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SportThursday, July 2, 2026

England’s Azteca date with Mexico sends resale tickets to £27,000

A last-16 meeting with the co-hosts at the iconic Estadio Azteca has triggered a frenzied secondary market, with some seats listed at 12 times their face value.

England’s 2-1 victory over DR Congo, secured by a Harry Kane double, has set up a blockbuster World Cup knockout tie against co-hosts Mexico at the Estadio Azteca – and ignited one of the most frenzied ticket scrambles in recent tournament history. Within hours of the final whistle, the cheapest available seat on FIFA’s official resale platform had climbed to £2,622, nearly twelve times its original face value, while premium Category 1 listings touched $35,649 (£27,300). British media reports note that only around 400 resale tickets remained by Thursday morning, almost all in the two ends of the 80,800-capacity venue, where Mexican supporters are expected to form an overwhelming majority.

The surge reflects a collision of scarcity and occasion. The England Supporters’ Travel Club received an allocation of 4,000 tickets in January, all sold via ballot, and no further official supply will be released. Fans who secured seats at face value paid between $235 for Category 3 and $770 for Category 1. On the secondary market, however, those same bands have been relisted at up to $19,453 and $35,649 respectively, with independent platforms such as SeatGeek showing nothing below £3,000. Italian press reports describe the lowest resale price as €3,000 once FIFA’s additional fees are included, while Iranian outlets highlight that the top-end listings exceed six billion tomans.

For travelling supporters, the cost of entry is only one part of a punishing logistical equation. Direct flights from Atlanta to Mexico City have risen above £730, and many fans are routing via Cancún or taking indirect paths to contain expenses. Accommodation in the capital remains relatively affordable, with hotels offering rooms under £80 for two nights, but security concerns are acute. Mexican authorities have launched a large-scale operation around the Azteca, with streets expected to be sealed off hours before the 1 a.m. BST kick-off. The UK Foreign Office has reiterated its caution about travel to certain areas, though British football police have praised the behaviour of England fans in the United States, where only five arrests have been recorded so far.

The match carries heavy historical echoes. England last played a World Cup fixture at the Azteca in 1986, losing to Argentina in a quarter-final defined by Diego Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ and his solo masterpiece. This time, Thomas Tuchel’s side will step into a cauldron where Mexican supporters, buoyed by a 2-0 win over Ecuador in the last 32, will dominate the sound. Outgoing UK prime minister Keir Starmer is set to relax licensing laws to allow pubs to stay open into the small hours, a nod to the anticipated domestic television audience.

Kane’s double against DR Congo took his season tally to 72 goals, surpassing Cristiano Ronaldo’s best single-season mark of 69 and leaving only Lionel Messi’s 82-goal campaign of 2011-12 ahead of him. The England captain would need 11 more strikes across a potential four remaining matches to equal that record. The immediate prize, however, is a quarter-final berth, with the winner of Monday’s clash advancing to face either Portugal or Croatia.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

15%
ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressSub-Saharan African press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Security
PragmatismDetachment

The England-Mexico match is overshadowed by unprecedented security measures in Mexico City after four fans died during celebrations of Mexico's victory. Authorities have doubled security and capped capacity at gathering points, prioritizing fan safety.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
OutrageSkepticism

England fans are forced to pay up to £2,600 for a ticket to the England-Mexico match on FIFA's official resale platform, a scandalous price that raises questions about speculation and accessibility in football.

Broaden your view

Read more
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Upd. 09:15 PM3 languages · 4 outlets
4 outlets|3 languages|3 min read
Thursday, July 2, 2026

England’s Azteca date with Mexico sends resale tickets to £27,000

A last-16 meeting with the co-hosts at the iconic Estadio Azteca has triggered a frenzied secondary market, with some seats listed at 12 times their face value.

England’s 2-1 victory over DR Congo, secured by a Harry Kane double, has set up a blockbuster World Cup knockout tie against co-hosts Mexico at the Estadio Azteca – and ignited one of the most frenzied ticket scrambles in recent tournament history. Within hours of the final whistle, the cheapest available seat on FIFA’s official resale platform had climbed to £2,622, nearly twelve times its original face value, while premium Category 1 listings touched $35,649 (£27,300). British media reports note that only around 400 resale tickets remained by Thursday morning, almost all in the two ends of the 80,800-capacity venue, where Mexican supporters are expected to form an overwhelming majority.

The surge reflects a collision of scarcity and occasion. The England Supporters’ Travel Club received an allocation of 4,000 tickets in January, all sold via ballot, and no further official supply will be released. Fans who secured seats at face value paid between $235 for Category 3 and $770 for Category 1. On the secondary market, however, those same bands have been relisted at up to $19,453 and $35,649 respectively, with independent platforms such as SeatGeek showing nothing below £3,000. Italian press reports describe the lowest resale price as €3,000 once FIFA’s additional fees are included, while Iranian outlets highlight that the top-end listings exceed six billion tomans.

For travelling supporters, the cost of entry is only one part of a punishing logistical equation. Direct flights from Atlanta to Mexico City have risen above £730, and many fans are routing via Cancún or taking indirect paths to contain expenses. Accommodation in the capital remains relatively affordable, with hotels offering rooms under £80 for two nights, but security concerns are acute. Mexican authorities have launched a large-scale operation around the Azteca, with streets expected to be sealed off hours before the 1 a.m. BST kick-off. The UK Foreign Office has reiterated its caution about travel to certain areas, though British football police have praised the behaviour of England fans in the United States, where only five arrests have been recorded so far.

The match carries heavy historical echoes. England last played a World Cup fixture at the Azteca in 1986, losing to Argentina in a quarter-final defined by Diego Maradona’s ‘Hand of God’ and his solo masterpiece. This time, Thomas Tuchel’s side will step into a cauldron where Mexican supporters, buoyed by a 2-0 win over Ecuador in the last 32, will dominate the sound. Outgoing UK prime minister Keir Starmer is set to relax licensing laws to allow pubs to stay open into the small hours, a nod to the anticipated domestic television audience.

Kane’s double against DR Congo took his season tally to 72 goals, surpassing Cristiano Ronaldo’s best single-season mark of 69 and leaving only Lionel Messi’s 82-goal campaign of 2011-12 ahead of him. The England captain would need 11 more strikes across a potential four remaining matches to equal that record. The immediate prize, however, is a quarter-final berth, with the winner of Monday’s clash advancing to face either Portugal or Croatia.

Source divergence

Sport · 4 outlets · 3 languages

15%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Neutral67%
Critical33%

How the same story is told elsewhere.

2 editorial groups · 3 languages

ToneTemperatureFocusPositioningHorizon
Atlantic / Anglosphere pressSub-Saharan African press
Atlantic / Anglosphere press/ Security
PragmatismDetachment

The England-Mexico match is overshadowed by unprecedented security measures in Mexico City after four fans died during celebrations of Mexico's victory. Authorities have doubled security and capped capacity at gathering points, prioritizing fan safety.

Sub-Saharan African press/ Anglophone
OutrageSkepticism

England fans are forced to pay up to £2,600 for a ticket to the England-Mexico match on FIFA's official resale platform, a scandalous price that raises questions about speculation and accessibility in football.

This story appeared in

4 outlets · 3 languages

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