The Cheapest Way to Buy 2026 World Cup Tickets in Atlanta
Atlanta hosts 8 FIFA World Cup 2026 matches at Mercedes-Benz Stadium — five group-stage games, a Round of 32, a Round of 16, and a semifinal. Demand is high, and prices swing by the hour. Here's how to pay the least.
1. Always check FIFA official resale first
FIFA runs an official resale marketplace where fans relist tickets at or near face value. It's the safest source and often the cheapest — but its site won't show you the single lowest seat. You have to click through every section to find it, which is slow and easy to miss.
2. Compare every resale marketplace at once
The big secondary marketplaces — StubHub, SeatGeek, Vivid Seats, Gametime, Ticketmaster, TickPick, Viagogo — all list the same matches at different prices. The cheapest seat for a given match might be on SeatGeek one hour and StubHub the next. Checking them one by one wastes time and almost guarantees you overpay.
That's exactly what our tracker does: it pulls the lowest 100-, 200- and 300-level prices across 9 marketplaces plus the FIFA official resale number, every few hours, into one screen — so you see the true floor at a glance.
3. Know your level
- 100s (Lower): closest to the pitch, most expensive.
- 200s (Club): mid-tier, often the best value-to-view.
- 300s (Upper): cheapest get-in — frequently hundreds less than the 100s.
See our Mercedes-Benz Stadium seating guide for the full breakdown.
4. Set a price-drop alert
Resale prices fall as the match nears and sellers compete. Instead of refreshing all day, set a target price per level and get emailed the moment a seat hits it.
Browse by match
Check the current lowest get-in for any Atlanta fixture:
Prices are from the third-party secondary market and change constantly. We're an independent service, not affiliated with FIFA, and we don't sell tickets — we surface the cheapest listings so you don't overpay.
See the live lowest prices for all 8 Atlanta matches.
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