Ticketholdr vs Ticketmaster — Which Is Better for Season Ticket Holders?

Reselling season tickets through the box office means 15–30% in combined seller and buyer fees. Ticketholdr is a flat 10%.

Fee Comparison

TicketholdrTicketmaster
Seller Fee10%15-30%
Co-owner Trading
Multi-platform listing

Real dollar comparison

On a $300 ticket:

PlatformSeller FeeYou Keep
Ticketholdr$30 (10%)$270
StubHub$45–75 (15–25%)$225–$255
Ticketmaster$45–90 (15–30%)$210–$255

Co-Owner Features

Ticketholdr

  • Built-in game trading.
  • Preference-based split.
  • No group texts.

Ticketmaster

No co-owner tools.

Multi-Platform Listing

Ticketholdr

Lists on 10+ resale platforms simultaneously.

Ticketmaster

Lists on Ticketmaster only.

Which Should You Choose?

Ticketmaster owns the primary market — buyers are forced to it. But for sellers (especially season holders) the combined 15–30% fee plus zero co-owner tooling makes Ticketholdr the clear pick. List once on Ticketholdr and it still reaches every major marketplace, Ticketmaster included.

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Frequently asked questions

Does Ticketmaster charge seller fees?

Yes. Ticketmaster charges sellers 15–30% combined between their seller and buyer fees. Ticketholdr charges a flat 10% seller fee with no buyer fees on top.

Can I resell season tickets on Ticketmaster?

Yes, through their Fan-to-Fan Resale program. But Ticketholdr also syndicates to Ticketmaster while simultaneously listing on 9+ other platforms — so you get Ticketmaster reach plus everything else.

Is Ticketmaster the best way to resell season tickets?

For primary market purchases, yes. For resale, no — their fees are among the highest in the industry and they have no co-owner management tools.