
Scammers have been actively exploiting the hype surrounding football tournaments, and the demand for the biggest event of the year could bring devastating financial losses for fans, Lloyds Bank and the UK Home Office warned.
According to Lloyds, football-related scams now account for 32% of all ticket scams reported to the bank. The findings are based on thousands of scam cases recorded between October 2025 and March 2026.
Lloyds also noted that scammers heavily target supporters of high-profile clubs like Arsenal, Liverpool, Chelsea, and Manchester United, as well as major events such as the FA Cup Final and Champions League Final.
The financial institution, alongside the UK government, believes that the same tactics will increase dramatically around the World Cup 2026.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup is expected to be the largest World Cup ever, with millions of fans traveling internationally across North America.
At the same time, ticket prices have skyrocketed.
The bank warns that these rising costs may push fans toward:
That’s exactly where fraudsters operate.
The bank says scammers exploit panic, urgency, and the fear of missing out, especially when fans believe tickets are about to sell out.
“As excitement builds for the World Cup, fraudsters are preparing to exploit loyal fans searching for tickets. I urge all football supporters hunting for tickets to Stop! Think Fraud and show fraudsters the red card,” said Lord Hanson, Minister for Fraud at the UK Home Office.
One of the most important findings is the role social media plays in ticket fraud. The bank says many football ticket scams begin on social platforms like Facebook and Instagram before moving towards WhatsApp for payment.
“Most of the football ticket scams we see start on social media – especially Facebook and Instagram – before the criminal moves the buyer onto WhatsApp and insists on a bank transfer to pay,” Lloyds Fraud Prevention Director Liz Ziegler said. “It’s incredibly convincing, and we don’t want fans to lose their money trying to support their team. We’re urging supporters to stay alert and stick to official ticketing channels.”
Fraudsters often advertise:
Victims are then pressured to pay quickly via bank transfer, payment apps, and crypto payments.
Lloyds also said that fraudsters use counterfeit QR codes, fake ticket screenshots, cloned confirmation emails, AI-generated promotional graphics, and fake customer reviews. Making matters worse, some victims only realize they were scammed after arriving at the stadium gates.
With demand for World Cup tickets expected to intensify, it’s highly recommended to follow a few key safety rules.
Whenever possible, buy tickets directly from FIFA or authorized resale platforms.
Bank transfers are among scammers’ preferred payment methods because recovering the money is extremely difficult.
Cheap final tickets, exclusive access claims, or urgent “limited time” offers should raise red flags.
Scammers often create websites that closely mimic official FIFA branding and ticket pages.
Fake QR codes and edited confirmations are increasingly common.
Urgency is a key scam indicator. If someone pressures you to pay immediately, slow down.
Tools like Bitdefender Scamio and Bitdefender Link Checker can help analyze suspicious messages, links, and websites before you enter personal or payment information.
Most ticket scams start on your phone through social media and messaging apps. Installing a mobile security solution (for Android or iOS) with scam protection can help block malicious links, phishing attempts, and fraudulent pages before you even interact with them.
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Alina is a history buff passionate about cybersecurity and anything sci-fi, advocating Bitdefender technologies and solutions. She spends most of her time between her two feline friends and traveling.
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