Times of Suriname Logo
Times of Suriname Logo

Engels

'Daylight robbery but worth it' - what fans are spending on World Cup

US - Fans at the 2026 World Cup across the US, Canada, and Mexico are spending eye-watering amounts to attend matches, with many calling the costs "insane"...

Times of Suriname

but ultimately worth it for the experience. Morten Oftedal, a Norwegian living in Atlanta, spent about 3,600 in cash and points to bring himself, his 82-year-old father, and his wife to see Norway vs Iraq in Massachusetts. With tickets at \380 each and flights consuming 180,000 frequent flyer points, he described the cost as "insane" and felt the tournament caters to "corporate America" rather than individuals.

Iain Bagwell, a British expat in Atlanta, paid $1,200 per ticket for England v Croatia in Dallas — calling it "daylight robbery" at first. He and his son are camping during their road trip to save money. A Bosnian couple, Alisa and Admir Maric, flew from Bosnia to Toronto, spending CAD1,250 per ticket, \600 per night on a hotel, and $1,150 per flight — totaling roughly CAD$5,400. Sisters Aida and Emina Tucic paid CAD$1,200 each for their tickets, acknowledging the price was "probably not" fair, but calling the experience "priceless." In Mexico, ticket prices were especially steep. Outside the Azteca Stadium, few fans paid less than $1,500, and some spent up to $4,000. Aaron Vieyra paid 30,000 pesos ($1,750) per ticket for himself and his girlfriend — noting that single ticket cost about three months' rent for many Mexico City residents. He spent more on that one game than on combined matches he'd seen in Brazil and Russia. Stadium food and drink prices vary widely: a 16oz beer costs $16 at the NYNJ Stadium but only $5 for a 12oz in Atlanta. A train ticket from Penn Station to the NYNJ Stadium was hiked from $12.90 to $98 for World Cup matches, with the governor saying FIFA isn't contributing to the $48 million transit costs.

Some relief exists: New York City's mayor secured 1,000 fifty-dollar tickets for residents via lottery, Ontario passed the Putting Fans First Act to curb resale prices, and Dallas is offering free stadium transport. Despite the costs, every fan interviewed said the memories made it worthwhile. As Oftedal put it: "The worry about money goes away after a while." (BBC)

Gerelateerde Artikelen

Buitenland

Amerikaanse terugtrekking van crisistroepen voor NAVO gaat onmiddellijk in

VS - De terugtrekking van Amerikaanse troepen voor de NAVO gaat direct in. Dat zei secretaris-generaal Mark Rutte donderdagochtend voorafgaand aan een top met defensieministers van het bondgenootschap.

Binnenland

Burgers luiden noodklok over bromfietsoverlast in Nickerie

NICKERIE – De aanhoudende overlast en verkeersonveiligheid veroorzaakt door bromfietsers in Nickerie zorgen voor groeiende ontevredenheid onder de bevolking.

Engels

Apple to raise prices as AI boom pushes up chip costs

US - Apple plans to raise the prices of its products as the cost of the memory chips it uses has surged, the technology giant's boss has said.

Buitenland

Twaalfhonderd jaar oude 'Robin Hood-boom' in Engeland bezweken

VERENIGD KONINKRIJK - Een van de bekendste bomen van het Verenigd Koninkrijk is volgens deskundigen dood. De zogeheten ‘Major Oak’ werd bekend vanwege zijn hoge leeftijd,...

Binnenland

Bestuurder belandt in goot nabij luchthaven

PARA - Een automobilist is op de Krakaweg, nabij de Johan Adolf Pengel International Airport, met zijn voertuig in een goot terechtgekomen, nadat hij de controle over het stuur verloor.

'Daylight robbery but worth it' - what fans are spending on World Cup