As millions of fans compete for tickets to the 2026 FIFA World Cup, FIFA is quietly deploying one of blockchain’s biggest real-world use cases. The global football governing body has revealed how its new Avalanche-powered blockchain is being used to combat ticket scalping, counterfeit tickets, and bot purchases by bringing key parts of the ticketing process onto blockchain infrastructure. The initiative represents one of the largest blockchain deployments ever undertaken by a global sporting organization.
Rather than simply issuing tickets as NFTs, FIFA has built an entirely new ticket rights system that gives the organization greater control over both primary and secondary ticket sales. The goal is straightforward: ensure that more tickets reach genuine fans while reducing the influence of scalpers and unauthorized resale platforms.
The new system operates on FIFA’s dedicated Avalanche Layer-1 blockchain and introduces two digital assets that exist before an actual ticket is issued:
Neither asset represents the match ticket itself.
Instead, a Right-to-Buy grants selected fans the opportunity to purchase a ticket during a designated sales window. Once the purchase is completed and approved, the Right-to-Buy is converted into a Right-to-Ticket, which ultimately becomes the official match ticket closer to game day.
This layered approach allows FIFA to maintain much tighter control over the entire ticket lifecycle while making unauthorized resale significantly more difficult.
According to Ava Labs, one of the biggest motivations behind the system was preventing automated bots from buying thousands of tickets the moment sales opened.
Dominic Carbonaro, who leads Consumer Enterprise at Ava Labs, compared the problem to the well-known Taylor Swift ticketing controversies, where automated software purchased large portions of available tickets before real fans had an opportunity to buy them.
Instead of allowing unrestricted transfers immediately after purchase, FIFA now controls how purchase rights move between users.
The system enables FIFA to:
By keeping transfers inside FIFA’s own blockchain-powered ecosystem, organizers can better manage supply while making it much harder for unauthorized marketplaces to exploit demand.
One of the most interesting aspects of FIFA’s implementation is that fans don’t need to understand blockchain to use it.
According to Avalanche executives, the vast majority of users simply interact with FIFA’s ticketing platform as they normally would. Wallet creation, blockchain transactions, and digital asset management occur largely in the background without requiring users to handle cryptocurrencies or interact directly with blockchain software.
This reflects a growing trend across Web3 where blockchain increasingly functions as invisible infrastructure rather than the primary user experience.
The World Cup has already demonstrated the scale blockchain infrastructure must support.
According to Avalanche, FIFA ticket activity generated more than 60,000 blockchain transactions during the initial sales phases. Network transaction volume increased approximately 24 times above normal levels, while active wallet addresses grew nearly 10-fold as fans participated in the ticket allocation process.
Those numbers were recorded before the tournament even began, providing one of blockchain’s largest real-world stress tests involving millions of potential users.
Despite the new blockchain infrastructure, ticketing challenges have not completely disappeared.
Some fans who purchased tickets through unauthorized resale platforms such as StubHub reported problems transferring tickets into FIFA’s official mobile ticketing system. Because FIFA now requires tickets to move through its own controlled digital ecosystem, some third-party resale purchases failed when sellers were unable to complete the required transfer process.
FIFA has repeatedly emphasized that tickets purchased through its official platform remain the only guaranteed method of entry, reinforcing its effort to reduce reliance on third-party marketplaces.
The World Cup deployment represents one of the highest-profile enterprise implementations of the Avalanche network to date.
Earlier this year, FIFA announced it would migrate its digital collectibles platform and future Web3 initiatives onto its own Avalanche-powered Layer-1 blockchain after previously utilizing other blockchain networks. The dedicated infrastructure gives FIFA greater flexibility over performance, compliance, and user experience while supporting millions of football fans worldwide.
For Avalanche, the partnership demonstrates that customized blockchain networks can support global consumer applications without requiring users to become crypto experts.
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