Enter a ticket price and see exactly what fans pay on every major UK ticketing platform.
That's money back in your fans' pockets — on every single ticket sold.
Eventbrite charges 6.95% + 59p per ticket when fees are passed to attendees. On a £25 ticket, that's £2.33. Fees are transparent but add up quickly for multi-ticket orders.
Skiddle charges approximately 10% + 25p per ticket in booking fees. On a £25 ticket, fans pay £2.75 extra — one of the highest fee structures among UK platforms.
DICE absorbs its ~10% fee into the face value, so there's no visible "booking fee". However, this typically means the ticket price itself is higher to compensate.
Yes — Tickts charges zero booking fees to fans and zero commission to organisers. The price fans see is the price they pay, with no hidden charges at checkout.
WeGotTickets charges up to 10% in fees, which are typically absorbed by the organiser but increase the effective cost. The exact percentage can vary by event.
TicketCo charges approximately 5.5% + 30p per ticket. While lower than Skiddle or DICE, the fees still add up — a £25 ticket costs fans £1.68 extra.
Zero booking fees. Zero commission. Direct payments via Stripe. Full customer data ownership.
Get Started FreeMethodology: Fee structures sourced from each platform's public pricing pages as of March 2026. "Booking fee" refers to the total additional charge a fan pays on top of the face-value ticket price (or the effective cost absorbed into the face value). DICE fees are estimated as they are absorbed into the ticket price. Actual fees may vary based on individual agreements, event type, and ticket volume. This comparison is for informational purposes only.