Anonymous wrote:So yesterday I tried to buy tickets via the Amex presale before I forgot that I don't have an Amex anymore. The only seats available were nosebleeds. Is it reasonable to expect that there will be better seats available when they go on sale to the public?
I'm concerned that I'll wait for them to go on sale to the public, not be able to get good seats and the same will happen to many people and there will be a run on Stubhub and I'll be SOL there too. I normally wouldn't care so much, but this is an event DH has been wanting to go to forever but it's been too expensive so we haven't done it. Now I have the opportunity to surprise him with it for his birthday.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So yesterday I tried to buy tickets via the Amex presale before I forgot that I don't have an Amex anymore. The only seats available were nosebleeds. Is it reasonable to expect that there will be better seats available when they go on sale to the public?
I'm concerned that I'll wait for them to go on sale to the public, not be able to get good seats and the same will happen to many people and there will be a run on Stubhub and I'll be SOL there too. I normally wouldn't care so much, but this is an event DH has been wanting to go to forever but it's been too expensive so we haven't done it. Now I have the opportunity to surprise him with it for his birthday.
-OP
Yes, better tickets will be on sale during the regular sale. You don't need to worry about being SOL at StubHub. What concert is it? Billy Joel? You will be able to get tickets via StubHub even the day of the concert.
Anonymous wrote:So yesterday I tried to buy tickets via the Amex presale before I forgot that I don't have an Amex anymore. The only seats available were nosebleeds. Is it reasonable to expect that there will be better seats available when they go on sale to the public?
I'm concerned that I'll wait for them to go on sale to the public, not be able to get good seats and the same will happen to many people and there will be a run on Stubhub and I'll be SOL there too. I normally wouldn't care so much, but this is an event DH has been wanting to go to forever but it's been too expensive so we haven't done it. Now I have the opportunity to surprise him with it for his birthday.
-OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then probably some of those folks re-selling their tix.
I'd try the public first. You can always pay the stubhub market rate if you strike out.
It seems I can get better seats than I will when it goes to the public. Since it's a special gift I don't want nosebleeds for this. I don't mind paying more as long as the tickets are actually legit. -OP
You don't know unless you try. The StubHub tickets will be there if they strike out. Try not to support the scalpers unless you have to. Those are scalpers' tickets. Regular ticket buyers rarely post on StubHub that fast.
OP said there were presales, so I'd imagine there are lots of tickets on there that are not from scalpers, but from presales.
Same thing. The scalpers are the ones who buy presale tickets to then sell them on StubHub. Regular buyers do not buy for personal use and then decide to sell them that quickly. These are scalpers' tickets.
Not true at all. Silly goose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stubhub is great. I use it to unload tix I buy on Amex pre sale (sting, billy Joel) and make a little extra. Kind of fun.
And I'm not a pro scalper at all. I sell 2 tix 3 times per year. Basically it pays for me to attend the concert.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then probably some of those folks re-selling their tix.
I'd try the public first. You can always pay the stubhub market rate if you strike out.
It seems I can get better seats than I will when it goes to the public. Since it's a special gift I don't want nosebleeds for this. I don't mind paying more as long as the tickets are actually legit. -OP
You don't know unless you try. The StubHub tickets will be there if they strike out. Try not to support the scalpers unless you have to. Those are scalpers' tickets. Regular ticket buyers rarely post on StubHub that fast.
OP said there were presales, so I'd imagine there are lots of tickets on there that are not from scalpers, but from presales.
Same thing. The scalpers are the ones who buy presale tickets to then sell them on StubHub. Regular buyers do not buy for personal use and then decide to sell them that quickly. These are scalpers' tickets.
Anonymous wrote:Stubhub is great. I use it to unload tix I buy on Amex pre sale (sting, billy Joel) and make a little extra. Kind of fun.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then probably some of those folks re-selling their tix.
I'd try the public first. You can always pay the stubhub market rate if you strike out.
It seems I can get better seats than I will when it goes to the public. Since it's a special gift I don't want nosebleeds for this. I don't mind paying more as long as the tickets are actually legit. -OP
You don't know unless you try. The StubHub tickets will be there if they strike out. Try not to support the scalpers unless you have to. Those are scalpers' tickets. Regular ticket buyers rarely post on StubHub that fast.
OP said there were presales, so I'd imagine there are lots of tickets on there that are not from scalpers, but from presales.
Anonymous wrote:ticketmaster owns it I think