Overjoyed people dancing, jumping and singing during concert of favorite group. Reasons why ticket prices are so expensive include increased demand and practices like dynamic pricing, high service fees and the resale market.
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It’s no secret that concert ticket prices have become shockingly expensive in 2026. Between massive stadium tours with high demand and higher budget requirements, hidden fees and scalpers buying up tickets with the aim of reselling at a hefty profit, the average fan may be finding it nearly impossible to see their favorite artists perform live. But beyond standard inflation, why are concert tickets so expensive?
The Average Price Of Concert Tickets In 2026
A 2025 Goldman Sachs report found that the average ticket price for one of the top 100 global concert tours was $136 in 2024, up a staggering 50% from an average of $91 in 2019. The report added that between 2024 and 2030, ticket prices are expected to grow at a 7.2% compounded annual rate.
The reality is that in a post-Covid world, concert ticket prices have risen to a level far beyond inflation. While it is true that large-scale tours cost more to produce than intimate shows, prices have surged across the board.
In the U.S., sky-high resale prices are one factor contributing to the inaccessibility of concerts. Many European countries have enacted strict anti-scalping price caps and mandatory ticket personalization, making the world of resale a much fairer process.
In one of the more aggressive ticketing moves by any country, the UK government recently announced its plans to bar any resale of tickets above face value, effectively outlawing the practice altogether. However, despite international restrictions on the resale market, the face value price of concert tickets, including fees, still continues to rise on a global scale.
The Biggest Factors Driving Higher Ticket Prices
A myriad of factors, such as increased demand in a post-pandemic era as well as influence from venues, ticketing platforms and even artists themselves, all affect the high costs of attending live concerts. As a result, combatting them is not a one-size-fits-all approach.
Following restrictions on live music performances throughout the majority of 2020 and 2021, fans were hungry to return to concerts. TikTok also played a major role in expediting the popularity of both familiar faces and newcomers in the music scene, further contributing to greater demand once restrictions on large gatherings were lifted.
This demand, coupled with practices like dynamic pricing, exorbitant service fees and the resale market – both on Ticketmaster and third-party platforms – is largely to blame for the rapid increase in ticket prices since 2019. But how much of the responsibility do artists, ticketing platforms and venues bear?
Service And Venue Fees
In one of the most high-profile antitrust cases in recent history, a jury recently determined that Live Nation has operated as an illegal monopoly on the live music industry since its 2010 merger with Ticketmaster. Among other anticompetitive practices, the ruling spotlighted the company’s contracts with major venues, which prevent both artists and fans from utilizing other ticketing platforms.
These practices allow Ticketmaster and venues to raise service fees with few repercussions – the jury found that Ticketmaster has been overcharging fans by an average of $1.72 per ticket across more than 20 states. While that figure may not seem high, it quickly adds up, and that extra cash is awarded to Live Nation, not to the artists and crew who work to put on a show. But while artists have little control over skyrocketing fees and resale prices, they do have a say in one prominent factor.
Dynamic Pricing
The practice of adjusting ticket costs in response to real-time demand, commonly known as dynamic pricing, has plagued the live music industry for years. But unlike service fees put in place by venues and ticketing platforms, Live Nation has maintained in court that artists and their management teams have the ultimate say on whether dynamic pricing is utilized.
According to AEG Presents CEO Jay Marciano, Taylor Swift reportedly refused to dynamically price her tickets for The Eras Tour – the highest-grossing concert tour of all time, amassing $2.2 billion globally – because “she didn’t want to do that to her fans.” By contrast, artists including Harry Styles, Coldplay, Blackpink and Bruce Springsteen have all opted into the practice, according to the BBC, meaning that fans often see the price for the same seat change before their eyes.
The Resale Market
Although artists like Swift have the power to opt out of dynamic pricing, they have no control over bots and resellers purchasing their tickets to list them on third-party websites like StubHub, SeatGeek and VividSeats. The resale market, enabled by automated tools, or “bots,” is what primarily contributed to The Eras Tour’s exorbitant ticket prices, listed for up to tens of thousands on third-party sites.
But some artists have succeeded in combating reselling practices on Ticketmaster itself. Grammy-winner Olivia Dean recently called the platform’s resale prices “vile and completely against our wishes.” In response, Ticketmaster activated its Face Value Exchange feature, capping resale prices.
Production Quality
With increased demand and stadium tours from artists like Swift, Beyoncé and Bad Bunny raising the bar in terms of production value comes heightened pressure to craft a larger-than-life spectacle. Artists generate the majority of their revenue through touring, but putting on a show costs a pretty penny.
The face value prices, before fees, reflect artists’ need to pay out a massive crew beyond the dancers and band members fans see onstage. An onslaught of behind-the-scenes staff — from truck drivers to set builders — travel with the production and contribute heavily to the overall cost of a ticket. In addition to overall rising costs from inflation, the increased scale of major tours in both stadiums and arenas can explain the rising baseline cost of a ticket before any scalpers, dynamic pricing or hidden fees.
Can Fans Still Afford Tickets?
For many consumers, attending concerts regularly in 2026 has become increasingly difficult. But fans who plan ahead can still improve their chances of purchasing tickets before they reach marked-up resale markets.
Rather than relying solely on an artist’s fan club, fans should follow artists, venues and promoters on social media, subscribe to their email lists and enable notifications from authorized ticketing platforms.
They should also review their credit card benefits, as programs such as Amex Presale Tickets and Citi Entertainment may provide cardholders with early access to select events. Spotify has also introduced Reserved, a feature that identifies eligible dedicated fans among its Premium subscribers and holds up to two tickets for them during a designated purchase window before the general sale.
Fans should also understand that tickets aren’t necessarily released through a single sale or website. Artists and their teams may divide tickets among several separate allocations, including artist, venue, promoter, credit card, streaming platform and general-public sales.
Depending on the event, different authorized vendors or distribution channels may also have access to different inventory. One presale appearing sold out therefore doesn’t always mean that every available ticket has been purchased. Fans should check each authorized seller identified by the artist or venue and continue monitoring those channels because additional tickets may be released later.
If face-value tickets are no longer available, fans shouldn’t immediately purchase a substantially marked-up resale ticket. Instead, they can monitor verified resale platforms, compare all-in prices and watch for additional inventory. Prices may fall as the event approaches if sellers are still holding tickets, but waiting until the day of the show is a gamble rather than a reliable strategy. Inventory may shrink, prices may rise or the event may sell out entirely.
To minimize the cost at face value, look for smaller-scale shows in theaters or local venues rather than arenas or stadiums. These shows typically cost less to put on, with lesser-known acts, and therefore are not as expensive. If you are looking to attend a large concert, researching whether an artist has used dynamic pricing in the past will help inform how pricey their tickets will likely be on their next tour.
Will Concert Ticket Prices Continue To Rise?
Whether concert ticket prices continue to rise may depend in part on the outcome of the Live Nation trial. While the jury verdict confirmed the platform’s unchecked power and put pressure on Ticketmaster to provide artists with more leverage and autonomy, it did not lessen fees overnight – the courts will ultimately decide what penalties to impose.
However, the ruling is indeed a step in the right direction that could lead to meaningful industry change, eventually trickling down to fans directly. If artists have more say in where and how they sell tickets, these competitive practices will benefit fans as well.
Concert ticket prices have increased by more than 50% since 2019, driven by a combination of rising demand, fees, dynamic pricing and a resale market that can magnify perceived scarcity. Artists retain some control over pricing practices and how tickets are allocated among fan clubs, venues, credit card programs, streaming platforms such as Spotify and other authorized vendors.
Still, Live Nation-Ticketmaster’s anticompetitive conduct bears much of the blame for the lack of meaningful competition in the ticketing market. The 2026 verdict will not make concerts more affordable overnight, particularly while the court determines the appropriate remedies but it could represent an important first step toward a more competitive and consumer-friendly market.

