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Reports of World Cup tickets dropping below $7 would be a major blow for FIFA, but those claims are not yet backed up by hard evidence.
The broader reality is still worrying. The official resale marketplace is now reflecting the true state of demand.
Fans will pay top dollar for the headline matches. But just because a game is part of the World Cup, that does not mean every ticket will fetch a premium price.
FIFA’s prices are being reset by the resale market
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That is why the talk around Cabo Verde vs Saudi Arabia matters, even if the $7 figure is not accurate.
There are tickets available for that match in Houston, but verified checks did not show standard tickets listed in single digits.
But the trend is clear. World Cup resale prices are falling, and that is more important than any isolated screenshot or post.
It is also worth noting that FIFA takes a cut from these sales. Its own support pages confirm a 15 percent fee for both buyers and sellers.
FIFA should worry about the direction of travel
This is not a crisis. High-profile matches are still expensive, and tickets for the final have been listed for millions of dollars.
The issue is the growing divide between the top fixtures and the rest. The market is showing that demand is far from even across the tournament.
That is a warning for FIFA. It can price the biggest games like global events, but it cannot expect every match to carry the same weight.
The World Cup brand is still massive. The resale market is just reminding FIFA that fans know the difference between a spectacle and a fair deal.
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