Ticket resale is a market reality that won't disappear. Trying to ban it completely is usually counterproductive: it pushes transactions to unregulated channels where neither the organizer nor the buyer has guarantees. The smartest strategy is to accept that it exists and design mechanisms to control it, protect fans, and capture some of the value it generates.
Why banning doesn't work
Total resale prohibition policies have adverse effects that many organizers don't anticipate.
- Fans with legitimate emergencies can't recover their investment
- The black market flourishes without any control or guarantee
- Prices in unregulated secondary markets skyrocket
- The organizer loses visibility on who will actually attend
- Fraud with fake or duplicate tickets increases
The controlled resale model
Controlled resale allows fans to sell their tickets safely while the organizer maintains control. The system works like this: when a fan wants to sell their ticket, they do it through the official platform. The original ticket is invalidated and a new one is generated for the buyer. Everything is recorded and traced.
- Maximum price: the organizer defines a cap (e.g., 120% of original price)
- Royalties: a percentage of each transaction returns to the organizer
- Verification: both seller and buyer are identified
- Guarantee: the ticket is always valid and verifiable
Benefits for the organizer
Implementing a controlled resale system not only protects fans but generates tangible benefits for the organizer.
- Additional revenue from royalties on each transaction
- Updated data on who will actually attend the event
- Drastic reduction of fraud and complaints
- Better brand image by offering a fair solution
- Direct competition against the black market
Recommended configuration
There's no single configuration that works for all events. It depends on the event type, audience profile, and expected demand. However, there are some practices that usually work well.
- Maximum price between 100% and 150% of original price
- Royalty between 5% and 15% of resale price
- Resale period that closes 24-48h before the event
- Limit of resales per ticket (e.g., maximum 2 transfers)
- Clear communication of rules from the moment of purchase
Communication with fans
For the system to work, fans must know about it and trust it. Clearly communicate during the purchase process that there's an official resale channel, explain the advantages over unofficial alternatives, and make the process easy when someone needs to sell. A fan who can recover their money easily is a fan who will buy again in the future.
Conclusion
Controlled resale transforms a problem into an opportunity. Instead of fighting against a market reality, smart organizers channel it in their favor: they protect their fans, reduce fraud, generate additional revenue, and maintain control over who accesses their events. The key is to design the right rules and communicate them transparently.