
When Ty Malugani in Alabama heard the World Cup was coming to North America, he was thrilled.
This was finally his chance to go to a World Cup right in the U.S and take his four little ones to experience the game he loves. The U.S. is co-hosting the tournament with Mexico and Canada starting in mid-June.
“We always talked about going to a World Cup,” Malugani says. “And so we were like, oh, there’s one in America! Just perfect, perfect timing.”
Soon enough, that excitement turned into disappointment. First, there were the eye-watering ticket prices. The cheapest match for the U.S. team would cost his family almost $1,600 — for nosebleed seats. If his family wanted to go to the U.S. opening game, it would cost them over $6,700 for seats.
Fans aren’t happy with FIFA for many reasons
Then there was the confusing way FIFA is selling the World Cup tickets, from using lotteries to its hard-to-understand array of seating categories.
The last straw for Malugani came when the organization awarded President Trump the FIFA Peace Prize, a new recognition given to those who “have helped unite people all over the world in peace.”
For Malugani, it felt as if FIFA was more focused on cuddling up to the president than on soccer fans like himself.
“It felt very much like we’re not going to care about the fans, or the event itself,” he says. “We’re not going to care about anything other than trying to appease this one person in order in the hopes that they may benefit FIFA in some way.”
With less than two months left before the start of the World Cup, Malugani is one of many fans from the U.S. and from overseas who told NPR they’ve grown so frustrated with the World Cup — and some of the policies from the Trump administration — that they are deciding not to attend the tournament at all.
FIFA, for its part, says it’s seeing “unprecedented” demand for tickets to the World Cup, which will bring star athletes such as Lionel Messi from Argentina or Cristiano Ronaldo from Portugal to North America.
But there are signs that demand for the World Cup is running below expectations, at least so far — and it’s raising questions about whether the tournament might not be quite the resounding success many had anticipated.
Jan Freitag, who analyzes the hospitality industry as National Director for CoStar Group, a real estate and hospitality data provider, says he still feels demand will pick up in the second half of the tournament, when the knockouts and the final take place in July.
But demand in the first half of the World Cup has been softer than expected, he adds.
“It’s a confluence of, oh, there’s a war going on. Oh, airfares are high. Oh, ticket prices are high. You know, and in the first round stages, maybe those matches aren’t super interesting. So, you know, maybe it’s sort of a little bit of everything,” Freitag says.
Hotel bookings aren’t as high as expected
In another sign of potential trouble, hotels are reporting bookings are not running as high as the industry had expected.
One reason is that FIFA canceled a large number of hotel rooms across some of the host cities, according to Rosanna Maietta, who leads the American Hotel & Lodging Association. Although it’s common for FIFA to overbook hotel rooms before tournaments, the number of cancellations caught the industry by surprise.

But another major reason is that the industry is not yet seeing the number of bookings from overseas travelers it had expected.
“That makes us take a deep breath,” Maietta says. “It remains to be seen where we’ll end up by the time the games are here.”
Maietta, however, said she was hopeful bookings will pick up as the tournament approaches.
Coming to America has become fraught for some people
But don’t count on Kieran Maguire to be one of them.
Maguire is a professor of soccer finance in Liverpool, England, who hosts a popular podcast on the subject. But he is also a fan, having attended several World Cups before.
Not this one, though. Maguire says he no longer feels welcome in the United States, a country he says he loves and where he has felt comfortable visiting before.
But lately, he’s wary. Maguire cites recent rules that allow immigration officers to scrutinize the social media history for a variety of visitors, which could be expanded to also include those from countries with visa waiver agreements with the U.S.
The White House has also imposed bans or travel restrictions on around three dozen countries, including on four teams that are actually taking part in the World Cup.
Another reason, Maguire says, are the recent cases of violence involving ICE in cities such as Minneapolis where several people have been killed.
“We’ve seen what’s happened in Minnesota. We’ve seen what’s happened in other cities as a whole,” he says. “I think some of the measures … which are seen as being draconian, which are seen as being quite repressive, have had a negative impact upon those willing to attend the World Cup.”
Like FIFA, the White House is adamant the tournament will be a success — and pushed back against those who criticize the administration.
“The FIFA 2026 World Cup will no doubt be one of the greatest and most spectacular events in the history of mankind,” says White House spokesman Davis Ingle in a statement. “President Trump is focused on ensuring that this is not only an incredible experience for all fans and visitors, but also the safest and most secure in history.”
But Malugani in Alabama won’t be one of the people attending. His biggest regret still remains that his four kids also won’t be able to watch them in person. He had been hopeful they could go to the World Cup so that they could also grow up loving soccer, just as he did.
But he now feels it’s a tournament that’s no longer meant for people like them.
“That to me is the worst. Because I love the sport and I want future generations to love the sport,” he says. “Hopefully things can turn around and things can maybe, maybe work out. But as of right now, it just feels like it’s a missed opportunity.”
Transcript:
JUANA SUMMERS, HOST:
This summer’s World Cup has a lot to be excited about. It’s being held across three countries for the first time, and it will be the biggest ever with 48 teams. But some big soccer fans do not share that excitement. NPR’s Rafael Nam has the story.
RAFAEL NAM, BYLINE: Ty Malugani is a huge soccer fan in Alabama, and he probably had the same reaction as many across North America when he heard the World Cup was coming to the U.S., Canada and Mexico this summer.
TY MALUGANI: I was so excited. We always talked about going to a World Cup, and so to be like, oh, there’s one in America, that’s perfect, perfect timing.
NAM: But it wasn’t long before his excitement started fading away. First, it was how difficult it was to get tickets. There were lotteries, not for tickets but for a time slot to buy tickets. And then, yeah, the prices – he has a family of six with four little ones. Even going to the cheapest U.S. game would have cost him over $1,500. And those are for nosebleed seats, high up in the stadium. Then there was this moment…
(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)
GIANNI INFANTINO: Please welcome the very first winner of the FIFA Peace Prize, the 45th and 47th president of the United States of America, Mr. Donald J. Trump. Please.
NAM: The peace prize – at the draw ceremony for the tournament held in Washington, D.C., FIFA President Gianni Infantino presented Trump with an award for individuals who have united people across the world. Malugani said it was the moment that made him question FIFA’s intentions.
MALUGANI: It felt very much like we’re not going to care about the fans or the event itself. We’re not going to care about anything other than trying to appease this one person in the hopes that they may benefit FIFA.
NAM: Malugani is not the only fan who NPR has talked to who has been really turned off by this tournament, whether it be ticket prices, the peace prize or something else. Jan Freitag, a travel analyst at CoStar, says demand to come to the World Cup is not running as high as many expected, at least for the first half of the tournament.
JAN FREITAG: I think it’s a confluence of, oh, there’s a war going on. Oh, airfares are high. Oh, ticket prices are high, you know, and in the first-round stages, maybe those matches aren’t super interesting. So, you know, maybe it’s sort of a little bit of everything.
NAM: And that little bit of everything is leading to concerns across the travel industry. Rosanna Maietta, who leads the American Hotel and Lodging Association, still sees a lot of anticipation, even with less than two months left. The problem?
ROSANNA MAIETTA: We’re not seeing that translate yet into bookings around the country. I think we’re seeing that it’s a little bit softer than we would have anticipated right now.
NAM: One of the people who won’t be booking a hotel room is Kieran Maguire in Liverpool, England. He’s a professor of sports finance, and he’s been to several World Cups before. But he says even he, a white European and a political centrist, doesn’t feel so welcome in the U.S., a country he loves. He talks about the crackdown on immigration with travel bans and restrictions, as well as the violence involving ICE in cities like Minnesota that make him feel unsafe.
KIERAN MAGUIRE: I think there’s a feeling amongst many Europeans that perhaps we’re not that welcome anymore, and so therefore, I think some of the measures which are being observed here in Europe, which are seen as being draconian, which are seen as being quite repressive, have had a negative impact upon those willing to attend the World Cup.
NAM: FIFA, though, says demand is incredible and that all games are on the verge of being sold out. And the White House says the president wants to make this an incredible experience for all visitors and the safest and most secure in history, while saying criticism of the tournament is due to ridiculous scare tactics by liberal activist groups and the left-wing media. Malugani in Alabama, though, still feels really disappointed. What stinks most is that his four little ones will not get to see the sport he loves because he feels the World Cup is not meant for people like them.
MALUGANI: That to me is the worst because I love the sport, and I want future generations to love the sport. Hopefully things can turn around, and things can maybe work out. But as of right now, it just feels like it’s a missed opportunity.
NAM: A missed opportunity because the World Cup will still go on, but perhaps not with soccer fans like him from around the world. Rafael Nam, NPR News.


