Neuseeland News – Reisen, Abenteuer und Tourismus fuer deutschsprechende Neuseeland-Reisende

Neuseeland News ist ein deutschsprachiges Online Reise- and Tourismus-Magazin exklusiv aus Neuseeland fuer Abenteuer, Reisen und Urlaub downunder.

  • Home
  • News
  • Features
  • Adventure
  • Advertising – Marketing – Contact
You are here: Home / Latest Neuseeland News / USA: Will the 2026 World Cup be a disaster for fans?

USA: Will the 2026 World Cup be a disaster for fans?

Prices for next year’s competition have tripled since the last, while Trump’s immigration crackdowns scare off fans – Image: CNP/ADM/Capital Pictures/picture alliance

The 2026 FIFA Soccer World Cup is set to be the most expensive, polluting and political yet. Immigration difficulties, mass deportation raids and climate issues have plagued the United States, the biggest of the three World Cup host countries, for most of 2025. With the first phase of ticket sales leaving fans astounded by the record-high prices, it raises the question: how much will fans really be able to enjoy the 2026 World Cup?

Immigration struggles

Since Donald Trump’s return to power, the US has made entering the country a nightmare for many.

Unpredictable rejections and even detentions at the border made headlines early in the year, notably in March when German citizens were being detained by US immigration.

The previous two World Cups had a fast-track, temporary visa process, but the US has yet to offer such a program. The final tournament schedule won’t be clear until the draw on December 5, leaving many fans facing a lengthy bureaucratic process before even knowing when, or if, their country will play.

For some, attending the tournament may already be legally impossible. At the start of the summer, Trump announced a new list of countries whose citizens are outright banned from traveling to the USA. An exception was defined for the players and staff from any sporting team taking part in the tournament, meaning the teams will be allowed in, but fans will be left sitting at home.

So far, the only nation from that list which has qualified for the World Cup is Iran. But local media in Brazil has speculated that their fans may also be barred from travel, as Trump has heavily sanctioned the South American country over the prosecution of former president and ideological ally Jair Bolsonaro. A World Cup without fans from Brazil, the only country to have qualified for every edition, is unimaginable.

No Brazil fans at a World Cup would be hard for many fans to imagine – Image: Darko Bandic/AP Photo/picture alliance

Mass deportations

As difficult as getting into the country may be, staying might be just as hard. Mass deportation raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) have been carried out across the country for months now. The targets are usually large, liberal-voting cities such as  Los Angelesand Chicago. Many of these cities will be host sites for the tournament next year.

During the summer’s Club World Cup, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) made its presence known. In a post on X, they stated their officers were “suited and booted ready to provide security.” Despite quickly deleting the post, they still advised attendees to carry proof of legal status.

Though the tournament ultimately concluded without any major ICE-related incidents, the statements caused enough fear to keep many fans away. Should this continue into next year, many fans might be discouraged from traveling.

There was a heavy security presence at the Club World Cup – Image: Yuri Cortez/AFP/Getty Images

High financial and environmental costs

On top of these civil rights concerns comes the financial impact on fans.

The most expensive 2026 final tickets are nearly four times higher than those in Qatar 2022 — from roughly $1,600 (€1,375) then to over $6,300 (€5,400) now.

Prices vary for the group stage and opening matches of each host nation. Matches played in Los Angeles and San Francisco, for example, are more expensive than those in Dallas and Philadelphia. But even with these disparities, group stage tickets, historically the cheapest of the tournament, are still about three times higher than the last edition.

Combined with “variable-pricing” schemes and resale portals with no price cap, simply getting a ticket could cost fans hundreds to thousands of dollars. Travel to the country and accommodation costs will make the trip even more untenable.

Along with the financial cost, there is also a large environmental one.

After the last World Cup took place in the small Gulf state of Qatar, this edition sees games taking place across the biggest three North American nations. This means teams and fans will have to rely primarily on air travel. The US will play its first game in Los Angeles, the second in Seattle, and the third again back in LA. That’s nearly 2,000 miles traveled on the most pollutive form of transportation.

While car rentals and ridesharing might offer a possibility for traveling fans, the increase in road traffic is expected to be so great it will reportedly contribute to making this World Cup the most polluting ever.

Public transportation options also remain a major concern. The AT&T Stadium near Dallas, for example, will host the most matches of any venue but cannot be reached by public transport.

Most of America is designed around the car, but even these facilities will be under strain when the world comes to visit for the World Cup – Image: Mike Blake/REUTERS

FIFA remain optimistic

FIFA President Gianni Infantino has reassured the public that immigration issues will not be a concern.

“There is definitely a commitment of the government in the United States to make sure that the process is smooth, so fans from all over the world will be welcome,” Infantino said during a press conference in August. He did not, however, detail how this process will work.

FIFA’s media director Bryan Swanson defended the ticket pricing structure, saying it is crucial to have “a ticketing model that reflects our responsibility to provide access to fans, while at the same time ensuring as much value as possible is retained for redistribution into the game around the world.”

When it comes to civil and human rights concerns, a group of 90 rights groups signed an open letter to FIFA asking them to address the growing abuses in the United States. No direct response was given.

(DW.com/NAN 10-10-25)

 

 

You might also like:

NEW ZEALAND: AirNZ backs nature with its first internationally verified carbon removals

In a move to help spark a voluntary carbon market in New Zealand, Air New Zealand has committed to buy 8000 tonnes of internationally verified, New Zealand nature-based carbon removals by 2030, in partnership with My Native Forest. My Native Forest provides weiterlesen…

Teile das

NEWS

New Zealand

NON-STOP FLIGHTS TO PARADISE: Air New Zealand announces new route from Christchurch in New Zealand to Rarotonga in the Cook Islands. Air New Zealand is turning up the heat for South Islanders next winter, giving travellers a new direct route to sunshine, sand and sea – no stopover required. The new seasonal service will operate up to three times a week from May through to October 2026. Flights are available to book from Wednesday 5 November 25.

FEATURES

FILM: Russell Crowe portrays Hitler’s right-hand man in ‘Nuremberg’

James Vanderbilt’s “Nuremberg” pairs Russell Crowe and Rami Malek in a prestige retelling of the Nazi tribunal, framed as a psychological duel between Hermann Göring and the US Army psychiatrist studying him. “Nuremberg” is what used to be called an Oscar movie. Or, less charitably, “Oscar bait”: The new film from director James Vanderbilt takes weiterlesen…

AUSTRALIA: How the plastics industry shifted responsibility for recycling onto you, the consumer

Australia’s recycling system has been lurching from one crisis to another for decades. Soft-plastic schemes are collapsing, kerbside contamination is on the rise, and states are still struggling to coordinate a coherent national approach. But the deeper problem isn’t technical. It’s historical — and moral. For 70 years, the packaging industry has led advertising and weiterlesen…

NEW ZEALAND: New exhibition about Marine Protection in Auckland

A new, immersive exhibition will be presented from this week at the New Zealand Maritime Museum (Hui Te Ananui a Tangaroa) in Auckland. Ngā Huhua: Abundance, brings the extraordinary Hauraki Gulf weiterlesen...

AUSTRALIA: What Queensland’s new tourism strategy means for the industry’s future

The state of Queensland in Australia has set out a new long-term vision for tourism, with sustainability and ecotourism at its core. Global certifying organisation EarthCheck’s Stewart Moore and weiterlesen...

Abenteuer

SÜDSEE: Die Macht der Motive – Wie der Tatau Polynesien formte

NEUSEELAND: In Kaikoura mit Delfinen schwimmen und Albatrosse hautnah erleben

TRAVEL-TIP: Architecture tourism in Germany

CONSERVATION: New Zealand’s “new population” – From 5 million to 695 billion

weiterlesen...

News

BRAZIL: Making forest protection more lucrative than destruction

NEW ZEALAND: Wildlife cruise company Black Cat acquires iconic Kaikoura Eco-Tourism business

NEUSEELAND: Junge Deutsche stirbt auf Wandertour

UN report: Global climate ambitions ‘off target’

weiterlesen...

Newsletter

Copyright © 2025 · Newspac Media Ltd · Log in