According to the federation, 3.8 million posts have been reviewed, and 388,000 have been removed.
Over 250 million comments and posts were reviewed, with more than 30 million of them identified as harmful with content about hate speech, racism, harassment, and personal attacks, FIFA said.
The announcement came as FIFA, TikTok, and the City of Atlanta brought together an elite group of players, policymakers, technology experts, and community leaders at the National Centre for Civil and Human Rights to discuss practical solutions to tackle hate speech and mark the International Day for Countering Hate Speech, Thursday.
The event concluded with a formal commitment ceremony, during which panelists pledged specific local actions, underlining the message that eradicating hate speech requires sustained and collective responsibility across all levels of the game.
FIFA affirmed that combating hate speech remains one of its top priorities throughout the 2026 World Cup, with the aim of ensuring that football continues a global symbol of unity, respect, and inclusion.
