My experience with Stubhub and viagogo

StubHub / viagogo

If you are here, it means you are searching for reviews about these sister companies.

The Brutal Truth About Buying Tickets on StubHub and viagogo: Read the Fucking Rules!

Let’s be real for a second. We’ve all been there: your favorite artist announces a tour, tickets sell out in milliseconds, and panic sets in. You desperately open Google, and there they are—StubHub and viagogo—promising you a way into the show.

My experience with these platforms started exactly like that. I was desperate, I was excited, and quite frankly, I was completely fucking clueless.

Before you click «buy» on either of these sites, you need a massive reality check on how they actually work, why you get frustrated, and why most of that frustration is entirely your own fault.


1. They Don’t Actually Own Your Tickets

Here is the absolute first thing you have to understand before you purchase from them: StubHub and viagogo are secondary marketplaces.

Crucial Fact: They do not own, hold, or sell the tickets themselves. They just provide the platform where individual sellers list them.

Because of this, your tickets are usually not immediately accessible. The seller might not even receive them from the venue until a few days before the show. This delay frustrates a lot of people who immediately start panic-calling customer service, crying, screaming, and demanding a refund.

Be honest: who actually reads the Terms and Conditions? NO ONE.

So take your fucking time and read them. If you do, you will actually know what you are getting into.

  • All sales are FINAL. There are no change-of-mind refunds. The only fucking way you will get a refund is if the order duplicated during check-out. That’s it!

  • The re-sale trap: The terms say you can re-sell your tickets on the platform at any time if you can’t attend. BE CAREFUL. This information may not apply to your specific tickets. Some event organizers and venues absolutely hate ticket reselling and will block a ticket from being transferred more than once. If you get stuck with a ticket you can’t re-sell, that is not StubHub or viagogo’s fault.

I totally understand the frustration because it has happened to me. So stop sobbing and assume your fucking responsibility. You are only in this mess because you didn’t read the terms because you were a fucking lazy asshole. How do I know this? Simple: I was that fucking lazy asshole.

DO NOT BUY PARKING PASSES. Why?

Parking lots do not like having their spaces taken for lower prices. Parking lots will fucking lie to you by saying the pass is invalid and will make you pay more to park you car.

Some sellers advertise the passes for a certain parking lot and end up giving you a pass for a lot very close to Far, Far Away…

Customer Service agents are aware of what’s going on and will issue a refund not without trying to get you replacement tickets that again, could be farther away than the original one.

Again, not a StubHub nor viagogo problem. They’re just marketplaces.


2. Yes, You’re Paying Fees. Here’s Why.

Are you going to pay hefty service fees? YES.

But instead of just blindly raging about the extra cost, understand what that money is actually paying for:

  1. It pays for the programmers, designers, and customer service agents keeping the platform running.

  2. It pays for a safety net called the FanProtect Guarantee.

What is that shit?

Well, in case the seller who listed the tickets decides to fuck you over and fails to deliver them, StubHub and viagogo are going to cover your sorry ass. They will try to give you comparable tickets or even a free upgrade so you can still get into the venue. Please do not be an asshole and demand the exact, same tickets you purchased. They do not own the fucking tickets!

But you have to use your brain here: if the event is completely sold out or the upgrade tickets cost a literal fortune, they will offer to give you your money back. Yes, a refund.

However, it is not going to hit your bank account immediately. That shit takes 5 to 8 business days to clear on your credit card. Alternatively, they might offer you a voucher worth 120% of the original value to use on future tickets. You can use it all at once or break it up into fractions.

The major downside of the guarantee?

They will not apply it until one hour before the event. No fucking exceptions. Yes, it sucks waiting outside a venue in the freezing cold or pouring rain waiting for a resolution, but it is what it is.

Note: If they offer you alternative tickets under the guarantee and you genuinely do not like them, you can always choose the refund instead.


3. Don’t Be an Idiot: Count Your Losses

If you are going to buy tickets for an event taking place far away from where you live, you are taking a risk. If your tickets don’t arrive, the event is sold out, and your only option left is a refund… COUNT YOUR FUCKING LOSSES and take a deep breath.

Calling Customer Service and yelling at some underpaid agent is not going to solve shit for you. PERIOD. Instead of ruining your night, accept the reality. Go visit interesting places in the city, find a great restaurant, have lunch, dinner, or whatever the fuck you want. Do not cry over spilled milk. LIFE IS FUCKING DISAPPOINTING, deal with it!

The absolute worst thing you can do?

File a fucking dispute/chargeback with your bank.

Yes, I did it once, and I learned a very harsh lesson. On a completely separate transaction, I panicked and filed a chargeback. What happened? viagogo immediately blocked the transaction. When I called Customer Service, the agents told me they were legally unable to provide me with any information or process anything because the account was flagged for a chargeback.

The kicker? The seller ended up fulfilling the order at the very last minute, but because my account was locked down due to the dispute, I was unable to access the tickets. I screwed myself out of the concert. Don’t do it.


4. How to Call Customer Service Without Dying in the Attempt

My time is priceless, and I bet you are going to say, «Mine is too.» If you absolutely have to call them, do it efficiently so you don’t waste hours of your life:

  • Have your order number ready before you even dial.

  • Explain the issue clearly and exactly once. Don’t go in circles. Do not be an idiot.

  • Answer all their verification questions clearly. Don’t start whining over the issue while they are trying to pull up your account.

  • Don’t bother screaming for a manager. If you want to escalate, go ahead. But if the agent tells you the Supervisor is going to give you the exact same information… BE PREPARED. The Supervisor is going to tell you the exact same shit. And if you think a Manager above them will magically break the corporate rules to solve your issue: wake up, you idiot. The answer will be the same.

They all play by the same rules. Read the terms, understand the risks, and stop blaming the platform when you refuse to read the fine print.

These companies really work, with some hiccups, but they do if you know the rules.

I hope you find my post useful. Bye for now.

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