Fan to Fan Ticket Money Stuck in Limbo
Comments
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But they haven't charged my card. TM did for the original sale but I don't want to void that because then it complicates the resale.0
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Yeah, true.SHZA said:But they haven't charged my card. TM did for the original sale but I don't want to void that because then it complicates the resale.0 -
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?0 -
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?PJ: 2013: London (ON); Buffalo; 2014: Cincinnati; 2016: Sunrise, Miami, Toronto 1-2, Wrigley 2; 2018: London (UK) 1, Milan, Padova, Sea 2, Wrigley 1-2, Fenway 1-2; 2021: SHN, Ohana, Ohana Encore 1-2; 2022: LA 1-2, Phx, Oak 1-2, Fresno, Copenhagen, Hyde Park 1-2; Quebec, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto; MSG, Camden, Nashville, Louisville, St. Louis, OKC; 2023: St. Paul 1-2, Chicago 1-2; Fort Worth 2; Austin 1-2; 2024: Vancouver 1-2, LV 1-2, LA 1-2, Napa, Barcelona 1-2; Indy; Chicago 1-2; MSG 1-2; Philly 2; Boston 2; Ohana 1-2; 2025: FL 1-2, ATL 1-2, Nash 1-2, Pit 1-2.
EV Solo: 2017 Louisville and Franklin, 2018 Ohana, 2019 Innings Fest, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Dublin and Ohana; 2021 Ohana Friday (from beach) and Saturday; 2022 Earthlings Newark; 2023 Innings Fest and Benoraya 1-2.
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 20230 -
I suppose their justification is that months from now the cards that some sellers have on file will no longer be valid.kst said:
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?0 -
Then they should do one of two things:SHZA said:
I suppose their justification is that months from now the cards that some sellers have on file will no longer be valid.kst said:
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?
1) Confirm to sellers that their credit cards will not be charged for buyer refunds.
2) Release the funds to sellers. If the buyer cancels, TM refund the buyer directly.
I believe option 2 is the best. There was never a reason to keep sellers in the process once a sale is made.
PJ: 2013: London (ON); Buffalo; 2014: Cincinnati; 2016: Sunrise, Miami, Toronto 1-2, Wrigley 2; 2018: London (UK) 1, Milan, Padova, Sea 2, Wrigley 1-2, Fenway 1-2; 2021: SHN, Ohana, Ohana Encore 1-2; 2022: LA 1-2, Phx, Oak 1-2, Fresno, Copenhagen, Hyde Park 1-2; Quebec, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto; MSG, Camden, Nashville, Louisville, St. Louis, OKC; 2023: St. Paul 1-2, Chicago 1-2; Fort Worth 2; Austin 1-2; 2024: Vancouver 1-2, LV 1-2, LA 1-2, Napa, Barcelona 1-2; Indy; Chicago 1-2; MSG 1-2; Philly 2; Boston 2; Ohana 1-2; 2025: FL 1-2, ATL 1-2, Nash 1-2, Pit 1-2.
EV Solo: 2017 Louisville and Franklin, 2018 Ohana, 2019 Innings Fest, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Dublin and Ohana; 2021 Ohana Friday (from beach) and Saturday; 2022 Earthlings Newark; 2023 Innings Fest and Benoraya 1-2.
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 20230 -
2 doesn't work. The seller gets paid for a canceled sale / event and TM loses money paying the refund. #1 is basically what they're doing based on the email that lmckenney24 gotkst said:
Then they should do one of two things:SHZA said:
I suppose their justification is that months from now the cards that some sellers have on file will no longer be valid.kst said:
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?
1) Confirm to sellers that their credit cards will not be charged for buyer refunds.
2) Release the funds to sellers. If the buyer cancels, TM refund the buyer directly.
I believe option 2 is the best. There was never a reason to keep sellers in the process once a sale is made.0 -
I agree, option #2 makes the most sense. I fucking hate Ticketbastard.kst said:
Then they should do one of two things:SHZA said:
I suppose their justification is that months from now the cards that some sellers have on file will no longer be valid.kst said:
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?
1) Confirm to sellers that their credit cards will not be charged for buyer refunds.
2) Release the funds to sellers. If the buyer cancels, TM refund the buyer directly.
I believe option 2 is the best. There was never a reason to keep sellers in the process once a sale is made.0 -
2 may not work in the stubhub case but it completely works in the fan to fan.SHZA said:
2 doesn't work. The seller gets paid for a canceled sale / event and TM loses money paying the refund. #1 is basically what they're doing based on the email that lmckenney24 gotkst said:
Then they should do one of two things:SHZA said:
I suppose their justification is that months from now the cards that some sellers have on file will no longer be valid.kst said:
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?
1) Confirm to sellers that their credit cards will not be charged for buyer refunds.
2) Release the funds to sellers. If the buyer cancels, TM refund the buyer directly.
I believe option 2 is the best. There was never a reason to keep sellers in the process once a sale is made.
The payment the seller gets is equal to what they originally paid. They’re then out of the picture. At that point TM has the new buyers money and the new buyer has the ticket. Original buyer out of the picture. Future refund directly between new buyer and TM.
I call BS on their email to LMC. Dollars to donuts they will still charge seller CCs for buyer refunds. In fact I wouldn’t be surprised if they’ve already done that in some cases and there are sellers who have now paid twice for the same ticket and TM won’t give them the funds from the buyer or a refund. Is anyone in that situation?PJ: 2013: London (ON); Buffalo; 2014: Cincinnati; 2016: Sunrise, Miami, Toronto 1-2, Wrigley 2; 2018: London (UK) 1, Milan, Padova, Sea 2, Wrigley 1-2, Fenway 1-2; 2021: SHN, Ohana, Ohana Encore 1-2; 2022: LA 1-2, Phx, Oak 1-2, Fresno, Copenhagen, Hyde Park 1-2; Quebec, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto; MSG, Camden, Nashville, Louisville, St. Louis, OKC; 2023: St. Paul 1-2, Chicago 1-2; Fort Worth 2; Austin 1-2; 2024: Vancouver 1-2, LV 1-2, LA 1-2, Napa, Barcelona 1-2; Indy; Chicago 1-2; MSG 1-2; Philly 2; Boston 2; Ohana 1-2; 2025: FL 1-2, ATL 1-2, Nash 1-2, Pit 1-2.
EV Solo: 2017 Louisville and Franklin, 2018 Ohana, 2019 Innings Fest, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Dublin and Ohana; 2021 Ohana Friday (from beach) and Saturday; 2022 Earthlings Newark; 2023 Innings Fest and Benoraya 1-2.
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 20230 -
My problem is I bought from Fan2fan and sold my tickets. So if the buyer wanted a refund I would just ask for a refund which I assume I could get before the 7 days after the concert bs0
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Yep this sucks. Have 3 pairs pending money from F2F sale that were sold on 3/7 and 3/8.
Talked to someone on TM live chat on Monday who gave me generic response saying I should receive funds in 3-5 days. On Friday I chatted with another TM rep and he basically said I will not see any money until the event is canceled or rescheduled which is BS. Like many of you have already said TM now has my money and the money from the buyer of the tickets I sold.
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Exactly. It’s total crap.dmbfactor said:Yep this sucks. Have 3 pairs pending money from F2F sale that were sold on 3/7 and 3/8.
Talked to someone on TM live chat on Monday who gave me generic response saying I should receive funds in 3-5 days. On Friday I chatted with another TM rep and he basically said I will not see any money until the event is canceled or rescheduled which is BS. Like many of you have already said TM now has my money and the money from the buyer of the tickets I sold.PJ: 2013: London (ON); Buffalo; 2014: Cincinnati; 2016: Sunrise, Miami, Toronto 1-2, Wrigley 2; 2018: London (UK) 1, Milan, Padova, Sea 2, Wrigley 1-2, Fenway 1-2; 2021: SHN, Ohana, Ohana Encore 1-2; 2022: LA 1-2, Phx, Oak 1-2, Fresno, Copenhagen, Hyde Park 1-2; Quebec, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto; MSG, Camden, Nashville, Louisville, St. Louis, OKC; 2023: St. Paul 1-2, Chicago 1-2; Fort Worth 2; Austin 1-2; 2024: Vancouver 1-2, LV 1-2, LA 1-2, Napa, Barcelona 1-2; Indy; Chicago 1-2; MSG 1-2; Philly 2; Boston 2; Ohana 1-2; 2025: FL 1-2, ATL 1-2, Nash 1-2, Pit 1-2.
EV Solo: 2017 Louisville and Franklin, 2018 Ohana, 2019 Innings Fest, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Dublin and Ohana; 2021 Ohana Friday (from beach) and Saturday; 2022 Earthlings Newark; 2023 Innings Fest and Benoraya 1-2.
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 20230 -
I just checked all minePAID Debit card - on 3/3 -PAID Debit card - on 3/7PAID Debit card - on 3/10
PAID Debit card - on 3/10PAID Debit card - on 3/12Im all paid up ..
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True, that could work. But I suspect their systems aren't set up for it, so it would take some work on TM's part. Usually if a show is canceled, the original buyer of the standard ticket automatically gets a refund to the credit card used to buy the ticket. Because resale prices typically vary from the original price, any resale refund has to be handled separately, by charging the resale seller's card on file when listing the ticket. Of course, since F2F resale is fixed at "face value" and there is no other way to transfer tickets, in this case TM could just treat the most recent F2F buyer as if they were the original purchaser for purposes of any refunds, so that previous buyers/sellers can be compensated and are "out of the picture." But since that wouldn't work for the thousands of non-PJ TM events which have a mismatch between original price and resale price, I suspect their systems just aren't set up for that. Hence the situation we're in now.kst said:
2 may not work in the stubhub case but it completely works in the fan to fan.SHZA said:
2 doesn't work. The seller gets paid for a canceled sale / event and TM loses money paying the refund. #1 is basically what they're doing based on the email that lmckenney24 gotkst said:
Then they should do one of two things:SHZA said:
I suppose their justification is that months from now the cards that some sellers have on file will no longer be valid.kst said:
Except that’s not what they’re doing. If the buyer requests a refund they will charge it to the seller’s card. They are holding the buyer’s payment to the seller independently of that and for no justifiable reason. It’s a cash flow grab plain and simple unless they clearly confirm they will no longer charge sellers’ cards for buyer refunds.Hawk123 said:
Makes sense, so they are holding my money in case the person who bought them requests a refund.SHZA said:
Because TM is just the platform. The sale was between you and the buyer.Hawk123 said:I really don’t get this, if I sold my tickets then they should pay me and I’m done. If the other buyer wants a refund then TM refunds them. Why would they charge me if the other buyer wants a refund?
1) Confirm to sellers that their credit cards will not be charged for buyer refunds.
2) Release the funds to sellers. If the buyer cancels, TM refund the buyer directly.
I believe option 2 is the best. There was never a reason to keep sellers in the process once a sale is made.
The payment the seller gets is equal to what they originally paid. They’re then out of the picture. At that point TM has the new buyers money and the new buyer has the ticket. Original buyer out of the picture. Future refund directly between new buyer and TM.Post edited by SHZA on0 -
I would think filing a dispute with your card company would make sense. I got my debit card refunded twice this year because of some stupid crap a couple of companies tried to pull. Small amounts that most people wouldn't fight but me.lmckenney24 said:
I wonder if it would be a waste of time to dispute the charge with CC. I used my Wells Fargo CC, may try calling them just out of curiosity and ask.SHZA said:
Yep and stubhub owes me over $1,000 too. Their claim that this somehow will "protect sellers" if the event is later canceled is absurd.lmckenney24 said:
So, this is going to suck for some (like you @shza) that are waiting for funds from several F2F sales. It's highly likely that some or all of these dates wont take place until 2021.SHZA said:
StubHub apparently is doing the same thing. Complete BS
That's bullshit if they hold our money that long. A lot of things way more important going on right now, but this just adds to that.0 -
I sold 2 pair in Feb (US citizen, sold for Canada). They eventually emailed me to confirm mailing address and they were mailing a paper check to me (this was Mar 5). Still nothing as of 3/25. You're welcome for the interest free loan TM!Camden, NJ 06 - Columbia, SC 08 - Washington D.C. 08 - Philadelphia, PA 09 - Bristow, VA 10 - Hartford, CT 10 - NYC, NY 10 - Alpine Valley, WI 11 - Baltimore, MD 13 - Ottawa, ON 20 - Baltimore, MD 20 - St. Louis, MO 200
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Sold a pair of tickets on 3/7. Still no payment. As sellers, we no longer own the product. Ticketmaster is at least sitting on the $244 from my purchase as well as the $244 from the resale. That is nothing short of fraudulent.
Are we all still in the same boat or are some of you receiving payments?0 -
Same boat. It’s an outrage.PJ: 2013: London (ON); Buffalo; 2014: Cincinnati; 2016: Sunrise, Miami, Toronto 1-2, Wrigley 2; 2018: London (UK) 1, Milan, Padova, Sea 2, Wrigley 1-2, Fenway 1-2; 2021: SHN, Ohana, Ohana Encore 1-2; 2022: LA 1-2, Phx, Oak 1-2, Fresno, Copenhagen, Hyde Park 1-2; Quebec, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto; MSG, Camden, Nashville, Louisville, St. Louis, OKC; 2023: St. Paul 1-2, Chicago 1-2; Fort Worth 2; Austin 1-2; 2024: Vancouver 1-2, LV 1-2, LA 1-2, Napa, Barcelona 1-2; Indy; Chicago 1-2; MSG 1-2; Philly 2; Boston 2; Ohana 1-2; 2025: FL 1-2, ATL 1-2, Nash 1-2, Pit 1-2.
EV Solo: 2017 Louisville and Franklin, 2018 Ohana, 2019 Innings Fest, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Dublin and Ohana; 2021 Ohana Friday (from beach) and Saturday; 2022 Earthlings Newark; 2023 Innings Fest and Benoraya 1-2.
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 20230 -
I'm in the same boat as you (email was March 7) The only optimism I have is that they said the check would be delivered within 4-6 weeks and it's been less than 3 weeks. If I don't have something by April 18, I'll reach out. Just trying to be patient.JB274988 said:I sold 2 pair in Feb (US citizen, sold for Canada). They eventually emailed me to confirm mailing address and they were mailing a paper check to me (this was Mar 5). Still nothing as of 3/25. You're welcome for the interest free loan TM!0 -
Same boat. Sold pair to LA1 on afternoon on March 9 - later that same day the tour postponement announcement came out.danofun said:Sold a pair of tickets on 3/7. Still no payment. As sellers, we no longer own the product. Ticketmaster is at least sitting on the $244 from my purchase as well as the $244 from the resale. That is nothing short of fraudulent.
Are we all still in the same boat or are some of you receiving payments?
Haven't received anything from TM, and based on info on the thread don't expect to for some time. Frustrating.0
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