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
| Ticketholdr | Ticketmaster | |
|---|---|---|
| Seller Fee | 10% | 15-30% |
| Co-owner Trading | ✓ | ✗ |
| Multi-platform listing | ✓ | ✗ |
Real dollar comparison
On a $300 ticket:
| Platform | Seller Fee | You 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.