Zohran Mamdani announces $50 World Cup ticket lottery for New York City residents

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New York City’s mayor, Zohran Mamdani, on Thursday announced that a new tranche of 2026 World Cup tickets will be made available to residents of the five boroughs at $50 per ticket. The tickets, which will be distributed via random draw, will be for every game at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium other than the final. They will also include bus transportation to and from the event.

A total of 1,000 tickets will be available as part of the program, with a block of about 150 tickets for each of the seven games. The tickets will be located in the upper bowl of the 82,000-capacity MetLife Stadium.

The games eligible for the program include five group games (Brazil v Morocco on 13 June, France v Senegal on 16 June, Norway v Senegal on 22 June, Ecuador v Germany on 25 June and Panama v England on 27 June), plus a Round of 32 game on 30 June and a Round of 16 game on 5 July.

Mamdani unveiled the plan on Thursday in the Little Senegal neighborhood of Harlem in upper Manhattan. He was accompanied by community leaders, plus Tim Weah and Mark McKenzie, two members of the US men’s national team who are also New York natives.

The plan marks the first and to date only time an individual 2026 World Cup host city will provide special access to tickets for residents of that particular city. In that way, it marks a return to the status quo: residents of Qatar receiving discounted tickets to the 2022 edition of the tournament in the country.

The lottery system for the tickets will open on 25 May at 10am Eastern Time and close on 30 May at 5pm ET, with a maximum of 50,000 allowed daily entries into the lottery. Winners will be allowed to buy up to two tickets each. The tickets are non-transferable and will be given to winners on the day of the games.

The initiative is positioned as a collaboration between the mayor’s office and the NY/NJ World Cup host committee – not with Fifa, who have control over ticket operations and have utilized dynamic pricing amid much criticism.

Ticket pricing has been a major issue throughout the buildup to this World Cup, with games in the New York/New Jersey area garnering significant attention for both the price of admission and the cost of transportation. New Jersey Transit, the authority that operates most of the bus and train routes to MetLife Stadium from New York City proper, initially announced that a round-trip train ticket between New York’s Penn Station and MetLife Stadium would cost $150, when the usual fare is $13. That price has since dropped to $105 for a round-trip ticket. Buses between New York City and the stadium are expected to run at $80 per ticket.

Fifa had previously responded to criticism around ticket prices by releasing a limited amount of tickets at $60, comprising approximately 1.6% of those available for sale. The federation had initially set $60 as the cheapest possible tickets for any World Cup games, but dynamic pricing has rocketed the prices up into the hundreds for every game of the tournament.

Mamdani, an avowed soccer fan who made affordability a central pillar of his successful mayoral campaign, took aim at Fifa over the prices of admission, saying last year that the federation was putting revenues over accessibility for what should be an inclusive celebration of soccer.

“There’s just no chance for so many who love this game so much to actually be able to go and see this,” Mamdani said at a campaign stop in September. “This also has a real impact on the potential for the atmosphere of the World Cup and just how many fans will actually be there. Because so often the people who get the tickets quickest are not the ones who are actually the most eager to be there. They’re the ones who are the most excited at the prospect of a profit.”

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