When I have bought football tickets directly from the school they go in Apple wallet. Stubhub is the official reseller but when I try to transfer my Umich football tickets to Apple Wallet I just get some gibberish source code. I have no other issues with tickets and Apple Wallet. I can get the StubHub ap version of the tickets which look very different from what usually goes into Apple Wallet, though I'm sure they're legit.

Hey all. How do you print tickets from the mobile app? I click "Get tickets" and they show but no option to print and I can only view on my phone. I cannot view on my laptop - website doesn't let me. The other option below Get tickets is "Native App? Download Offline Tickets", so I clicked that and it says "Your ticket has been downloaded" so I click OK. The tickets are nowhere to be found - not in Apple Wallet and nowhere in the app.


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I have purchased tickets for a NHL game in the USA. I have been sent an email saying that the tickets are ready to transfer to me. I can see the tickets with their moving barcodes on my computer or phone screen when I press the "accept tickets" link in the email - from the URL of the tickets they appear to be hosted by Safetix.

I have found a post elsewhere that suggests downloading the "passwallet" app, which is available in the UK - I have done so, but can find no way to transfer the tickets from StubHub to this app either. I have also tried downloading the StubHub International app which is availble in the the UK - but this does not recognise my login credentials for my stubhub.com account. And I tried making a new StubHub International account with the same email address, but it cannot find any of my stubhub.com ticket purchases.

I've run out of ideas to try - and I am concerned because I have now received an email from stubhub telling me to hurry up and accept my tickets as "the link to claim your tickets may expire if you wait too long, which could cause issues as the event approaches"

Beginning next week, people looking to purchase Super Bowl tickets via StubHub's iPhone app will see a new "AR" option that lets them bring up a 3D model of the stadium and its surrounding area. The idea, according to StubHub CTO Matt Swann, is to give ticket-buyers a way to better plan their Super Bowl experience well before they ever set foot in Minneapolis.

It's all the same. You select two tickets that show a price of $79/ea on the stadium map page, then you go to your cart to checkout and the total is $974, but you can save $5 with promo code "RAPEME" for first-time users.

And what is the problem if U-M isn't officially endorsing StubHub any more? What issues will there be for transferring tickets to or from? Certainly quite a few people will not have seen this announcement (OSU fans?) and will venture to StubHub.

On the other hand, consumers shouldn't have to compare ticket prices across different sites. A monopoly case could be made where all tickets sold go through a single place so buyers can easily compare prices and selection. That's basically where we are with the AD granting SeatGeek the monopoly over resale. The same way NYSE and Nasdaq have basically a monopoly over trading the securities listed on their exchanges.

On the other, other hand, each seat is unique, and there is a hard deadline when the price drops dramatically (gametime, obviously). And usually a relatively small number of tickets are available. So it's hard for any market maker to keep it liquid enough and protect both buyers and sellers. There is no single clearing price, since some tickets are more valuable than others based on location and other factors.

I'll be open minded about the change. I've used Stub Hub to buy and sell tickets (Michigan and other events) for 13 or 14 years. I had no problems until last year when I didn't receive my money for a game. Stub Hub customer service was horrendous and after hours on the phone and multiple calls (their customer service was located out of the US), I turned to the Michigan Ticket office for help. They resolved the matter for me in about a week and the guy I talked to at the Michigan office told me that my problem was not unique. Therefore I was not at all surprised by the change. I'm not that upset by the fees in part because of the reasons noted above and in part because it is a significant convenience which has a value.

Great question. The answer is different for Sellers and Buyers. Seat Geek has half the audience that StubHub has. This means Sellers will find it more difficult to command a premium for their tickets. Buyers on the other hand should pay less given the decreased competition.

You could argue that a portion of the UofM fanbase will flow over to Seat Geek because they have to....and that's certainly important to selling UofM tickets. Ultimately losing half the buyers can only hurt demand, and you can only put so much make up on that pig.

I had a terrible experience on StubHub (basically $700 in tickets that were mailed/lost hard copy to Alaska the weekend before the show, despite buying/paying for said tix 8 months prior) so I've been going thru Seatgeek. But the guy with all the upvotes said it all...fuck the ticket resellers.

StubHub is an American ticket exchange and resale company. It provides services for buyers and sellers of tickets for sports, concerts, theater, and other live entertainment events. By 2015, it was the world's largest ticket marketplace.[1][2] While the company does not currently disclose its financials, in 2015 it had over 16 million unique visitors and nearly 10 million live events per month.[3]

In 2006, StubHub became involved in several disputes over the resale of season sports tickets in New England, involving the New England Patriots and New York Yankees.[16][17] In the U.S., 38 states had laws allowing the reselling of event tickets as long as the sale did not take place at the event site. The other 12 states had varying degrees of regulation, including registration requirements and maximum markups.[18] StubHub, Ticketmaster, TicketNetwork, and others began to lobby state legislatures to repeal or modify the stricter anti-scalping laws. In Florida, StubHub made over $6,500 in campaign donations to members of the state legislature in support of a 2006 bill to amend Florida's 61-year-old anti-scalping laws. Many consumers, as well as lobbyists for the leisure and entertainment industries were opposed to the bill, and claimed it would drive up prices for consumers while hurting their share of the ticket market.[19][20] The bill's sponsor argued its passage would modernize the state's ticketing industry. The bill passed in June 2006, resulting in 35 states having no restrictions on ticket resale.[21]

In 2013, StubHub created an application especially for the South by Southwest events in Texas that gave users the opportunity to buy a range of tickets to all of the different shows.[41] In January 2013, StubHub launched "The Rising Stars program", which offers grants of $25,000 - $100,000 for locally based, grassroots organizations to aid youth in sporting and artistic development.[42] StubHub has also supported major benefit events, such as 121212, the Concert for Sandy Relief, including a $1 million donation to the Robin Hood Relief Fund for those impacted by Hurricane Sandy.[43] StubHub and other reselling sites were criticized by concert producers of the 12-12-12 benefit concert in Madison Square Garden for allowing the resale of the tickets at above face value. In response StubHub stated it lacked the technology to require sellers donate their profits to charity, but noted it was donating all earnings on the concert's tickets to the organizing Robin Hood Foundation for Hurricane Sandy victims,[44] ultimately donating US$1 million.[43]

In 2016, the United States Senate commerce committee introduced legislation called the Better Online Ticket Sales, or BOTS, Act which was later signed into law in December 2016 by President Obama. This law makes using bots to purchase tickets under certain circumstances illegal and holds bot owners liable for obtained tickets.[54][55] StubHub expressed support for the legislation.[56]

The StubHub online platform facilitates ticket resale,[7][61] as well as directly issuing tickets on behalf of event organizers for live entertainment,[62] also offering features for finding and planning events.[63]

August E. Grant and Jennifer H. Meadows describe StubHub as a "clearinghouse for ticket sales."[64] It "serves as a middleman between buyers and sellers, deriving revenue from commissions on ticket sales."[65] Local agencies may trade smaller profit margins from selling to a larger volume reseller rather than risk not finding a retail buyer for the same ticket.[1] StubHub was described by The Wall Street Journal as "far and away the biggest player in the $6 billion market for reselling live-event tickets".[2] The company allows for ticket sellers to gain a profit, but unlike eBay, without involving auctioning.[66]

Many sell their extra tickets on StubHub at a profit, often tickets which are in high demand which are difficult to find.[67][68] While concert tickets can get expensive when the demand is high, more than half of all tickets sold on StubHub go for at or below face value. Tsakalakis has stated that he believes the ticket market is not a level playing field for the average person, in that before a ticket goes on sale, promoters have already sold the vast majority of seats to everyone from fan club members, American Express card holders and ticket brokers.[69] He has said, "There is this whole mentality within concerts that if it doesn't sell out right away it's not a hit. It just doesn't make sense. Nothing works that way. There isn't a supplier out there that says, 'The first day I put my product out there I want all of it to sell out and I don't want to have any more supply.' What business works that way?"[69] Sellers choose what they want to charge for the ticket.[66] A range of tickets are listed, mainly sporting, concert, theater, and other live entertainment events.[7][61] Theatre and comedy is organized by Cirque du Soleil, Classical music and opera, dance/ballet, family, festivals and fairs, film festival, museum, musicals, play, and other/miscellaneous.[70] 17dc91bb1f

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