Eventbrite’s pricing structure includes three different options that come with various price tags. These options charge the organizer or attendee with a fixed-fee per ticket sold, a percentage of sales, and an additional payment processing charge which they don’t include on the pricing page of their website.
A question we ran across in our research was “What percentage does eventbrite take?”.
Eventbrite Service Fee: 2% + CA$0.59 per sold ticket. Eventbrite Service Fee: 3.5% + C$0.99 per sold ticket. Eventbrite Organiser tickets at the door: C$1 per sold ticket.
After Eventbrite’s 2% total sales, and $0.79 per ticket in ticket commissions, you would only take home $4495 – paying $140 in Eventbrite fees for their most basic package*. The equivalent to this would be subscribing to Event Espresso’s Personal package, which would cost you a total of $79.95 and allow you to organize additional events throughout the year without any extra ticket commission fees*.
Both our Essentials and Professional products are free for free tickets — we only charge you each time you sell a paid ticket. Organizers with only free events have access to everything in Essentials, and everything in Professional except for phone, chat, or email support.
What percentage does Eventbrite take from ticket sales?
While the Essential and Professional platforms are free for event creators to use, the cut taken by Eventbrite differs by tier. For the Essential package, the company takes 2% from each ticket sold. For the Professional platform, the company takes 3.5% from each ticket sold.
Eventbrite Service Fee: 3.5% + C$0.99 per sold ticket Eventbrite Payment Processing Fee: 2.5% per order Eventbrite Organizer tickets at the door: C$1 per sold ticket.
– Eventbrite’s pricing is 2% of the ticket price and $0.79 per paid ticket plus 2.5% payment processing per transaction for our essentials package. – Eventbrite’s pricing is 3.5% of the ticket price and $1.59 per paid ticket plus a 2.5% payment processing fee per transaction for our professional package.
Another common question is “What are Eventbrite fees and how do they work?”.
Eventbrite fees scales upwards, depending on the price of your tickets and the number of attendees. They charge a significant commission on your ticket sales and their fees increase depending on the package you’ve selected, the number of tickets sold, and the price per ticket.
If your class were full during both of the offered sessions, you’d make $5000 in total. After Eventbrite’s 2% total sales, and $0.79 per ticket in ticket commissions, you would only take home $4495 – paying $140 in Eventbrite fees for their most basic package*.
For example, an event with “General Admission – Early Bird”, “General Admission – Regular”, and “VIP” has 3 ticket types. Does Eventbrite have a free option?
What payment processing do Eventbrite organisers use?
The vast majority of Eventbrite organisers use Eventbrite Payment Processing, our native payment processor that enables full access to all features in your selected package and has historically increased sales conversion by up to 20%.
Also, what are the benefits of Eventbrite payment processing?
Eventbrite Payment Processing is the easiest way to take payments online. Here are the benefits: ☑️ Attendees can stay on Eventbrite or on your website to complete their purchase. ☑️ The payment processing fees are lower than Pay. Pal’s fees and can be included in the ticket price.
How long does it take to receive funds from Eventbrite?
Consult Eventbrite for latest fees and pricing details. No waiting until after your event to receive event proceeds. With Stripe, your online ticketing funds are typically transferred within 48 business hours directly into your bank account. RSVPify offers a seamless, fully-brandable online ticketing, payment, and event registration experience.
– You can accept cash or credit card payments for your event with Eventbrite Organizer. It’s a great way to keep track of on-site sales, and you can even collect contact information for your attendees. – Review our payment processing options here. How do I get money from Eventbrite?