

However, you can set the fees to a higher amount to generate extra revenue or to a lower amount to absorb part or all of the fee.Īs an example, if your ticket face price is $10, and the cost calculator calculates the fee to be $0.50, if you set the service charge to $0.50, the buyer will pay $10.50 per ticket and you will receive the exact net $10 per ticket.īut if you set the fees to a higher amount like $2, as most other ticketing systems do, you will receive approximately $1.5 in extra revenue per ticket. You can set your buyers service fee to the calculated price to transfer the fees to the buyer and break even and receive the full ticket face price. Use the cost calculator on the pricing page to calculate your exact cost for any ticket price. Alternatively you can set the fee to any amount higher to make extra revenue, or any amount lower or zero to absorb the fee.

However, you can align the buyer fee to be equal to your Ticketor fee to transfer the fee to the buyer. In other words, the fee that the buyer pays to you is not related to the fee that you pay to Ticketor. You are the one who decides how much the buyer pays in charges (service fee) and you are the one collecting those fees.Ticketor does not add any fees to your buyers.Ticketor does not charge for any un-sold tickets.

It means that if you sell discounted or complimentary tickets, you pay fee based on the discounted price and not the original price.
