Germany’s World Cup opener against Curacao is already carrying a heavyweight price tag in Houston, with resale tickets starting at $641 including fees and premium pitchside inventory reaching $7,628.
The Group E match is scheduled for Sunday, June 14, 2026, at Houston Stadium, with kickoff listed at 12:00pm local time. For Germany, this is the start of another World Cup campaign under heavy expectation. For Curacao, it is one of the biggest fixtures in the country’s football history.
That contrast is now being reflected in the ticket market. The lowest visible entry point is $641 for upper-level seats, with Sections 636 and 605 both appearing at that price. Those seats are not close to the pitch, but they offer the cheapest route into the stadium for fans who simply want to be part of a World Cup matchday.
Prices climb quickly from there. Section 607 is listed at $670, while Section 112 is priced at $727. Section 132, marked as a strong value option, is listed at $872. Several other seats across the stadium sit between roughly $750 and $1,100, showing that the sub-$1,000 range is still available, but limited to selected areas.
The first major jump comes in the lower bowl. Section 106 is listed at $1,262, while another central lower-area listing appears at $1,405. Those prices show where the market starts to separate casual entry from stronger match-view inventory.
For fans looking closer to the field, the cost becomes much steeper. Section 103 is listed at $2,951, Section 110 at $3,896, and Section 131 at $4,722. Section 134 is also shown at $3,542. At those levels, buyers are paying for location, view, atmosphere and the scarcity of premium World Cup seating.
The hospitality market is in another bracket. A Pitchside Lounge+ option is listed at $3,238, while a Pitchside Lounge VIP package reaches $7,628. These packages are aimed at fans seeking more than a standard seat, and the pricing reflects the premium attached to World Cup hospitality in a major U.S. host city.
Germany’s presence is the main force behind the early demand. The four-time world champions travel with one of the largest global fan bases in football, and a noon kickoff in Houston gives supporters a clear opening fixture to target. Curacao adds a different kind of pull: a smaller football nation stepping onto the World Cup stage against one of the sport’s biggest names.
The match also has a strong neutral appeal. Germany will be expected to control the game and open the tournament with authority, while Curacao will draw attention as an underdog facing a historic test. That kind of storyline often pushes demand beyond the two fan bases, especially for a World Cup group-stage match in a large market like Houston.
For buyers, the clearest decision is whether the goal is entry or experience. The cheapest available seats around $641 to $727 get fans inside the stadium. The $872 to $1,405 range brings better-positioned options. Lower-bowl and premium areas push the price far higher, with VIP inventory moving into luxury-event territory.
Fans should also remember that resale prices can move quickly before a World Cup match. Team news, travel demand, hotel prices, group-stage stakes and remaining supply can all affect listings. Official match details are available through FIFA’s Germany vs Curacao match page, while resale availability can be checked through SeatGeek’s Germany vs Curacao ticket page.
At current resale levels, Germany vs Curacao is already one of the more expensive early World Cup tickets for fans targeting Houston. The cheapest seats start above $600, lower-bowl options can run into several thousand dollars, and pitchside VIP access is priced near $7,600. For supporters hoping to watch Germany begin its campaign, waiting could mean taking a gamble on both price and availability.















