Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 7
New York, New Jersey Commit $503 Million to World Cup as FIFA Eyes $8 Billion Revenue
Updated
Updated · POLITICO · Jun 7

New York, New Jersey Commit $503 Million to World Cup as FIFA Eyes $8 Billion Revenue

3 articles · Updated · POLITICO · Jun 7

Summary

  • $503 million in planned spending across New York, New Jersey and New York City is tied largely to the 2026 World Cup, with governments covering host-committee funding, transit upgrades, policing and fan events.
  • MetLife Stadium drives much of the bill: New Jersey Transit is spending $106 million on access upgrades, the states and city have provided $111 million in cash and loans to the host committee, and New Jersey expects another $42.5 million in public costs.
  • New York City alone expects about $92 million in police overtime during the tournament's five weeks, though FEMA has designated $66 million for the region and the U.S. Transportation Department released $10 million for transport support.
  • The spending is drawing scrutiny because FIFA is expected to earn $8 billion this year while the host committee has not disclosed its private fundraising, leaving lawmakers to question whether taxpayers are carrying too much of the burden.
  • Officials are selling the outlay on a projected $3.3 billion regional economic impact and $432 million in tax revenue, but tourism uncertainty and New York-New Jersey rivalry are sharpening doubts over who benefits most.

Insights

With taxpayers funding the World Cup, are New York and New Jersey facing a massive financial loss while FIFA profits?
Amid investigations into FIFA's ticket prices, is the World Cup experience now completely out of reach for average fans?