Marriott Is Selling World Cup Tickets for Points. The Hotels in Host Cities Can't Fill Their Rooms.
Marriott Bonvoy is rolling out its biggest experiential loyalty play ever with 600+ World Cup ticket packages starting at 75,000 points. Meanwhile, FIFA just canceled tens of thousands of reserved room nights across host cities, and some properties are reporting 95% cancellation rates on World Cup blocks.
Let me paint you a picture. Marriott's marketing team is rolling out champagne-worthy press materials about being the "Official Hotel Supporter" of the 2026 World Cup, complete with 600+ ticket-and-stay packages, a splashy Visa co-brand partnership, and auction experiences that go up to 1.4 million Bonvoy points for a pair of Final tickets with a four-night stay. The campaign is called "For Fans, Everywhere." It's gorgeous. It's ambitious. It is the single largest Marriott Bonvoy Moments release for any event in the program's history. And if you're an owner of a Marriott-flagged property in one of the 16 host cities, you might be reading this with a very different expression on your face than the one headquarters is wearing right now.
Because here's the part the press release left out. FIFA has already canceled tens of thousands of reserved room nights across host cities in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. Hotel associations in New York, Philadelphia, and San Francisco are reporting no meaningful surge in World Cup-related demand. Some properties... and I need you to sit with this number... are seeing cancellation rates above 95% on FIFA-held blocks. Forward bookings for June and July in New York are running roughly even with last year. Not up. Even. For what was supposed to be the biggest tourism event in North American history, with 48 teams, 104 matches, and a projected 6 million in-person fans. The 48-team format, which everyone celebrated as "more countries, more fans," may actually be the problem. Smaller qualifying nations don't travel the way traditional soccer powerhouses do. Fewer traveling supporters means fewer hotel nights, fewer restaurant covers, fewer rideshare trips. The format expanded the tournament. It didn't necessarily expand the demand.
So what we have here is a fascinating disconnect. Marriott the loyalty program is having an excellent day. This is exactly the kind of experiential play that justifies 248 million members and reinforces the emotional value of points beyond free nights. "Money-can't-buy" access to the World Cup Final? That's the kind of thing that keeps a premium traveler earning inside the Bonvoy ecosystem for the next three years. As brand theater, it's smart. As a loyalty retention strategy, it might be brilliant. But Marriott the hotel company... the one with owners who signed franchise agreements partly because "major events drive rate premiums"... that's a different story entirely. The brand is selling the sizzle of the World Cup to its loyalty members while the actual hotels in host cities are watching their anticipated demand evaporate like a FIFA room block in March.
I sat in a brand presentation once (not this brand, but the energy was identical) where a franchise development VP showed a slide projecting demand lifts from a major sporting event. Beautiful curve. Gorgeous numbers. An owner in the second row raised his hand and asked, "Is that projected or confirmed?" The VP said projected. The owner closed his laptop. That moment lives rent-free in my head because it's the same dynamic playing out right now across 16 cities. The brand's projection was the story they sold. The owner's confirmed bookings are the story they're living. And those two stories are diverging fast.
The real question for Marriott... and honestly for every flag with significant presence in host cities... is what happens to owner trust when the event that was supposed to justify rate premiums, PIP investments, and loyalty program buy-in delivers a fraction of the promised demand. Experience-driven travel is real. The 17.5% growth projection through 2030 is probably directionally correct. But "experiential loyalty" can't be a corporate strategy that only works at the program level while individual properties absorb the gap between the promise and the performance. The brand promise and the brand delivery are two different documents. They always have been. And right now, in 16 cities across North America, a lot of owners are reading both.
If you're a GM at a branded property in a World Cup host city, stop waiting for the demand wave. It's not coming the way you were told it would. Pull your June and July pace reports today and compare them honestly against the same period last year. If you're flat or down, start building your contingency plan now... targeted promotions to drive local and regional demand, group sales pushes, anything that doesn't depend on international soccer fans materializing. And here's the thing I really want you to hear: do NOT hold rate for demand that isn't on the books. This is what I call the Rate Recovery Trap... if you sit at an inflated rack rate waiting for World Cup guests who never show, you'll spend the back half of summer trying to retrain the market on pricing. Better to be realistic now and protect occupancy than to be proud of a rate that nobody paid. Bring this to your ownership group before they bring it to you.