FIFA World Cup 2026 ticketing fraud: 300 fake sites, 9,741 domains in April
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Ticketing fraud linked to the FIFA World Cup 2026 is surging at an unprecedented scale, with cybersecurity firms identifying more than 300 pixel-perfect replica ticketing websites and nearly 10,000 fraudulent domains registered in a single month, according to multiple industry reports released on Thursday, 25 June 2026. Fans and ticket sellers across host nations — the United States, Canada, and Mexico — face heightened financial risk as the tournament enters its opening stages.
Scale of the Fraud Operation
Threat intelligence firm Silent Push has identified more than 300 pixel-perfect replica ticketing websites designed to deceive buyers into purchasing counterfeit or non-existent tickets. Separately, Check Point Research, the research arm of cybersecurity company Check Point Software, recorded 9,741 fraudulent World Cup-related domains registered in April 2026 alone — nearly four times the peak seen around the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar. Cybersecurity firm Fortinet counted more than 13,000 tournament-themed domains registered between January and May 2026.
How Fraudulent Transactions Compare
A report by payments intelligence company ACI Worldwide, based on an analysis of 24.5 million transactions across 61 live-event merchants serving global fan audiences, found that fraudulent orders averaged $405 during the pre-tournament build — approximately 1.5 times the legitimate average of $270. Average transaction values overall rose 1.2 per cent in the period. The firm projected that average fraudulent transaction values could again approach $400 during the tournament itself. Notably, warning signs that preceded fraud surges during Copa America 2024 and the 2022 World Cup have re-emerged in the current cycle, suggesting a repeating pattern that organisers and payment providers have yet to fully contain.
Domestic Cards Most Vulnerable
During the pre-tournament period, domestic cards recorded a 3.2 per cent attempted fraud rate, compared with 1.4 per cent for cross-border cards — a gap that reflects fraudsters' demonstrated preference for locally issued credentials, which are easier to exploit in host-country transactions. Fraudsters are predominantly targeting higher-value purchases, the ACI Worldwide report noted, and fraud pressure is expected to remain elevated through the opening stages of the tournament.
Alternative Payments Offer a Safety Edge
Alternative payment methods (APMs) — including digital wallets and bank transfers — recorded a significantly lower attempted fraud rate of 0.57 per cent, compared with 3.97 per cent for traditional cards, a nearly sevenfold difference. APM adoption has climbed sharply, rising from 7 per cent of transactions in 2022 to 24.8 per cent year-to-date in 2026. Cybersecurity firms and law enforcement have warned that fraudsters are now deploying automation and artificial intelligence to scale World Cup-related scams at speed and volume that outpaces manual detection.
What Fans Should Do
Authorities and cybersecurity experts urge fans to purchase tickets exclusively through the official FIFA ticketing portal and authorised resellers, verify website URLs carefully before entering payment details, and prefer APMs over traditional card payments where possible. With the tournament now underway, fraud pressure is unlikely to ease until the final whistle.