World Cup Ticket Scams Surge in 2026, Using Fake FIFA Sites and AI
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 26
World Cup Ticket Scams Surge in 2026, Using Fake FIFA Sites and AI
3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 26
Summary
FBI warnings and security experts say 2026 World Cup scammers are exploiting last-minute demand with spoofed FIFA websites, fake social-media listings and AI-generated ticket materials to steal money and personal data.
Fake domains mimic FIFA branding with typo-squatting and added words like "ticket" or "career," while polished pages, QR codes and confirmation emails can make bogus offers look legitimate.
The safest check is whether a ticket transfers through FIFA’s official system or resale marketplace; screenshots, PDFs and seller-supplied QR codes are not reliable proof of entry.
Real buyers have already been burned: one fan paid $485 per ticket on StubHub, another saw roughly $550 seats fail before a June 14 match, and replacement tickets later topped $1,500.
Fans are urged to type FIFA.com directly, avoid Zelle or crypto payments, save transaction records and report scams to the FBI’s IC3 if money or personal information is exposed.