U2 tickets: swaps vs the secondary market
Getting tickets for U2 concerts has always been a bit of a hassle, going all the way back to the mid-Eighties for some parts of Europe. Dutch fans may remember the riots in Rotterdam during the Joshua Tree ticket sales. Things haven’t got easier in the age of the internet. You’re not dealing with a score of fans queueing up outside a box office overnight, you’re competing with the rest of the world.
It helps to get organised. Buddy up with friends, use multiple computers, open multiple browsers, cross yourself, three hail Marys, you may get lucky. If you do, you could end up with the tickets you want. Or you may find yourself with some you don’t. Time to start swapping your extras for those you really want.
Fans swap tickets among themselves using fansite forums and mailing lists and, more recently, social networks like Facebook, which has just got its own U2360° Tour ticket exchange group. Some people go for travel packages, forking out for hotels or parties, just to get a ticket. Others venture onto eBay to buy or sell, or try the ticket brokers.
The so called secondary market is much maligned. This week, Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor spoke out against the secondary market in Rolling Stone. Other artists decide they want a cut of the market, and mark up their own tickets to profit. U2 themselves have opted to let Ticketmaster auction off VIP-tickets, donating an undisclosed portion of the proceeds to support (RED) and the Global Fund to fight AIDS in Africa.
For the buyer, the secondary market can be a risky business. Tickets are sold for much more than face value and it’s often hard to tell whether the seller is reliable. You wouldn’t be the first to get duped. UK-based Seatwave (‘the fan to fan ticket exchange’), a relatively new ticket reseller, offers a different approach. Founded by Joe Cohen, formerly of Match.com and Ticketmaster, this company allows anyone to buy or sell tickets on the exchange. The price can be selected by the seller, below or above face value.
Seatwave says their ‘power sellers’ are vetted carefully: “Anyone with under a 98% fulfillment rate is banned from listing tickets”. Additionally, Seatwave has a team to source tickets to fill any breakages that occur and offers refunds if suitable replacement tickets can’t be found. The website currently list tickets for most of the recently on sale U2 concerts, with prices ranging between the fair (£60) and the ludicrous (£4143.15, surely that can’t be right?)
Whatever you choose to do to get tickets, it’s good to keep in mind that the only place you’re likely buy or swap tickets at face value is through networking face to face with your fellow fans. Join a local fanclub, if you can! And read up: atU2.com has a very nifty Guide To Buying U2 Tickets.
6 Comments
Permanent Hiatus
Archives
U2 News Links
- Like a Song: Gone February 8, 2012[Ed. note: This is the 64th in a series of personal essays by the @U2 staff about songs and/or albums that have had great meaning or impact in our lives.] I like the Pop album. There, I said it. I know I’m in the minority, but I think it’s a solid record that has been underrated ever since its release 15 years ago. It’s not a perfect album, […]
- Predict The Running Order February 8, 2012We know what tracks will appear on U22... but we don't yet know the order. Got any ideas? […]
- The Eternal Sunshine of Bono’s Mind February 7, 2012Just in time for Valentine’s Day, philosophy professor Michael W. Austin, examines authentic love with a little help from Bono. In a Pyschology Today blog post titled Authentic Love, Kierkegaard and U2, the concept of losing love to find romance is explored. In the song “A Man and a Woman” from the album How to [...]This is a post from the @U2 blog.The Etern […]
- Column: off the record…, vol. 12-500 February 6, 2012If you missed it last week, please stop reading this OTR and check out Aaron Sams' overview of the 22 tracks that made the final cut for U22, the next U2.com members-only release. It's a super look into how the U2.com audience voted, […]
- @U2 Question of the Month: February 2012 February 6, 2012Welcome to @U2's Question of the Month for February 2012: What are your favorite one or two lines from a U2 lyric? What personal meaning does it have for you? Please send your responses to atu2.com@gmail.com by February 18. We'll post your answers -- and a new question -- on March 7. Want to see what QOM is all about? Check out the responses to pre […]






Very easy this morning to get tickets for Hampden Glasgow from my work in the Netherlands.
Very easy this morning to get tickets for Hampden Glasgow from my work in the Netherlands.
Same from here, also netherlands, but i tried the Cardiff show. From home it was extremly easy to get tickets. I even went into the cue a few times to check other tickets. That was impossible in Holland.
Same from here, also netherlands, but i tried the Cardiff show. From home it was extremly easy to get tickets. I even went into the cue a few times to check other tickets. That was impossible in Holland.
UK sale sounds like a breeze.
Dublin and France, not so good.
My creditcard payment timed out 3 times, so I had to repost it, so I may have ended up paying 3 times! In the end I managed to get Paris, but GA Dublin for the 25th seem to be like golddust.
So swap market it is =) That’s always a bit of fun for getting to know people.
UK sale sounds like a breeze.
Dublin and France, not so good.
My creditcard payment timed out 3 times, so I had to repost it, so I may have ended up paying 3 times! In the end I managed to get Paris, but GA Dublin for the 25th seem to be like golddust.
So swap market it is =) That’s always a bit of fun for getting to know people.