World Cup Ticket Scams Are Already Up 36%. Here Is the Playbook Fraudsters Are Using
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Lloyds Banking Group is warning football fans about a sharp rise in ticket fraud ahead of the 2026 World Cup, with reported cases climbing 36% during the current Premier League season and average losses reaching £215 per victim. Total losses jumped 42% compared with the same period a year earlier, and football accounted for 32% of all ticket scams the bank tracked. The pattern is consistent: sellers post fake tickets on social media, move buyers to WhatsApp, demand a bank transfer, and disappear once the money clears. Lloyds also flagged counterfeit QR codes, fake waiting lists, and bogus pre-release offers as common variations on the same basic fraud.Scammers have genuine scarcity to exploit this tournament cycle.
FIFA received more than 500 million ticket requests for 2026 — far above the combined demand for the 2018 and 2022 tournaments — and listed top Category 1 seats for the July 19 final at MetLife Stadium at $32,970, roughly three times the previous record high of $10,990. That combination of overwhelming demand and eye-watering official prices creates exactly the conditions where buyers are willing to take risks on unofficial sources and sellers can credibly claim to have hard-to-find inventory. Investigators are urging fans to verify ticket sources exclusively through FIFA's official resale marketplace and treat any unsolicited offer, regardless of how convincing it appears, as a red flag by default.