Al Krow Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago Personally delighted that the Govt are introducing this reform: https://www.theguardian.com/money/2025/nov/17/reselling-tickets-for-profit-to-be-outlawed-in-uk-government-crackdown Great news for those of us wanting to see live music having saved up for the actual face value ticket price (although these can be eye-watering!) and not some ridiculous rip-off figure. The only remaining fly in the ointment is the continued ability of the online platforms to charge a "service fee", but hopefully this will also be capped to a reasonable amount. 3 2 Quote
Al Krow Posted 5 hours ago Author Posted 5 hours ago 2 hours ago, pete.young said: Dynamic pricing? Should also hopefully now be history. Can only resell at face value, plus service fee. Quote
Al Krow Posted 5 hours ago Author Posted 5 hours ago 2 hours ago, Rich said: And about bloody time too. 100%!! Quote
fretmeister Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago The admin fees are now going to be £100 per ticket. Cynical? Moi? Quote
BigRedX Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I've just been looking at getting a ticket to see Cabaret Voltaire at Rock City next year. The face value ticket price is £35.00 On top of that is £5.88 booking fee and a £1.50 E-Ticket charge bringing the total price up to £42.38, and this is from Rock City's own web site. If you want to buy them from any of the other ticket sites it's even more expensive. It used to be possible to bypass these fees by going in person to the Rock City box office. I'm in town for a client meeting tomorrow so I'll go and have a look to see if this is still the case. IMO if there is no way of avoiding these additional charges then they should not be additional and be part of the actual face value ticket price. And if they can be avoided by buying in person rather than on-line then this information should be made available at the time of purchase. I suspect that there is some creative accounting reason why they are additional. Quote
Mykesbass Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 38 minutes ago, Al Krow said: Should also hopefully now be history. Can only resell at face value, plus service fee. But wasn't the issue with Oasis tickets that there was no face value from the original seller and it fluctuated with demand? 1 Quote
uk_lefty Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 2 hours ago, BigRedX said: I've just been looking at getting a ticket to see Cabaret Voltaire at Rock City next year. The face value ticket price is £35.00 On top of that is £5.88 booking fee and a £1.50 E-Ticket charge bringing the total price up to £42.38, and this is from Rock City's own web site. If you want to buy them from any of the other ticket sites it's even more expensive. It used to be possible to bypass these fees by going in person to the Rock City box office. I'm in town for a client meeting tomorrow so I'll go and have a look to see if this is still the case. IMO if there is no way of avoiding these additional charges then they should not be additional and be part of the actual face value ticket price. And if they can be avoided by buying in person rather than on-line then this information should be made available at the time of purchase. I suspect that there is some creative accounting reason why they are additional. I'm stuck on these... On one hand it's good to see the breakdown so you know (to a degree) where your money is going, but as you say if you can't actually remove any of those additional fees then it all just seems pointless. Quote
Kev Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 3 hours ago, Al Krow said: Should also hopefully now be history. Can only resell at face value, plus service fee. How does this impact on Dynamic Pricing? This appears to only apply to resale, whereas Dynamic Pricing is where the real gouging happens. Quote
Al Krow Posted 38 minutes ago Author Posted 38 minutes ago 6 hours ago, pete.young said: Dynamic pricing? 1 hour ago, Kev said: How does this impact on Dynamic Pricing? This appears to only apply to resale, whereas Dynamic Pricing is where the real gouging happens. Yeah fair about dynamic pricing, still being possible. "Ticketmaster faced intense scrutiny and hundreds of consumer complaints after the prices for both the 2024 Oasis and 2023 Bruce Springsteen tours soared dramatically with high demand, leading to accusations of price gouging. Resulted in a Competition and Markets Authority investigation. While the CMA did not find evidence of real-time algorithmic "dynamic pricing" in the Oasis case, it did find concerns regarding a lack of transparency about different price tiers and that consumers were not given clear information, which may have breached consumer protection law." I guess at the end of the day folk can't stop sellers selling tickets at whatever prices people are willing to pay. Same goes for anything that shoots up in value e.g. some bass pedals right? But at least these tickets are being sold to someone who actually wants them - will now be illegal for touts and commercial resale sites to scoop up thousands of tickets purely for resale at massive margins. And, sure, I appreciate that it's also illegal to sell cocaine and that doesn't stop the equivalent of ticket touts pushing drugs, so the resale of tickets may simply go underground? But I guess the argument goes if coke were legal, take up would be massively higher i.e. making it illegal reduces the supply and demand? Quote
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