Ticketmaster CashorTrade Partners CashorTrade With to Expand Verified Face Value Resale

Ticketmaster has integrated with fan-to-fan platform CashorTrade to expand verified face value ticket resale, but some in the community aren't convinced.

April 7, 2026

Ticketmaster and the face value ticketing movement have not historically been on the same side. That dynamic just got more complicated.

Ticketmaster announced Tuesday that it has integrated with CashorTrade, a fan-to-fan marketplace that has spent more than 15 years building a community around buying and selling concert tickets at face value or below. The integration allows verified Ticketmaster tickets to be listed on CashorTrade, authenticated through Ticketmaster’s verification technology, and transferred to buyers as newly issued tickets within the CashorTrade app. Markups are not allowed. Sellers choose who they sell to. The feature is currently live on select tours with more to come.

“Fans deserve more ways to buy and sell tickets at the original price, with confidence that what they’re getting is legitimate,” said Ticketmaster EVP of Music David Marcus. “By working with CashorTrade, we’re expanding face value resale in a way that gives fans more choice, and we’ll continue to support partnerships with resale platforms that operate with integrity and respect artist terms.”

CashorTrade CEO and co-founder Brando Rich framed the deal as a natural evolution of what the platform has always stood for. “What started in the parking lots as a fight for fairness has grown into something much bigger,” he said. “This integration gives fans more freedom to buy and sell authenticated tickets at the artists’ original prices.”

The partnership builds on Ticketmaster’s own Face Value Exchange, which launched in 2019 and gave artists the option to cap resale prices directly on the platform. That program is available on select tours. The CashorTrade integration expands that infrastructure through a third-party platform that already has deep credibility with jam band and independent music communities, counting Phish, Umphrey’s McGee, Waxahatchee, moe., The Disco Biscuits, and others among its longtime artist partners.

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Not everyone in the CashorTrade community is celebrating, though. As Live for Live Music noted, some longtime users pushed back immediately, pointing out that Ticketmaster’s own platform still operates dynamic Platinum pricing and allows above-face-value resale through Ticketmaster itself. For many in the face value community, the company is precisely the problem CashorTrade was built to work around. CashorTrade addressed the reaction directly, writing to users that the integration is primarily a verification tool, not a structural change to how CashorTrade operates.

The tension is real and worth naming. This partnership does not change Ticketmaster’s broader pricing practices. What it does do is give fans a verified, no-markup path for resale on a platform they already trust, using Ticketmaster authentication to reduce fraud risk. For artists on select tours, that’s a meaningful addition. Whether it signals a genuine shift in how the Live Nation antitrust era plays out for fans remains a more complicated question.

The Live Nation antitrust trial has kept a spotlight on whether the company’s dominance over ticketing serves fans or works against them. This move, at minimum, is Ticketmaster visibly aligning itself with face value principles at a moment when that alignment carries PR value. Whether it leads to anything more structural is what the industry will be watching.

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