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Urgent Enforcement Amended Final

StubHub Pays $10M Settlement Over Deceptive Ticket Pricing

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Summary

The FTC settled with StubHub Holdings, Inc. for $10 million to resolve charges that the company violated the FTC Act and the agency's Rule on Unfair or Deceptive Fees by advertising ticket prices without clearly disclosing total costs upfront. The settlement requires StubHub to pay $10 million for consumer refunds and prohibits misrepresenting total prices, fees, or payment amounts.

What changed

The FTC alleged that StubHub violated the Fees Rule, which took effect May 12, 2025, by failing to disclose total ticket prices upfront across multiple pricing displays on its website. The settlement requires StubHub to pay $10 million for a consumer redress distribution program and prohibits misrepresenting any aspect of pricing.\n\nCompanies offering live-event tickets must prominently disclose total prices including all mandatory fees before consumers commit to purchase. StubHub must implement compliance measures to ensure pricing transparency across all displays and checkout flows.

What to do next

  1. Pay $10 million for consumer refunds under the settlement
  2. Refrain from misrepresenting total prices of goods or services
  3. Refrain from misrepresenting fee nature, purpose, amount, or refundability

Penalties

$10 million settlement for consumer refunds

Archived snapshot

Apr 12, 2026

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“The Commission’s Fees Rule makes it very clear that the total price of live-event tickets must be disclosed up-front to enable consumers to make fully informed purchasing decisions,” said Christopher Mufarrige, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection. “Price transparency is essential to a free and competitive marketplace. Today’s settlement underscores the Commission’s commitment to ensuring that consumers pay the price they are promised.”

The FTC’s action against StubHub Holdings, Inc., follows a warning letter the agency sent the online ticket platform in May 2025 stating that multiple prices displayed on its website appeared to be in violation of the Fees Rule. Under the Rule, which took effect on May 12, 2025, it is an unfair and deceptive practice for any business to offer, display, or advertise the price of a live-event ticket without clearly, conspicuously, and most prominently disclosing the total price, which the Rule defines as “the maximum total of all fees or charges a consumer must pay for any good(s) or service(s) and any mandatory ancillary good or service.” Misrepresenting prices also violates the FTC Act.

Today’s action also follows the Administration’s recent Executive Order on Ticketing.), which includes a directive for the FTC to “take appropriate action . . . to ensure price transparency at all stages of the ticket-purchase process, including the secondary ticketing market.”

According to the Commission’s complaint, in mid-May 2025—after the Rule went into effect—StubHub advertised its ticket prices without disclosing the full price consumers would actually pay by failing to include mandatory fees and to disclose the total price everywhere it displayed prices.

Specifically, the FTC alleges StubHub failed to provide the total price for tickets—including high-demand National Football League tickets in the lead-up to when the NFL schedule was announced on May 14, 2025—in the first three pricing displays on its website. On the initial two pricing displays, in numerous instances, the advertised price did not include all mandatory fees, and StubHub did not disclose the total price. On the third pricing display, StubHub listed multiple fees and charges but did not disclose the total price.

The proposed order settling StubHub’s alleged violations of the FTC Act and the Fees Rule requires the company to pay $10 million, which the company will use to provide monetary relief to eligible consumers through a settlement and consumer redress distribution program. The order also prohibits StubHub from misrepresenting the total price of any good or service; any fee or charge, including its nature, purpose, amount, or refundability, as well as why the fee or charge is being imposed; the final payment amount for any transaction; and any other material fact including those related to refunds or cancellations.

The proposed order also prohibits StubHub from:

  • Offering, displaying, or advertising any price of a good or service without clearly and conspicuously disclosing the total price;
  • Failing to disclose the total price more prominently than any other pricing information;
  • Failing to clearly and conspicuously disclose the amount of any fees or charges that have been excluded from the total price and what they are for, as well as the final payment amount—before the consumer agrees to pay for a product or service; and
  • Violating the Commission’s Fees Rule. Within 90 days of the date of the order StubHub must provide redress to two groups of eligible consumers who bought tickets for live events in the U.S. between May 12 and 14, 2025. The first group includes those where the total price of tickets was not disclosed on the initial pricing display. The second group includes all other consumers who bought tickets during that period.

The Commission vote authorizing the staff to file the complaint and stipulated final order was 2-0. FTC Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson issued a separate statement. The FTC filed the complaint and final order **** in the U.S. District Court for the District of Southern District of New York.

NOTE: The Commission files a complaint when it has “reason to believe” that the named defendants are violating or are about to violate the law and it appears to the Commission that a proceeding is in the public interest. Stipulated final injunctions/orders have the force of law when approved and signed by the District Court judge.

The lead staff attorney on this matter is Annette Soberats of the FTC’s Bureau of Bureau of Consumer Protection.

The Federal Trade Commission works to promote competition and protect and educate consumers. The FTC will never demand money, make threats, tell you to transfer money, or promise you a prize. Learn more about consumer topics at consumer.ftc.gov, or report fraud, scams, and bad business practices at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the FTC on social media, read consumer alerts and the business blog, and sign up to get the latest FTC news and alerts.

Press Release Reference

With NFL’s 2025 Schedule Set to be Announced, FTC Warns Ticket Reseller StubHub it Must Comply with Agency’s New Rule on Unfair and Deceptive Fees

Contact Information

Media Contact

Mitchell J. Katz Office of Public Affairs 202-257-3814

Related Cases

StubHub

Related actions

Statement of Chairman Andrew N. Ferguson in the Matter of FTC v. StubHub Holdings, Inc.

Topics

Protecting Consumers

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Named provisions

Rule on Unfair or Deceptive Fees

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
FTC
Filed
April 1st, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Retailers Technology companies Consumers
Industry sector
4541 E-Commerce 4411 Retail Trade
Activity scope
Ticket resale Price advertising Consumer refunds
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Consumer Protection
Operational domain
Compliance
Compliance frameworks
FTC Act
Topics
Advertising and Marketing Consumer Finance

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