Key Takeaways:
Switzerland’s gambling watchdog Gespa has opened a preliminary probe into FIFA’s new blockchain-based ticketing system, questioning whether the global football body’s “Right-to-Buy” (RTB) tokens cross into gambling territory. The move comes after the tokens raised around $15 million in sales within months of launch.

Launched in 2024, the RTB tokens were designed to modernize how fans access World Cup tickets using blockchain technology. Each token represents the right to purchase tickets for matches at the 2026 World Cup but only if a buyer’s national team qualifies for those games.
Holders of these NFTs can trade them on FIFA’s official marketplace, creating a secondary speculative market. Of the 51 participating nations, tokens for eight teams have already sold out, including high-profile sides like Brazil and England.
However, Gespa director Manuel Richard confirmed that regulators are not yet satisfied the product falls outside gambling law.
“It cannot be ruled out that the offering on collect.fifa.com may be relevant under gambling legislation,” Richard told Bloomberg.
“We will now proceed with additional fact-finding to determine whether regulatory action is required.”
The regulator clarified that no formal complaints were filed before the inquiry, but the model’s structure itself raised enough legal uncertainty to merit investigation.
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The RTB tokens that FIFA offers are an amalgamation of digital ownership, scarcity and conditional rewards that have led to both innovation and controversy in the crypto industry. The customers also pay to have the opportunity to purchase the tickets in case their team wins. Otherwise, they are left with an electronic collectible that has extremely low resale value.
Critics believe that this type of arrangement is like lottery or performance depending on what transpired. As financial analysts claim, this can disorient digital collectibles and authorized games of chance.
Crypto analyst Marc Steiner told SwissInfo that FIFA’s model “introduces speculative behavior under the guise of digital fandom,” adding that “the loss ratio could exceed 80% if most teams fail to qualify.”
Others highlight concerns about transparency and fairness:
Gespa in Switzerland is also known to be very strict with regards to the traditional and online gambling. In case the investigation establishes that FIFA blockchain ticketing system is in breach of the Swiss law, the enforcement procedures, e.g. sales suspension or bans of access by the Swiss domains, may commence.

Legal observers suggest that other countries, especially EU members and the U.S. may follow suit with their own reviews. “If Switzerland classifies RTB tokens as gambling, other jurisdictions will likely adopt similar stances,” said crypto policy researcher Anna Keller.
This would pose a major challenge to FIFA’s Web3 ambitions, as the organization has positioned the 2026 World Cup as a test case for blockchain-based fan engagement, including NFTs, digital collectibles, and metaverse integrations.
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Internal estimates suggest FIFA has already earned some amount of roughly $15 million through the sale of tokens, which is a tiny portion of its expected $11 billion total World Cup revenues but big by crypto standards.
There have been mixed reactions by industry:
The executives of crypto exchanges also observe that the outcome of the investigation into Gespa may affect further NFT ticketing systems, especially services associated with sports, music, and entertainment events based on conditional or randomized rewards.
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