Walmart released purchase data from the 2026 World Cup showing that soccer fans changed when and what they bought, according to Digiday. The retailer tracked millions of transactions across its U.S. stores and found that fans spent 30% more on snack categories during match weeks, shifted their primary shopping day to align with weekend games, and bought in larger basket sizes when major matches were scheduled.
The mechanics were straightforward. Walmart cross-referenced purchase timestamps with the tournament calendar, then segmented customers by repeat purchases of soccer-adjacent products—team apparel, flags, face paint. Those shoppers moved their weekly grocery run from midweek to Thursday or Friday before big Saturday and Sunday matches, and their carts skewed toward bulk snacks, beverages, and ready-to-eat items. The pattern held across geographies, with the strongest signal in markets with large Hispanic populations.
This works because major sporting events create predictable, short-duration demand spikes that consumers plan around. Fans know the match schedule weeks in advance. They consolidate errands to free up game time, and they stock up to avoid mid-tournament trips. For a retailer or brand, that creates a visible, targetable window: the 72 hours before kickoff. Walmart didn't guess; it measured, then merchandised and promoted accordingly.
The broader insight is that event-driven shopping isn't limited to the event itself. Fans start buying three to five days early, and the basket composition tells you who they are. A shopper buying salsa, chips, and a case of beer on a Thursday is signaling intent for a Saturday watch party. That's a known cohort you can reach with event-specific messaging, product bundles, or even direct mail timed to the match calendar.
The steal for a small physical-product brand is to pick one recurring event with a published schedule and align your promotion calendar to the prep window, not the event day. If you sell barware, snack boards, or anything consumable at a gathering, identify the next marquee sports event—playoff series, Olympics, major golf tournament. Pull the full match or broadcast schedule. Count backward 72 hours from each high-viewership day. Send an email or run a small paid social campaign with a subject line or creative that names the event and the date: "Sunday's final. Your setup ships Thursday." Bundle your product with one or two complementary items if possible, or offer a small discount for orders above a certain threshold to mirror the bulk-buy behavior Walmart saw.
Cost is minimal. A Klaviyo email campaign costs you nothing beyond your monthly fee. A Facebook or Instagram ad targeting fans of the event—easily defined by interest targeting—runs $50 to $200 for a concentrated 72-hour push. If you have no email list, a simple Google Shopping campaign will catch search traffic for "[event] party supplies" or "[event] snacks" in the days leading up. The key is specificity: reference the event, the date, and the use case. Walmart's data shows that shoppers are already planning; your job is to be visible when they execute.
The larger pattern is that national events create local demand curves you can ride without competing on Walmart's scale. You don't need to stock 10,000 SKUs or negotiate end-cap placement. You need to know the calendar, message into the prep window, and make your product the obvious choice for a known occasion. Walmart captured the data; you capture the margin.
The takeaway
Event fans buy 72 hours early in predictable patterns; small brands win by timing promos to the prep window, not the game day.
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