No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeTopicsLatin AmericaSoaring Soccer Prices in South America: Messi, Fans & Skyrocketing Costs

Soaring Soccer Prices in South America: Messi, Fans & Skyrocketing Costs

In soccer-mad South America, where love for the game transcends social class, watching stars like Lionel Messi play has become inaccessible to most as ticket prices hit the roof.

During the September qualifying round for the 2026 World Cup, ardent fans across the continent grumbled over the cost of seeing their favorite team play. 

“In my case it is impossible” to afford a ticket. “One can’t enjoy it,” said Pablo Gonzalez, 49, a maintenance worker at a university in the Colombian town of Barranquilla, where his country will play Uruguay on Thursday.

The average ticket price for the match is $102, in a country where the minimum monthly wage is $270. According to a recent tally the tickets are the second highest in the region for the qualifiers.

In Argentina, victors of the 2022 World Cup, fans hoping to see Messi in action were left disappointed after the football federation set ticket prices for Thursday’s match against Paraguay at an average of $120.

The country is battling annual inflation of 120 percent and poverty levels of 40 percent.  Argentina’s football federation has introduced a subscription program giving preferential access to match tickets. The “Gold” category costs $14,000 for a three-year pass with a slew of benefits.

Let people go for free

Even Argentina coach Lionel Scaloni commented on how much it had cost him to buy tickets for his whole family. “It cost me a lot, like everyone else. But who am I to set the price of tickets? If it was up to me, let people go for free,” he told a press conference.

“What can I do? I can’t do anything about it.” Some prices are making “something popular like football exclusive,” complained fan Candela Thompson to state news agency Telam. 

In Brazil, prices have shot up over the past month, with tickets going from an average of $63 dollars to $97 for Thursday’s match against Venezuela in central Cuiaba.

Chilean captain Arturo Vidal, considered a footballer of the people due to his humble background, has also complained.

“Tickets are expensive. I have already told the president (of the football association) to lower them a bit, we need a full stadium,” Vidal said on social media before a match against Colombia in September.

According to the Chilean media, unlike in previous qualifiers, it took several days for tickets to sell out. In Uruguay, football authorities admitted they had erred after high prices left thousands of seats empty for a match against Chile in September.

“We made a mistake,” said the country’s football association president Ignacio Alonso in remarks to local media. “The proof is that the stadium should have sold 40,000 tickets, and only sold about 31,500.”

After the “rejection of the prices,” he lowered ticket costs slightly. The cheapest spots for a match against Brazil on October 17 are now going for $22 dollars, $3 dollars less than the previous game.

Trending Now

Guatemala’s New Semana Santa Destinations See High Demand

Guatemala tourism authorities say places like El Paredón, Monterrico and Esquipulas draw growing interest ahead of Semana Santa, traditionally one of the busiest travel...

US Delivers Final Guarantees for Extradition of Celso Gamboa and Pecho de Rata

The United States delivered the final documents Costa Rican courts required to advance the extradition of Celso Gamboa Sánchez and Edwin Danney López Vega,...

Costa Rica Records Another Month of Negative Inflation

Costa Rica recorded negative annual inflation for another month in February 2026, with overall prices down 2.73 percent from the same period a year...

Keylor Navas Opens Up on Costa Rica’s World Cup Miss and His Club Revival

Keylor Navas opened up in a recent interview with journalist Yashin Quesada about Costa Rica's failure to qualify for the 2026 World Cup and...

Bukele Dismisses Political Prisoners Accusations in El Salvador Gang Crackdown

El Salvador President Nayib Bukele brushed aside accusations from human rights organizations that his government holds political prisoners and has committed crimes against humanity...

Qualifier Gibson stuns Paolini to reach Indian Wells quarterfinals

Australian qualifier Talia Gibson pulled off one of the biggest upsets of the BNP Paribas Open on Tuesday, defeating seventh-seeded Jasmine Paolini 7-5, 2-6,...
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica