tournament stage.
Until the full price table is released, you can only estimate total costs using likely ranges. Still, it is useful to think in terms of scenarios.
If you plan to follow one team through the group stage, budget for at least three matches. A cost‑conscious fan using mostly Category 3 or 4 tickets might aim for a total in the low hundreds of dollars, while someone choosing Category 1 or 2 for all three games should expect a bill several times higher. Travel between host cities will often exceed the ticket cost itself, especially in the United States, so it needs to be part of your calculation.
Fans who want to sample multiple matches in one city can sometimes keep costs lower by choosing cheaper categories and avoiding long‑distance flights. For example, attending four or five group games in the same venue in Category 3 or 4 may cost less overall than following a single team across the continent in higher categories.
If you dream of a knockout run plus the final, be prepared for a steep jump. Adding a quarter‑final, semi‑final and final in mid‑to‑high categories can easily multiply your total ticket spend compared with a group‑only trip, even before you factor in extra nights of accommodation and additional travel.
FIFA’s core public ticket prices are set in advance by category and stage, but effective prices are still shaped by demand. High‑interest matches, such as host‑nation games or classic rivalries, are more likely to sell out quickly in lotteries and first‑come‑first‑served phases. When that happens, fans who miss out may turn to official hospitality or, later, the official resale platform, where prices can be higher than the original face value.
In addition, some products around the tournament, such as hospitality and certain travel‑inclusive packages, already use dynamic pricing. As demand rises or inventory shrinks, the package price can increase even if the underlying face value of the match ticket is unchanged. Booking early usually gives you access to the lowest package prices and the widest choice of categories.
Currency movements also matter. Tickets will be priced in specific currencies depending on the sales phase and your country of residence. If your home currency weakens between the time you plan your budget and the moment your card is charged, the real cost in your local money can end up higher than expected.
To keep control of what you pay, decide in advance which categories you are comfortable with, set a maximum per‑match budget, and be ready to walk away from high‑priced resale or package offers that push you beyond that limit.
To buy 2026 World Cup tickets, you must use the official ticketing portal accessed via FIFA.com/tickets. You start by selecting the FIFA World Cup 2026 tournament, then choosing the option to explore ticket details. From there, you are redirected to the FIFA ticketing login page, where you click Sign Up and enter your personal information, including full name, date of birth, email address and postal address.
After submitting the form, you create a password, accept the terms, and receive a verification email. You must confirm your email either by clicking the button in the message or by copying the code into the browser window. Once verified, you are taken back to your ticketing account, where you should complete all mandatory profile fields and save them. Your FIFA ID and ticketing account are linked, so you will use the same login for future ticket applications and purchases.
Accurate details are essential. The name, date of birth and country of residence in your account should match your passport or ID, as these may be checked against your digital tickets at the stadium.
Most general public tickets for the 2026 World Cup are allocated through random selection draws rather than instant purchase. The typical process is:
In early phases, some draws are restricted to holders of a specific payment card, while later phases are open to all fans. If your application is successful, FIFA emails you with the result and a time‑limited purchase window. During that window you log back in, review the matches you were allocated and complete payment. If you miss the deadline, your allocation is cancelled and tickets return to the pool.
Subsequent phases may include additional random draws and finally a first‑come, first‑served period where remaining tickets can be bought instantly without a lottery, again via FIFA.com/tickets.
FIFA has set strict purchase caps to keep access as fair as possible. For the 2026 World Cup, the general rule is:
A “household” is defined by the postal address in your FIFA ticketing account. Different accounts using the same address are treated as one household, and all their purchases count toward the same limits.
You may only apply for or purchase tickets to one match per day, even if games are in different cities. If you need more than four seats for the same match, FIFA directs you toward official hospitality products, which have separate rules and higher prices.
During some presale phases, especially those linked to promotional partners, payment may be restricted to a specific card brand. For example, the initial Visa presale required a valid Visa credit, debit or prepaid card both to enter the draw and to pay for any tickets allocated.
In later phases, FIFA typically accepts a wider range of major cards. The transaction currency depends on the host country of the match: tickets for games in the United States are charged in US dollars, while matches in Canada and Mexico may be billed in local currency.
If your card is declined during the payment window, your order is not confirmed. In most cases you must either retry with the same card or use another accepted method before the deadline. If you cannot complete payment in time, FIFA cancels the allocation and returns the tickets to inventory; they are not held beyond your assigned slot.
To avoid issues, ensure your bank is aware of a large international transaction, your card has sufficient limit, and 3‑D Secure or similar verification can be completed on the device you are using.
For 2026, FIFA is using digital ticketing as the standard. After successful payment, your purchases appear in your online ticketing account, but the actual match tickets are usually released closer to the tournament through an official mobile app.
You will be instructed to download the dedicated World Cup ticketing app, sign in with the same FIFA credentials and link your account. Tickets are then delivered to the app as QR or similar scannable codes, often only a short time before each match to reduce fraud. Each ticket is assigned to a named guest, and stadium entry staff may check your ID against the details in the app.
You should keep your phone charged, ensure the app is updated, and avoid screenshots or forwarding codes, as these may not be valid at the turnstiles. If you change devices, you will need to log in again and, in some cases, re‑authorise the tickets on the new phone before match day.
Standard tickets give you a reserved seat and basic stadium access. Hospitality tickets add a full premium match‑day experience around that same seat.
Most 2026 World Cup hospitality products include:
Hospitality packages usually do not include flights or hotels, unless you buy a separate travel bundle from a tour operator.
FIFA and its official provider have built a menu of products that all sit on the same core tiers (FIFA Pavilion, Champions Club, VIP, Pitchside Lounge and private suites), but bundle matches differently.
Official 2026 World Cup hospitality is intentionally premium. Current public price points, which vary by city, opponent and tier, fall roughly into these bands:
These products are aimed at corporate clients, sponsors, high‑net‑worth fans, and groups looking to entertain guests or combine football with business networking. Smaller single‑match packages also appeal to individual supporters who want a once‑in‑a‑lifetime upgrade for a specific game.
To stay safe, buy only from official channels. For 2026, FIFA directs buyers to its dedicated hospitality portal and to a network of authorised sales agents working with the official provider.
Before paying, check that:
Be cautious if you see:
Unofficial resellers may advertise “VIP” or “corporate” tickets that are not recognised by FIFA. These can be cancelled without refund, and you may be refused entry at the stadium. Sticking to official hospitality platforms and named authorised agents is the only reliable way to secure genuine 2026 World Cup hospitality packages.
Demand for 2026 World Cup tickets is extremely high. In the first major global sales window, FIFA reported around 150 million ticket requests in just over two weeks, from fans in more than 200 countries. That is more than 30 times the number of seats that will actually exist across the tournament.
A “ticket request” is not a confirmed ticket. It simply means a fan has applied in a lottery-style phase for one or more matches. Many people submit multiple requests, and most matches are oversubscribed, especially games involving big nations, host countries, and knockout rounds.
For you, this means:
Treat “150 million requests” as a signal that competition is fierce and that you should plan around lotteries, not assume you can buy any match at face value later.
FIFA is running its own official resale and exchange marketplace for 2026 World Cup tickets. It is the only secondary market that guarantees tickets are valid and compliant with tournament rules. You access it through your existing ticketing account.
Key points about how it works:
Using the official resale platform keeps your tickets digital, traceable and protected under FIFA’s ticketing rules, which is not the case with external marketplaces.
Because demand is so intense, scams around 2026 World Cup tickets are already widespread. Many fraudulent offers look professional, so you need to be very cautious.
Common red flags include:
In practice, the safest rule is simple:
Anything else, no matter how convincing, carries a real risk that you will lose your money, your tickets, or both.
Attending the 2026 World Cup does not give you any automatic right to enter the United States, Canada or Mexico. There is no special “World Cup visa.” You must meet the normal entry rules for each country on your itinerary, and you may need different permissions for each border you cross. Holding a match ticket also does not guarantee that a visa or travel authorization will be approved.
For United States matches, most fans will enter either with a regular B‑1/B‑2 visitor visa or, if eligible, through the Visa Waiver Program using ESTA. The U.S. has introduced a priority appointment system for World Cup ticket holders (FIFA PASS), but standard vetting and admissibility rules still apply.
For Canada, you may need either a visitor visa (Temporary Resident Visa) or an electronic Travel Authorization (eTA), depending on your nationality and how you travel (by air, land or sea). Canada has created dedicated guidance for World Cup fans and strongly urges early applications because of expected high demand.
For Mexico, many nationalities are visa‑exempt for short tourist stays. In addition, holders of valid multiple‑entry visas for the United States, Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom or any Schengen‑area country can usually enter Mexico without a separate Mexican visa, provided they meet all other entry conditions.
You can travel visa‑free or with electronic authorization if:
You will generally need a full visa if:
In all three countries, border officers make the final decision at entry, even if you already hold a visa, ESTA, eTA or are visa‑exempt.
Your match itinerary directly shapes your visa strategy. If you plan to see games in more than one host country, you must separately satisfy the entry rules for each of the United States, Canada and Mexico. There is no shared “North American World Cup visa,” and permission to enter one country does not give you rights in the others.
For example, a fan flying into Toronto for group matches, then driving to New York and later flying to Mexico City will need to check:
Multiple entries also matter. If you plan to cross borders several times (for instance, staying in a U.S. city and making day trips to Canadian or Mexican venues), make sure your visa or eTA allows repeated entries and that your passport remains valid for the whole period.
Because processing times for visitor visas can stretch to weeks or months in busy consulates, immigration authorities in all three countries are urging fans to apply as early as possible in 2026, well before booking non‑refundable flights or accommodation.
FIFA PASS is a new priority appointment scheduling system created by the U.S. Department of State in partnership with FIFA for the 2026 World Cup. It gives eligible World Cup ticket holders earlier access to U.S. visa interview appointments at embassies and consulates, specifically for travel to matches in the United States.
The system does one thing only: it moves verified ticket holders up the queue for interview dates. It does not change visa rules, security checks, or the legal standards for approval. You must still complete the normal application, pay the fee, attend an interview, and qualify under U.S. immigration law. Officials have stressed that “your ticket is not a visa” and that all standard vetting remains in place.
FIFA PASS is expected to go live in early 2026, ahead of the tournament that runs in North America from June to July 2026.
You may qualify for a FIFA PASS priority appointment if:
Eligibility is tied to tickets bought through official FIFA channels. Third‑party or unofficial tickets are not expected to qualify. Each ticket holder can request a priority interview slot once the system opens.
According to current announcements, the dedicated FIFA PASS portal and priority scheduling will become available in early 2026. Fans in countries where regular appointments are already available before the tournament are encouraged to apply now; those facing long waits may benefit most from waiting for FIFA PASS to open.
While detailed step‑by‑step technical instructions will be published closer to launch, current guidance indicates the process will look roughly like this:
FIFA PASS does change:
FIFA PASS does not change:
In short, FIFA PASS is best understood as a fast‑track to the interview calendar, not a shortcut around U.S. visa law. It is designed to reduce the risk that genuine fans spend heavily on tickets and travel only to discover there are no interview slots left before kickoff.
Most World Cup ticket holders who need a visa for the United States will apply for a B‑1/B‑2 visitor visa. This category covers tourism, short visits to attend matches, and limited business activities such as meetings or conferences. It is usually the right choice if you are coming only to watch games, travel between host cities, and then return home.
If you already hold a valid U.S. visitor visa that will remain valid for your entire trip, you normally do not need a new one. Some travelers may qualify for the Visa Waiver Program and travel with ESTA instead of a visa; in that case, you do not apply for a B‑1/B‑2 visa unless instructed to do so by U.S. authorities.
Before you start, check appointment wait times for U.S. embassies and consulates in your country. These times can vary widely by location and season, and they may change quickly as World Cup demand grows. If you have flexibility, compare several posts in your region and choose the one with the most suitable combination of wait time, travel cost and language support.
The DS‑160 is the online nonimmigrant visa application form. Each traveler, including children, must complete a separate DS‑160. You will provide personal details, travel plans, employment or study information, and security‑related questions. Answer everything truthfully and keep your plans consistent with a short, temporary visit for tourism and sport.
At the end of the DS‑160 you upload a digital photo that meets U.S. visa photo standards, then submit the form and save the confirmation page with the barcode. You will need this to schedule your interview.
After the DS‑160, you create a profile on the official U.S. visa appointment website for your country. There you pay the non‑refundable visa fee in the amount and currency set for your location. Payment options usually include local bank transfer, card payment or cash at approved partners, but the exact methods depend on the country. Only after the fee is registered in the system can you move on to booking an interview.
Once your fee is active, you can schedule a visa interview at a U.S. embassy or consulate. You select the post, choose an available date and time, and enter your DS‑160 confirmation number. For family or group travel, you can often create a group appointment so everyone attends together.
Where the FIFA Priority Appointment Scheduling System (FIFA PASS) is available, eligible ticket holders may see a separate pool of priority interview slots. To use it, you typically need to:
FIFA PASS does not guarantee visa approval and does not remove normal security checks. It only helps you obtain an earlier interview date where capacity allows. If priority slots are not visible, they may not yet be released or may be fully booked, so check back regularly and consider alternative consular locations if travel is practical.
For your interview, prepare a clear, organized set of documents. Typical items include:
During the interview, answer questions briefly and honestly. Explain that your purpose is to attend the 2026 World Cup and tourism, and show that you intend to return home after your visit. Consular officers focus on your overall situation, not only your tickets, so be ready to discuss your job, studies, family and previous travel.
Processing times vary. Some applicants receive a decision on the day of the interview, while others face administrative processing that can take weeks or longer. Apply as early as practical before your first match, avoid non‑refundable travel purchases until you have your visa, and monitor any status updates using the official tracking tools provided by the embassy or consulate.
For the 2026 World Cup, treat tickets and visas as two parallel projects that overlap in time. You generally want to secure tickets first, then move quickly on visa planning once you know which countries and cities you will visit.
If you need a visa for the United States, Canada or Mexico, do not wait until you have every ticket confirmed before starting. As a rule of thumb, once you have:
you should begin checking visa requirements and appointment wait times. For many nationalities, U.S. visa interview waits can stretch to several months in busy periods, so starting 9–12 months before your first planned match is prudent.
If you are visa‑exempt or eligible for electronic travel authorizations (such as ESTA for the U.S. or eTAs for Canada), you still should not leave applications to the last minute. Aim to apply as soon as your travel window is clear, and no later than a few months before departure, to allow time to resolve any issues.
The 2026 World Cup is spread across three countries and many host cities, so travel timing is as important as ticket timing. Once ticket sales phases give you a clearer picture of where your team might play, sketch a priority itinerary: the matches you most want to attend and the cities that anchor your trip.
Use that skeleton plan to decide:
Book long‑haul flights and accommodation in major host cities as early as possible once you have at least some tickets or a strong expectation of attending. Prices tend to rise sharply as matchdays approach, especially in cities hosting the opening match, semifinals and final. For internal travel, consider refundable or changeable fares where the schedule is still uncertain.
Try to avoid booking non‑refundable hotels or flights for matches you only have a low chance of attending. Instead, lock in flexible options around the games you already hold tickets for, then add extra segments once later ticket phases or knockout fixtures are confirmed.
There is always a small risk that a visa decision will not arrive in time, or that an application is refused. Planning ahead reduces that risk, but you should still have a fallback strategy.
First, monitor processing times closely and respond quickly to any requests for extra documents or information. If your appointment or processing is delayed, check whether you can reschedule travel or adjust your itinerary to matches in a country where you do not need a visa, if that still fits your plans.
If a visa is refused or not issued in time, review the official ticket and hospitality refund or resale rules that apply to your purchase. In many cases, the inability to obtain a visa is not an automatic ground for a full refund, but you may be able to list tickets on an official resale platform or recover part of your costs.
Avoid turning to unofficial resellers to “solve” a visa problem. They cannot fix immigration decisions, and buying or selling tickets outside official channels can lead to cancellation of your tickets without compensation. Instead, focus on what is within your control: using official resale options where available, adjusting travel plans, and, if appropriate, seeking professional advice before making any new visa application.
From late 2025 onward, FIFA has outlined several key milestones for remaining 2026 World Cup ticket phases. The first general sales opportunities began with the Visa Presale Draw from 10 to 19 September 2025, followed by an Early Ticket Draw from 27 to 31 October 2025 and a further random‑selection draw after the final tournament draw in December 2025.
Looking ahead from December 31, 2025, the next major phase is the first‑come, first‑served sales period planned for spring 2026. This phase will use live inventory rather than lotteries and is expected to be the last large public release before the tournament kicks off on June 11, 2026.
Official hospitality packages, including VIP and corporate products, have been on sale since 2025 and will remain available while inventory lasts, right up to and during the tournament. Prices and availability are updated continuously, so fans should treat hospitality as a rolling sales stream rather than a single window.
Because FIFA is using dynamic pricing, late‑stage releases and any additional tickets from venue‑capacity adjustments or returned allocations may appear in smaller “top‑up” drops closer to match days. These will not always be pre‑announced, so monitoring the official ticketing portal regularly is essential.
FIFA’s 2026 ticketing policies are built around the principle that standard tickets are generally non‑refundable and non‑exchangeable once purchased, except in specific scenarios defined in the official terms. You cannot usually cancel a confirmed order simply because your plans change.
If FIFA cancels tickets for safety, security or disciplinary reasons, or if it reduces stadium capacity, it may unilaterally void some tickets. In those cases, the purchaser is normally entitled to a refund for the affected tickets, as set out in the ticket terms.
For Team‑Specific Tickets where your team is eliminated before all matches in your package are played, FIFA will cancel the unused portion and refund the remaining value minus a small fixed fee (for example, currently 10 USD for U.S. residents). Refunds are usually processed within 60 days of cancellation, or sooner if required by local law.
If you list tickets on the official resale or exchange marketplace and they are successfully resold, FIFA refunds you the resale price minus a resale administration fee (currently 10 percent), typically within 30 working days of the resale or within 15 working days after the tournament ends, whichever is later.
When a match is moved, postponed or cancelled, the exact remedy depends on the circumstances and the legal documents in force. In past FIFA tournaments and in the current 2026 documentation, the usual options have been: automatic validity of your ticket for the rescheduled match, or a refund if the match is cancelled outright or moved to a different venue or city that you cannot reasonably attend. Fans should always check the latest ticket terms for the precise rules that apply at the time of purchase.
For accurate, up‑to‑date information on 2026 World Cup tickets, hospitality and policies, rely only on official channels. The key sources to monitor are:
These government sites are the only authoritative sources on visa rules, wait times and security policies. FIFA repeatedly stresses that a match ticket alone does not guarantee entry to any host country, so fans should cross‑check ticket plans with current immigration guidance before they travel.
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