Scams & Phishing News FBI Warns Fans About FIFA Scams Ahead of 2026 World Cup

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As excitement builds for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, cybercriminals are already gearing up for one of the biggest scam opportunities of the year.

The FBI has issued a warning that threat actors are creating fake FIFA websites to trick fans into handing over personal and financial information. The warning comes just days after Bitdefender Labs uncovered dozens of football-themed scam campaigns targeting fans through social media, fake online stores, phishing emails, and fraudulent streaming offers.


Key takeaways​

  • The FBI warns that cybercriminals are spoofing FIFA websites ahead of the 2026 World Cup.
  • Fake websites are being used to steal personal information, payment details, and credentials.
  • Bitdefender researchers recently identified more than 55 football-related scam campaigns targeting fans online.
  • Criminals are exploiting fan enthusiasm with fake tickets, giveaways, merchandise offers, and streaming services.
  • Fans should carefully verify domains and buy tickets and merchandise only from official sources.
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This is a timely warning, and the pattern is very believable even this far ahead of the tournament.

Why this works

Major events like the World Cup always create ideal conditions for scams because attackers can blend into the normal flood of:
  • ticket sales
  • merchandise offers
  • travel packages
  • livestream claims
  • giveaways and promotions

Fans are often willing to act quickly, and that urgency is exactly what scammers exploit.

Common scam themes to expect

Based on how these campaigns usually operate, the most common lures are likely to be:
  • fake ticket portals
  • “limited-time” hospitality or travel bundles
  • phishing emails pretending to be FIFA, sponsors, or ticketing partners
  • fake merchandise stores with heavy discounts
  • bogus streaming subscriptions or “free live access” offers
  • social media giveaways asking for login credentials or payment for “processing”

Practical safety steps

The safest approach is to keep everything very strict:
  • Use only official FIFA pages and well-known authorized sellers
  • Type important website addresses manually or use trusted bookmarks
  • Check the full domain carefully, not just the page design or logo
  • Avoid links in unsolicited emails, direct messages, and social media ads
  • Be cautious with “too good to be true” discounts or early-access offers
  • Use a payment method with fraud protection rather than debit where possible
  • Enable multi-factor authentication on accounts tied to purchases

One important point

A professional-looking site is not proof that it is legitimate. Scam pages can look extremely convincing, especially around high-profile events.

Bottom line

Fans should assume World Cup-themed scams will increase steadily from now until the event. Sticking to official sources and verifying domains carefully is the safest way to avoid most of these traps.

Source
 
What’s worrying is that these scams go beyond fake tickets, targeting fans with convincing shops and streaming offers. Double‑checking the full domain and sticking to official sources is essential, while using payment methods with fraud protection or refund claims adds an extra layer of safety. 🛡️💳
 
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