Best Way to Sell Concert Tickets in 2026: Platform Comparison and Timing Guide | TicketFlipping
Seller Guide - 2026

The Best Way to Sell Concert Tickets in 2026

Which platform to use, when to list, how to price for maximum return, and how to sell tickets last minute when the event is days away. A complete seller's guide.

By TicketFlipping Team - ticketflipping.com

The best way to sell concert tickets is not to pick one platform and hope for the best. It is to list on multiple platforms simultaneously, price based on actual sold data rather than listing prices, and act on declining demand signals before everyone else does. This guide covers exactly how to do that - whether you have weeks before the show or hours.

Where to Sell: Platform Comparison for Sellers

The platform you choose affects both how fast your tickets sell and how much of the sale price you keep. Here is a current comparison of the major platforms from a seller's perspective:

Platform Seller fee Buyer pool size Payout timing Best for
StubHub Largest reach ~15% commission Largest 5-7 days post-event Maximum exposure, concerts and sports
Ticketmaster Fan-to-Fan ~10-15% Very high (native buyers) 5-7 days post-event Buyer trust, Ticketmaster-issued tickets
Vivid Seats Low seller fee ~10% High 5-7 days post-event Concerts, country and pop events
SeatGeek ~10-12% High 5 business days post-event NFL partner team games, Deal Score visibility
Gametime Last-minute Competitive Medium (mobile-first) After event Day-of and last-minute sales specifically
Lysted Multi-platform ~11% avg across platforms All major platforms combined Varies by platform Listing across all platforms simultaneously

The most effective approach for most sellers is not to choose one platform but to list everywhere at once. Lysted is the tool that makes this practical - it syncs your inventory across Ticketmaster, StubHub, Vivid Seats, SeatGeek, and other platforms simultaneously. When your ticket sells on one platform, Lysted cancels the listing on all the others automatically. This gives you maximum buyer exposure without the risk of double-selling.

Is It Better to Sell on StubHub or Ticketmaster?

This is one of the most common questions from first-time sellers, and the honest answer is: both, if possible.

StubHub has the largest resale buyer pool of any platform and typically moves concert tickets faster than any single alternative. The trade-off is seller fees around 15% and a separate buyer fee that can make your listing appear expensive to price-sensitive buyers comparing across platforms.

Ticketmaster Fan-to-Fan Resale has a built-in trust advantage - buyers shopping for tickets are already on the official platform and see your listing alongside primary inventory. This credibility can command a slight price premium. Fees are capped at 15% of face value (not resale price) for many events, which can be advantageous on high-markup resales.

Experienced resellers list on both simultaneously and cancel whichever listing remains when the first one sells. The combined exposure consistently outperforms either platform alone in sell speed and final price achieved.

StubHub's pricing assistant is trained on its own sales data and makes pricing suggestions when you create a listing. It is a useful starting point - but always cross-reference with actual recent sold transactions rather than relying on automated suggestions alone. Sold data is more accurate than any algorithm's estimate.

When to List and How to Price

Timing affects both sell speed and the price you achieve. The secondary market has a predictable price curve for most events - understanding it helps you decide when to hold and when to move.

Typical concert ticket price curve - when to list vs. when to sell
Immediately post-buy
List now - capture early buyers
Best listing window
8-12 weeks out
Steady demand, good selection
Hold or list
2-4 weeks out
Price peak - highest avg. market prices
Peak window
1-7 days out
Prices declining - act on signals
Monitor closely
Day of show
Price lowest - motivated last-minute buyers
Price aggressively
General pattern based on secondary market data. High-demand events may maintain prices closer to show date. Always monitor your specific event rather than relying on general curves.
Tickets not moving - 10+ days out
Drop 5-10%
If no sale after several days at your listed price, you are priced above the market. Drop incrementally rather than in one large cut - monitor response after each adjustment.
Strong demand signals
Hold or raise
Declining inventory in your section, rising sold prices, event trending - these are signals to hold or even raise your price. The Flare Dashboard drop alerts tell you when inventory is thinning.
72 hours to show - unsold
Price to move
Something is better than nothing. At 72 hours out, the goal shifts from maximizing return to avoiding a total loss. Drop your price to below the current get-in floor to guarantee a sale.

How to Price Concert Tickets Based on Real Data

Most sellers make the mistake of checking listing prices when setting their own price. Listing prices tell you what other sellers hope to get. Sold prices tell you what buyers actually paid. These are often very different numbers, especially for events with weak demand where many listings never sell at all.

The correct pricing process:

1

Check recent sold transactions for your section and row

Look at what comparable seats have actually sold for in the last 48-72 hours. On StubHub you can toggle to "sold" listings. The Flare Dashboard shows sold data across 98% of major resale platforms in one place - the fastest way to get an accurate market picture.

2

Find the current get-in price (floor of the market)

The get-in price is the cheapest currently available ticket for the event. Buyers sorting by price will see listings at or near the floor first. Price slightly above the floor if you want to sell quickly, or price higher if your seats are superior and demand is strong.

3

Set your price and monitor every 2-3 days

Secondary market pricing is not static. A price that was right two weeks ago may be too high or too low today. Check comparable sold data every 2-3 days and adjust accordingly. In the final week before the event, check daily.

4

Act on declining signals before the broader market does

If sold prices in your section start trending down week over week, do not wait for confirmation. Drop your price ahead of the market - sellers who reprice early consistently outperform those who hold and hope for a recovery that never comes.

How to Sell Tickets Last Minute

Selling tickets last minute - within 72 hours of the show - requires a different approach than advance selling. Buyers in this window are motivated but price-sensitive. They know inventory is limited and they know prices often drop close to the event. Your goal is to be the listing that converts, not the listing that maximizes margin.

Last-minute selling strategy: within 72 hours of showtime

When the event is imminent, these are the priorities in order:

Price below the current floor

Do not match the get-in price - beat it by a meaningful margin. Last-minute buyers are scanning for the obvious deal. If the floor is $95, listing at $85 is the listing that sells. Maximizing margin is no longer the goal when the clock is running out.

Make sure delivery is instant

Mobile transfer tickets that can be delivered immediately are dramatically easier to sell last minute than any other format. Buyers within 24-48 hours of the show will not purchase anything that requires physical shipping or delayed delivery.

List on StubHub and Gametime specifically

StubHub for maximum buyer exposure. Gametime is purpose-built for last-minute mobile buying - their buyer pool skews heavily toward same-day purchases and the mobile-first design converts last-minute buyers better than desktop-heavy platforms.

Check every few hours - not every few days

Last-minute markets move fast. An event can go from no buyer activity to a complete sell-through within hours when nearby inventory clears. If your tickets still have not moved by the day of show, dropping to break-even or even a small loss is better than holding $0 inventory at 9 PM.

!
If your tickets are on Ticketmaster and the event is tomorrow or later today, make sure the mobile transfer window is still open. Some events close their transfer window hours before showtime. Check the specific event's transfer policy before listing anywhere, or you may sell tickets you can no longer deliver.

How Serious Resellers Do It: Multi-Platform Listing

Individual sellers who list on one platform and wait are consistently outsold by resellers who list everywhere simultaneously. The math is straightforward: more buyer exposure means faster sales and better prices. The practical challenge is managing multiple listings without accidentally selling the same ticket twice.

Lysted solves this problem. It is a multi-platform listing tool used by professional ticket brokers to sync inventory across Ticketmaster, StubHub, Vivid Seats, SeatGeek, and other platforms from a single dashboard. When a ticket sells on any one platform, Lysted automatically cancels all other listings. It also provides pricing recommendations based on current market data and tracks your profits and costs per event.

For anyone selling tickets more than occasionally, the time savings and the revenue lift from multi-platform exposure make Lysted the most practical upgrade to the basic selling workflow.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best way to sell concert tickets?
The best way to sell concert tickets is to list on multiple platforms simultaneously - StubHub for maximum buyer reach, Ticketmaster Fan-to-Fan for credibility, and Vivid Seats for additional exposure. Price based on current sold data rather than listing prices, list as early as possible after buying, and use a tool like Lysted to manage all platforms from one place.
Is it better to sell on StubHub or Ticketmaster?
Both have advantages - StubHub has the largest resale buyer pool, Ticketmaster has built-in buyer trust. Most experienced resellers list on both simultaneously and cancel whichever listing remains when the first one sells. The combined exposure consistently outperforms either platform used alone.
How do I sell concert tickets last minute?
To sell tickets last minute, price below the current market floor - not at it. Make sure your tickets can be delivered instantly via mobile transfer. List on StubHub for maximum exposure and Gametime which is built specifically for last-minute buyers. Check listings every few hours and drop the price progressively if tickets are not moving.
When is the best time to list concert tickets for sale?
List immediately after buying - ideally the same day. Early buyers pay a premium for certainty. Secondary market prices typically peak 2-4 weeks before an event and then begin declining. Listing early gives you maximum time to capture that peak-demand window. If you buy and wait weeks before listing, you may have already missed the best pricing opportunity.
How do I price concert tickets to sell quickly?
Check actual sold prices for comparable seats in the last 48-72 hours - not listing prices, which reflect what sellers hope to get. Find the current get-in price (the cheapest available listing) and price just above it for fast sales, or higher if your seats are superior and demand is strong. Monitor every 2-3 days and adjust based on whether inventory in your section is thinning or growing.
What is the best tool for selling tickets on multiple platforms at once?
Lysted is the most widely used multi-platform listing tool for professional ticket resellers. It lists your tickets across Ticketmaster, StubHub, Vivid Seats, SeatGeek, and other platforms simultaneously and automatically cancels all other listings when one sells. It also provides pricing recommendations and profit tracking. Most TicketFlipping members use Lysted as their primary listing workflow tool.
Know What to Sell Before You List

Use real sold data to price with confidence

The biggest pricing mistake sellers make is guessing based on listing prices instead of sold prices. The Flare Dashboard shows you 98% secondary market sold data coverage across all major platforms - what tickets actually transacted for in your section, not what other sellers are hoping to get. Use that data before you set your price and you will consistently outperform sellers working from incomplete information.

See the Flare Dashboard Get the Free Roadmap
Free Training

Sell Smarter - Not Harder

The free TicketFlipping Roadmap shows you the complete system for finding, buying, pricing, and selling concert tickets consistently - using real market data at every step.

Get the Free Roadmap

Free - No credit card required