A Global Event at a New Scale The FIFA World Cup has always been more than a football tournament. It is a global gathering, a cultural landmark, and one of the rare events capable of capturing worldwide attention at the same moment. With the 2026 edition, the World Cup enters a new stage of its history. Expanded to forty-eight teams, spread across three host nations, and featuring more matches than ever before, the 2026 FIFA World Cup represents an unprecedented organizational and economic undertaking. Its scale invites reflection: how is such an event structured, how is access managed, and how does a global sporting ritual adapt to modern economic and logistical realities? The Price of the World Cup offers a clear and measured exploration of these questions. Rather than focusing on matches or sporting outcomes, this book looks behind the scenes at the systems that make the World Cup possible. It examines how ticketing, access pathways, pricing structures, and organizational choices operate at a global level, and why these mechanisms matter for the experience of the tournament. Drawing on official documents, institutional data, and international reporting, the book explains how World Cup ticketing works in the twenty-first century. Tickets are no longer simple entry passes. They are structured products released in phases, distributed through different channels, and adapted to extraordinary global demand. Readers are guided through the logic of random selection draws, group-stage packages, hospitality programs, and official resale platforms, with the aim of replacing confusion with understanding. The book also explores what it means to attend the World Cup in person today. Attendance is shaped not only by ticket prices, but by travel, accommodation, timing, and uncertainty. Host cities play a central role, benefiting from global visibility while managing the practical demands of welcoming millions of visitors. These elements are examined together to show how the World Cup functions as a complete system rather than a single event. At the same time, the book reflects on the idea of universality long associated with the World Cup. In an era of global broadcasting, the tournament reaches more people than ever before. This book considers how that universal reach relates to physical presence, and how institutions seek to balance inclusivity, organization, and economic sustainability as the event grows larger and more complex. This is not a book of accusation or nostalgia. It is a calm, accessible framework for understanding how the modern World Cup is built, governed, and experienced. By the end, readers will have a clearer sense of how access is structured, why systems operate as they do, and how a global sporting ritual continues to evolve in a changing world. Written for football fans, journalists, analysts, and readers interested in global events, The Price of the World Cup offers a thoughtful look at football's greatest tournament at a moment of transformation.