Britain to outlaw resale of live event tickets for profit

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British Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government Steve Reed looks on, as he speaks to the press, on the first day of Britain's Labour Party's annual conference, in Liverpool, Britain, September 28, 2025. REUTERS/Phil Noble

Housing Minister Steve Reed said Britain is committed to ending the scandal of ticket touts.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- Britain is set to ban the resale of tickets for live events such as music concerts, shows and sports at inflated prices, tackling the scourge of ticket touts who use technology to snap up tickets for popular events, the government said on Nov 18.

Housing Minister Steve Reed said the practice of “ticket touting” – people buying tickets to sell them on at multiples of their face value – was hugely damaging for individuals who had to pay “through the nose” to attend events.

Shares in US company StubHub, the owner of resale site Viagogo, fell 14 per cent on Nov 17 after the reports that the Labour government would go ahead with the ban.

“We are committed to ending the scandal of ticket touts,” Mr Reed told BBC News on Nov 18, adding that its plans would be set out by ministers in the coming days.

Tickets for shows such as rock band Oasis’ tour are often offered on resale sites for hugely inflated prices minutes after they sell out.

The government had been considering setting a cap of up to 30 per cent of the face value for the resale of tickets in a consultation earlier in 2025.

However, a report in the Guardian said the resale of tickets above face value would be banned. The newspaper also said there would be a cap on the fees that resale platforms could charge.

Separately on Nov 18, Britain’s Competition and Markets Authority said it had opened investigations into the pricing practices of a number of online platforms, including StubHub, which is separate from the US-listed company, and Viagogo. REUTERS

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