Online Ticket Deals
Ads for sporting events, concerts, circus or theater tickets are all over the internet… from eBay to Craigslist, and on thousands of “ticket finder” type websites — but which ones are the read deals?
Before purchasing tickets online for any event, be sure you’re dealing with a reputable ticket seller. Stories of fake tickets, sellers who take deposits and then can’t deliver, and other scams are as prevalent, or more so than nearly any type of online selling.
Know what your buying, and how much it’s really worth. Even if an event is sold-out from the original ticketing agency or event promoter, chances are you can find what “face value” for the ticket is (or was).
In some areas, “scalping” is illegal… both for the seller and the buyer — you could purchase tickets in good faith, only to have them intercepted in the mail, or voided at the gate when you try to use them. Legitimate ticket agencies usually add on a “convenience fee” or anywhere from a few dollars per ticket up to several times the face value of the ticket. Delivery charges, brokers and agents fees, and other charges may be legal in some areas. One way sellers avoid charges of scalping is to sell the tickets “at face value”, BUT, only if you purchase some other (overpriced) item with them — for exmample, you may get (2) tickets to a baseball game for the same $35/ea the seller paid — but they require you also buy a baseball card worth $0.10 for $100 to get the tickets… legal, yes — ethical, not really.
Finding tickets to concerts, sporting events and theater engagements is getting harder all the time — there is a lot of financial incentive for people to stay up all night, wait in line and buy tickets at the box office — only to resell them immediately to a broker for two or three times what they paid. Tickets to major league sports and popular concerts can sell out in a matter of hours.
Unlike many items that increase in value over time — tickets become worthless as soon as the event is over. This one factor can save you a lot of money — if you’re willing to wait ’til the last minute, and maybe do some running around to get the tickets. For instance, tickets selling on eBay will frequently be reduced in price the day before an event — sometimes the seller waits until only 8-10 hours if they aren’t selling — so they drop the price.
Craigslist, (http://www.craigslist.org/) is another great source for last minute tickets — probably even better than eBay since local sellers can more easily be found. We tried to purchase tickets to a sold out concert last month, and ran an ad on CL a week before the show. In the first couple days several people responded (offering to sell the tickets at 2-3 times face value, or sending up spam email directing us to a website where the ticket prices were inflated with excessive fees). We finally made a deal with a “real person”, who just happened to have a couple extra tickets and wanted to sell them… BUT, on the day before the show, we actually received email from two different people offering to sell us tickets at less than face value… they were stuck with the tickets — one guy was even willing to drive the 50 miles to deliver them and sell them for half price, (two for one), but we already had our’s.. purchased at face value only 3 days before the concert — (we ended up sitting next to the guy who sold us the tickets).
If you do buy tickets online, be sure to know the lingo. There are “hard tickets”, “e-tickets” and “will call” (tickets)…
A “hard ticket” is an actual ticket printed on card-stock like you’d get at the box office. Major league sports and concerts almost always have this type of ticket available. Super Bowl and other major events may even have a hologram of other specialty printing that makes the tickets very hard to duplicate — and as a bonus, in some cases the ticket (or even the stubs) become collector items.
“E-Tickets” are ones that you pay for online, then print out on your home computer — while they may have a bar-code or other scan code on them, they are easy to forge, and sometimes hard to redeem.
“Will call” or box office tickets are ones you pick-up a the box office or ticket booth just before the event starts. You are usually required to pay for these by credit card ahead of time, then present the credit card or drivers license when you pick them up — sometimes ticket sellers wil lnot let anyone except the original; purchaser pick up the tickets.
As with anything else you buy from unknown people online — beware, be careful, and double check everything.
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