
The Inquiry Is the 2026 World Cup an own goal?
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Feb 17, 2026 Dr Johan Rewilak, sport management researcher at Loughborough, and Dr Christina Philippou, sport finance expert at Portsmouth, debate the 2026 World Cup's expansion and costs. They discuss FIFA's growth aims, how dynamic and tiered pricing raised ticket prices, the travel and accommodation burden across three countries, and whether ticket revenue truly funds global development.
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Expansion Aligns With FIFA's Growth Goal
- FIFA's stated goal is to grow the game globally by increasing participation and viewership.
- Expanding the World Cup to 48 teams aligns with that strategic objective.
More Seats But Higher Prices
- Despite more matches and seats, ticket prices rose significantly versus the previous World Cup.
- Lower-category seats were scarce and sold out before public sales opened.
Dynamic Pricing Shapes Ticket Costs
- FIFA used dynamic pricing to adjust prices based on observed demand for specific games and locations.
- Early pricing already segmented by category, stage, and host-nation matches before demand shocks.

