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Reading: World Cup matches in Toronto still aren’t sold out. But fans are facing high costs
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Today in Canada > News > World Cup matches in Toronto still aren’t sold out. But fans are facing high costs
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World Cup matches in Toronto still aren’t sold out. But fans are facing high costs

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Last updated: 2026/05/30 at 12:14 AM
Press Room Published May 30, 2026
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World Cup matches in Toronto still aren’t sold out. But fans are facing high costs
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The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.

Would you rather buy a ticket to a World Cup match or pay a month’s rent at a condo near BMO Field?

With two weeks until kick-off and thousands of tickets still available for the six matches Toronto is hosting, many of the city’s soccer fans appear to be giving a definitive answer.

As of Wednesday, there were still plenty of tickets available for the first World Cup match in the city, featuring Canada against Bosnia and Herzegovina. The cheapest tickets, for nosebleed seats, were $1,370. The best remaining seats were just over $3,100.

Locals like Cam Sharpe told CBC News they would never pay those kinds of prices for a sporting event, once-in-a-lifetime or not.

“I wouldn’t even have paid that much for the Blue Jays in the World Series, Game 7 against the Dodgers, where we actually win this time,” he said. “To get into something like that for such a steep ticket price, it doesn’t encourage locals to go.”

FIFA has faced criticism over the prices it set for this World Cup since tickets were first released late last year. But the federation may not be concerned with selling out matches, says Moshe Lander, a sports economist at Concordia University.

WATCH | World Cup prices have these fans fuming:

World Cup fans give FIFA a red card over expensive, confusing ticket process

With the World Cup coming up fast, some fans are sounding off on what they call FIFA’s overly expensive and confusing ticketing process, with some saying they paid top dollar for premier seats only for better ones to be released later.

If FIFA can make money selling seats at a higher price, even if fewer people can afford it and some tickets aren’t sold, that might still be more profitable than selling out the stadium at a more reasonable cost to ticketholders, Lander said.

“Wouldn’t you want to sell out?’ Maybe not. Maybe I don’t maximize my profit that way.” 

Fans worldwide reacted with shock and anger in December after seeing that FIFA’s ticketing plans gave participating teams no tickets in the lowest-priced category. Their standard allocation is eight per cent of stadium capacity per team.

In December, the backlash led FIFA to promptly slash prices on some tickets for each participating country.

Some resale tickets to Toronto matches were going for tens of thousands of dollars before Ontario capped ticket resales last month. FIFA then temporarily removed tickets from its official resale platform to get in line.

In an email, a FIFA spokesperson defended its ticket pricing, outlining its move in December. It also referred to comments made by FIFA president Gianni Infantino at the 76th FIFA Congress in Vancouver in April, where he noted the demand for World Cup 2026 tickets was ten times the amount of the last two World Cups together.

“Of course, we are always putting tickets on the market. There are expensive tickets, yes, but there are also affordable tickets,” he said.

Many fans relegated to bars, watch parties: commentator

It’s all leaving Toronto’s dedicated soccer fanbase out in the cold, says Gareth Wheeler, lead commentator at the soccer streaming service OneSoccer.

“This is bigger than the Olympics. This is the biggest tournament on the planet. And I think it’s safe to say right now, you’re not really feeling it,” Wheeler said. “I don’t think it does anything for the atmosphere of the stadium whenever you’re keeping people that care the most out of stadiums.”

LISTEN | Is the $1B cost of Canada co-hosting the World Cup worth it?:

The Current19:27FIFA World Cup costing Canadians $1B

New estimates from the federal budget watchdog show that the Canadian government will spend more than a billion dollars to host the World Cup in Toronto and Vancouver. We hear from businesses, sports fans and experts about whether the public money spent will actually give Canadians a fair return.

It’s unclear whether moneyed tourists will descend upon the city to scoop up the remaining tickets.

Hotel bookings in Toronto haven’t surged for the World Cup. Destination Toronto executive Kelly Jackson recently said hotels in the city are seeing an 80 per cent occupancy rate in June and July, roughly what’s expected for those summer months.

WATCH | Canada is co-hosting the 2026 World Cup. Here’s a primer:

What to know ahead of the FIFA World Cup

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is coming to Canada — and it’s going to be the biggest in the competition’s history. It’s the first to be hosted in three countries — and Canada is hoping it’ll also have its first-ever World Cup win.

Meanwhile, local soccer fans are more likely to show up at watch parties, backyard screenings, and bars around the city, Wheeler said.

“That’s where you’re going to really feel the pulse,” he said.

But even the city’s fan festival near the stadium, which was initially advertised as a completely free event, is now charging for 20 per cent of its tickets. Toronto reversed a controversial plan to also charge $10 for general admission tickets after strong public criticism.

Cheri Bradish, a sports business professor at Toronto Metropolitan University, says there’s still plenty of time for remaining match tickets to be gobbled up, even if prices don’t drop.

“I don’t believe the tourists that we see and the visitors that are coming just for the event are here yet in Toronto, and maybe have [not yet] completed all their purchases,” she said.

Toronto hosts its first World Cup match on June 12, and its last on July 2. It’s one of 16 North American co-host cities.

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