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USMNT soccer fans reveal secret of how they are finding World Cup tickets for half the cost of FIFA pricing

Photo by Europa Press Sports/Europa Press via Getty Images
Photo by Europa Press Sports/Europa Press via Getty Images
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Some USMNT fans who waited out the 2026 World Cup ticket market found a risky but effective way into the opener, and paid far less than FIFA’s original prices.

The United States’ 4-1 win over Paraguay at SoFi Stadium eventually produced the atmosphere organizers wanted, but the build-up was dominated by anger over ticket costs.

FIFA’s official prices left many supporters wondering whether a home World Cup had priced out the very fans it was supposed to serve.

Some fans responded by refusing to panic early, then moving late through resale sites once prices softened.

The FIFA logo is seen before the FIFA World Cup 2026 Group D match between USA and Paraguay at Los Angeles Stadium.
Photo by Harry How/Getty Images

USMNT fans used resale patience to beat FIFA World Cup pricing

As detailed by The Athletic, one father and son bought premium 200-level tickets on Gametime for $1,300 each. That still sounds expensive, but it was less than half of FIFA’s original price for comparable seats.

Another family from Texas made a similar late move. Tony, the father, had tracked prices for weeks before jumping on a resale opportunity, paying $5,000 total for four tickets at $1,250 each.

The lesson was not that World Cup tickets suddenly became cheap. It was that FIFA’s listed prices were not always the real market price once kickoff got closer and sellers faced empty seats.

That mattered because official prices for the USMNT’s opener were among the most criticized of the tournament. Category 1 tickets were listed at $2,735, Category 2 at $1,940, and Category 3 at $1,120, creating a gap that patient resale buyers were able to exploit.

USMNT win over Paraguay may close the Australia ticket window fast

Gianni Infantino defended the pricing before the tournament by pointing to huge demand, saying interest at the listed prices had been tenfold.

For the Paraguay match, enough fans effectively called that bluff. They waited, watched resale platforms and found seats at prices that were still high, but far below the original FIFA mark.

The timing may not work as cleanly for the next USMNT match. After the 4-1 win over Paraguay, with Folarin Balogun scoring twice and Gio Reyna adding one of the tournament’s standout goals, interest in the team rose quickly.

Prices for the Australia game have already spiked again, with resale get-in costs reported well above $1,700 in some markets.

A big opening win changed the mood around the team and gave sellers less reason to drop. The secret was never a hidden discount code.

It was patience, timing, and a willingness to trust that an overheated market might cool before kickoff. After one USMNT statement win, that window may already be harder to find.