Mohamed bin Hammam will take his case against a lifetime ban from football to the Court of Arbitration for Sport after the world football governing body, FIFA, rejected his initial appeal.
FIFA banned Bin Hammam, 62, after finding him guilty of bribing Caribbean voters with US$40,000 to back his later abandoned campaign to become president.
The original FIFA report said there was "convincing and overwhelming" proof that bribes had been paid to officials.
Bin Hammam is the most senior figure banned by FIFA in its 107-year history.
"As expected, the Fifa appeals panel, which met in Zurich today [Thursday, September 15], upheld the 23 July ruling by the FIFA ethics committee, and we will therefore be taking our appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport," a statement from Bin Hammam's lawyer, Eugene Gulland, confirmed.
FIFA's statement, released on Thursday, read "The appeal made by Mohammed Bin Hammam has been rejected and the decision of the Fifa ethics committee confirmed. The sanction of being banned from taking part in any kind of football-related activity [administrative, sports or any other] at national and international level for life has therefore been maintained."
Bin Hammam was accused of attempting to buy votes ahead of June's FIFA presidential election which led to his withdrawal from the race, handing incumbent president Sepp Blatter a fourth consecutive term as head of football's world governing body.
[Source: The BBC]