


Kim Worsøe, Ben Mitha, Kiki Ressle, Christof Huber, Stefan Wyss, Peter Aiken, Mathilde van Geertruyden, Chris Ortiz, Olivier Darbois, María Lagos, Eduard Mercé, Maherí Contreras, Alex Argimon, Neo Sala , Sam Shemtob, Tristan Skelley, María Argomániz, Scumeck Sabottka and Stéphanie Foulgoc
Ticketing Alliance FEAT Unveils Anti-Scalping Policy For Europe
The alliance met in Barcelona on Friday 17 October
The Face-value European Alliance for Ticketing (FEAT) met in Barcelona, Spain, on Friday October 17 to discuss strategies for ending ticket scalping across Europe.
Membership:
FEAT is a non-profit organization founded in 2019 to promote better ticket resale practices across Europe.
Its members consist of representatives from eight countries: Denmark, Germany, Switzerland, Ireland, Belgium, Spain, France, and the UK.
The official position:
FEAT members agreed that ticket resale should only take place via event promoter-approved platforms, with newly barcoded tickets then reissued to buyers.
All resale prices should be face value.
Other findings:
FEATs members reported 275 illegal resale listings across 2025 using the EU’s Digital Services Act, comprising nearly 1000 tickets.
Of those reports, not a single response was received from the unauthorized websites – a further contravention of the DSA.
FEAT has determined to continue to gather evidence of DSA infringements and to lobby the EU for more stringent enforcement with stricter requirements for takedowns and quicker escalations.
What they said:
Neo Sala and Scumeck Sabottka, FEAT’s Founding Directors: “In FEAT’s sixth year of being established, it’s great to see such a good representation at our [annual general meeting], together with agreement on an updated position of promoter-approved resale only. Unauthorized websites continue to list hundreds of tickets for resale every day, ripping off tens of thousands of consumers each year across Europe. We have our eye on you.”
The Face-value European Alliance for Ticketing (FEAT) met in Barcelona, Spain, on Friday October 17 to discuss strategies for ending ticket scalping across Europe.
Membership:
FEAT is a non-profit organization founded in 2019 to promote better ticket resale practices across Europe.
Its members consist of representatives from eight countries: Denmark, Germany, Switzerland, Ireland, Belgium, Spain, France, and the UK.
The official position:
FEAT members agreed that ticket resale should only take place via event promoter-approved platforms, with newly barcoded tickets then reissued to buyers.
All resale prices should be face value.
Other findings:
FEATs members reported 275 illegal resale listings across 2025 using the EU’s Digital Services Act, comprising nearly 1000 tickets.
Of those reports, not a single response was received from the unauthorized websites – a further contravention of the DSA.
FEAT has determined to continue to gather evidence of DSA infringements and to lobby the EU for more stringent enforcement with stricter requirements for takedowns and quicker escalations.
What they said:
Neo Sala and Scumeck Sabottka, FEAT’s Founding Directors: “In FEAT’s sixth year of being established, it’s great to see such a good representation at our [annual general meeting], together with agreement on an updated position of promoter-approved resale only. Unauthorized websites continue to list hundreds of tickets for resale every day, ripping off tens of thousands of consumers each year across Europe. We have our eye on you.”
The Face-value European Alliance for Ticketing (FEAT) met in Barcelona, Spain, on Friday October 17 to discuss strategies for ending ticket scalping across Europe.
Membership:
FEAT is a non-profit organization founded in 2019 to promote better ticket resale practices across Europe.
Its members consist of representatives from eight countries: Denmark, Germany, Switzerland, Ireland, Belgium, Spain, France, and the UK.
The official position:
FEAT members agreed that ticket resale should only take place via event promoter-approved platforms, with newly barcoded tickets then reissued to buyers.
All resale prices should be face value.
Other findings:
FEATs members reported 275 illegal resale listings across 2025 using the EU’s Digital Services Act, comprising nearly 1000 tickets.
Of those reports, not a single response was received from the unauthorized websites – a further contravention of the DSA.
FEAT has determined to continue to gather evidence of DSA infringements and to lobby the EU for more stringent enforcement with stricter requirements for takedowns and quicker escalations.
What they said:
Neo Sala and Scumeck Sabottka, FEAT’s Founding Directors: “In FEAT’s sixth year of being established, it’s great to see such a good representation at our [annual general meeting], together with agreement on an updated position of promoter-approved resale only. Unauthorized websites continue to list hundreds of tickets for resale every day, ripping off tens of thousands of consumers each year across Europe. We have our eye on you.”
Face-value European Alliance for Ticketing
FEAT
Neo Sala
Scumeck Sabottka
Digital Services Act
Secondary Ticketing Issues
Government Regulation Of Ticketing
Legal Scrutiny Of Ticketing Practices
Rising Scrutiny Of Ticketing Practices
Ticketing Legislation
Platform Liability For Seller Actions
International Ticket Scalping Networks
Artist-Led Anti-Scalping Measures
DSA Enforcement In Live Music
Policy & Legal
Litigation
Consumer Protection Law
Trade Body Alliance
Fan-to-Fan Resale
Ticket Resale
Ticketing
Anti-Scalping Advocacy
Denmark
Germany
Switzerland
Ireland
Belgium
Spain
France
United Kingdom
Barcelona, ES
👋 Disclosures & Transparency Block
This story was written with information from Pollstar.
We covered it because it’s news regarding the secondary ticket market.
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