Six other nations have joined Britain in solidarity and are willing to snub the summer tourney in protest of the use of a nerve agent in Salisbury, Britain.
Officials from Poland, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden, Australia and Japan, are expected to not show up at the tournament in solidarity to Britain.
Theresa May had last week announced that Prince William and all her government ministers will refuse to play any part in the competition.
Polish President Andrzej Duda was the first world leader to stand alongside Mrs May by revealing he has refused to go to the tournament’s opening ceremony in Moscow on June 14.
Labour MP Ian Austin who’s also a Foreign Affairs Committee member said: “It is great to see solidarity from our allies on this.
“It is right for our governments not to give any help to Putin abusing the World Cup for his own self-glorification.”
None of the football teams will boycott the event however as this has been seen as a punishment for football fans rather than Russia.
Sepp Blatter courted controversy when he said that a boycott of the competition would be wrong.
He tweeted:
“Football has up to 2 billion followers. FIFA-World Cup 2018 in Russia: The most important sport event in the world.
“Therefore no boycott! Let’s play the game in peace and for peace!”