
Tickets for a rare football clash between teams from the two Koreas sold out within hours despite ongoing geopolitical tensions.
All 7,087 general admission seats for the 20 May semi-final of the Women’s Asian Champions League between South Korea’s Suwon FC Women and North Korea’s Naegohyang Women’s FC were bought within 12 hours of going on sale on Tuesday, according to the Korea Football Association.
The match will be played in Suwon, around 35km south of the South Korean capital Seoul.
Naegohyang Women’s FC is the first North Korean sports team to play in South Korea since 2018.
The team, founded in Pyongyang in 2012, is expected to travel to the neighbouring country via China over the weekend.
The South Korean unification ministry previously said the North Korean delegation travelling for the match included 27 players and 12 staff members. They were expected to share accommodation with the rival squad at a hotel in Suwon.
Since the Asian Champions League is a club competition and not an international tournament, local media reported that national flags and anthems would not feature during the match.
There will be no travelling supporters as North Korean citizens are generally barred from entering the South.
The unification ministry said it planned to provide 300 million won ($200,000) to civic organisations in the South preparing joint cheering events for the two teams.
The winner will play the final on 23 May in Suwon against either Australia’s Melbourne City or Japan’s Tokyo Verdy Beleza.
North Korea has long been a powerhouse in women’s football, particularly in youth competitions. Its teams have secured several world titles in recent years, including the Fifa U-17 Women’s World Cup last year after defeating the Netherlands 3-0 in the final.
North Korea recently updated its constitution to remove all references to reunification with the South, signalling a shift towards treating the two Koreas as separate states.
North Korea’s Naegohyang Women’s Football Club has arrived in Beijing on Tuesday and will head to South Korea on Sunday. As announced by @uni_kr, the Korean government plans to provide about $202,000 via the Inter-Korean Cooperation Fund to support civic cheering squads for the… pic.twitter.com/VLEybYk05v
— CSIS Korea Chair (@CSISKoreaChair) May 13, 2026
Analysts say the changes are aimed at portraying North Korea as a “normal” state, with the new text reportedly avoiding strongly hostile language towards the neighbour.
Victor Cha, Korea chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, and Andy Lim, deputy director at the American think tank, argued that the match could serve as a rare channel for inter-Korean engagement at a time of strained relations, continuing a long history of “sports diplomacy” between the two nations.
“The fact that Pyongyang allowed athletes to travel to South Korea is significant given North Korea’s shutdown of all dialogue with South Korea and its assertion of the enemy-state declaration vis-à-vis Seoul,” they wrote.
“In this regard, the football match could demonstrate the potential to separate cultural exchanges from politics.”
Lim Eul Chul, North Korea expert at the South's Kyungnam University, told AFP that the match was an opportunity for Seoul to establish “at least a basic communication channel” between the two countries.
“It could become a chance to test peaceful coexistence,” he said.
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