2026 World Cup rising costs may strip fan appeal

A sports analyst has warned that escalating costs threaten the emotional core of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, as supporters globally signal they can no longer afford to attend the tournament live.

Abdulkarim Tsoho, a Kano-based analyst, said the event’s historic connection to ordinary fans is at risk due to high ticket prices and significant travel expenses across the three host nations: the United States, Canada, and Mexico. “World Cup has always drawn its meaning from ordinary supporters, local fans who save for years, travelling fans who cross continents,” Tsoho stated. “When prices rise beyond reasonable reach, the competition risks becoming less democratic and less intimate.”

His comments follow formal criticism from fan groups. Football Supporters Europe (FSE), backed by consumer rights organization Euroconsumers, has filed a complaint with the European Commission against FIFA. The complaint alleges the governing body abused its monopoly by setting excessive ticket prices without proper fan consultation. While FIFA released a limited number of $60 tickets, FSE argues they are extremely scarce and difficult to obtain, rendering the offer ineffective for most supporters.

For Nigerian fans, the financial barrier is already insurmountable. Ahmad Bello, a Kano-based supporter, abandoned years of planning to attend. “With the current economic challenges and the high cost of tickets, flights and accommodation, I decided not to go,” he said. Shehu Usman Salihu noted the North American host selection itself signaled unaffordability. “The moment I heard the World Cup would be played in the United States, Canada and Mexico, I knew as an ordinary Nigerian it would be out of my reach,” he said. Many now prefer local viewing centres, citing both cost and camaraderie.

Tsoho emphasized that travel costs may pose a bigger obstacle than tickets alone. “Even where supporters find a match ticket, the real cost of attending the 2026 World Cup will often be much higher than the ticket value,” he explained, citing intercity travel, accommodation, visas, and living expenses across vast distances.

The analyst cautioned that while FIFA may achieve financial success, the tournament’s cultural fabric could fray. “Financially, FIFA may do very well, but culturally the World Cup risks becoming a luxury spectacle,” Tsoho said. “Football calls itself universal, but universality also means ordinary people must be able to enter the stadium. A World Cup without ordinary fans may still look big on television, but it may feel less authentic.” The issue underscores a growing tension between commercial revenue and the tournament’s traditional, fan-driven identity.

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