Advertisement

You better lawyer up, Ticketmaster: Taylor Swift fans file Eras Tour lawsuit

A woman with long, curly blond hair wearing a bedazzled dress and holding a clear, pointy trophy
Taylor Swift attends the 2022 American Music Awards in Los Angeles.
(Jordan Strauss / Invision/AP)
Share via

It’s no secret that there is bad blood between Taylor Swift fans and Ticketmaster. Now the Swifties are officially taking legal action.

According to Rolling Stone, 26 Taylor Swift fans from 13 states filed a lawsuit against the ticket vendor Friday in Los Angeles County. The complaint accuses Ticketmaster of violating the California Cartwright Act and the California Unfair Competition Law during last month’s “Verified Fan” pre-sale for Swift’s upcoming concert. The plaintiffs are seeking a civil fine of $2,500 per violation.

Advertisement

Obtained by Rolling Stone, the lawsuit alleges that Ticketmaster’s parent company (Live Nation Entertainment Inc.) engaged in fraud, price-fixing and antitrust-law violations while selling advance tickets to the pop superstar’s Eras Tour. The filing also accuses Ticketmaster of “intentionally and purposefully mislead[ing] ticket purchasers by allowing scalpers and bots access to TaylorSwiftTix presale.”

Taylor Swift is making no excuses for Ticketmaster, which she said assured her team that it could handle the massive demand for tickets to her tour.

In the wake of the pre-sale fiasco, many accused Ticketmaster of unfairly monopolizing the ticket market — which allegedly forced “fans to buy more expensive tickets that Ticketmaster gets additional fees from every time the tickets are resold,” the lawsuit states.

Ticketmaster has blamed unexpected and “unprecedented” demand for overwhelming its system and causing the Eras Tour to sell out prematurely. (The company ended up canceling its sale to the general public “due to extraordinarily high demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory to meet that demand.”)

Advertisement

But the fan lawsuit accused the company of “intentionally provid[ing] codes when it could not satisfy ticket demand” after “millions of fans waited up to eight hours and were unable to purchase tickets.”

Congress is asking the Federal Trade Commission if it will enforce against bots after Ticketmaster blamed them for Taylor Swift ticket-sale disaster.

Disgruntled Swifties are not the only ones with an ax to grind against Ticketmaster. The Eras Tour debacle has also prompted the attorney general of Tennessee and even members of Congress to scrutinize the ticket industry in recent weeks.

In a message to fans last month, Swift refused to “make excuses” for Ticketmaster after she and her team “asked them, multiple times, if they could handle this kind of demand and ... were assured they could.”

Advertisement

“It’s truly amazing that 2.4 million people got tickets, but it really pisses me off that a lot of them feel like they went through several bear attacks to get them,” the “Midnights” artist added.

“We strive to make ticket buying as easy as possible for fans, but that hasn’t been the case for many people trying to buy tickets for Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour,” Ticketmaster said last month in a statement. “We want to apologize to Taylor and all of her fans – especially those who had a terrible experience trying to purchase tickets.”

Ticketmaster did not immediately respond Sunday to The Times’ request for comment.

On Thursday, Ticketmaster released a statement meant to assuage fans shut out from purchasing Eras tickets. Next: a potential congressional investigation.

Advertisement