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NIVA Statement on U.S. House Passage of the TICKET Act

NIVA, the National Independent Venue Association, has released a statement following the U.S. House of Representatives’ passage of the TICKET Act earlier today...

The speculative ticketing ban in the TICKET Act is an important step toward restoring trust in the ticketing market. Artists, independent venues, and promoters fought tirelessly over the last two years to secure this critical protection. Any national ticketing law must truly ban speculative tickets without exception.

Unfortunately the inclusion of a "concierge service" carveout, as written in the TICKET Act, would undermine the speculative ticket ban. Concierge services should not be a loophole for companies like Vivid Seats to claim they are offering a service while selling “tickets” they don't possess to unsuspecting fans. States across the country have proven that strong, loophole-free ticketing consumer protections work, and Congress should build on that momentum. The White House Executive Order on Combating Unfair Practices in the Live Entertainment Market also made clear that deceptive practices must be fixed, not rebranded.

We urge Congress to amend language to make certain that “concierge services” do not empower multi-billion dollar resale platforms over consumers. Further, we support strengthening the law with enhanced penalties and enforcement authority for state attorneys general to deter bad actors and help ensure the law is being followed. Illegal bot use runs rampant in the ticketing industry because the FTC has only brought one enforcement action since the use of bots was banned in 2016. We hope Congress does not miss the opportunity to ensure these laws are actually enforced in the future. 

We look forward to working with the Senate to ensure that fans, venues, and artists are prioritized in the final version of the TICKET Act."

  — Stephen Parker, Executive Director of the National Independent Venue Association (NIVA)