Ticket Scams

Illustration of Ticket Scams — an online shopping cart on a laptop

By ZapScam Editorial Team · Last updated: April 2026 · Reviewed for accuracy

Americans lost $12.5 billion to fraud in 2024, according to the FTC.

Quick Answer

Ticket scams defraud consumers by selling fake, duplicate, or nonexistent tickets to high-demand events, with UK victims losing £9.7 million to ticket fraud in one recent year according to Action Fraud.

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How It Works

1
Scammers create listings for in-demand events on social media, online marketplaces, or fake websites designed to look like official vendors. These events are often sold out elsewhere, creating a sense of urgency for buyers.
2
The seller offers counterfeit tickets, which can be completely fabricated PDFs or barcodes, or they sell a single legitimate ticket to multiple buyers. In other cases, the scammer takes payment for a ticket that never existed at all.
3
The scammer insists on payment through methods that are difficult to trace or reverse, such as wire transfers, gift cards, or peer-to-peer payment apps like Zelle or Venmo. After receiving payment, the scammer disappears, and the buyer is left with an invalid ticket or no ticket at all, often only discovering the fraud upon arrival at the venue.

Red Flags

What to Do If Targeted

How to Report It

Key Statistics

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Frequently Asked Questions

A ticket scam is a type of fraud where a criminal sells counterfeit, duplicate, or nonexistent tickets to events like concerts, sports games, or theater shows. Scammers often target high-demand or sold-out events, using social media and fake websites to lure victims into paying for tickets that are worthless.
Check the website's URL carefully for misspellings or variations of a legitimate seller's name. A secure, official website should start with 'https://' and have a padlock icon in the address bar. Scammers often create lookalike sites that appear real at first glance, so always start by visiting the artist's or venue's official page for links to authorized ticket sellers.
Buying tickets on social media is extremely risky because these platforms are a primary channel for scammers. They can use fake or hacked accounts to appear legitimate and will often demand payment through untraceable methods like cash apps or gift cards. It is safest to purchase tickets directly from the venue or an authorized ticket vendor.
If you realize you have been scammed, immediately contact your bank or credit card company to dispute the charge. Report the scam to the platform where you bought the ticket, and file official reports with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) at reportfraud.ftc.gov and the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) at ic3.gov.

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