DC AG Joins 26 States in Live Nation Antitrust Lawsuit
Summary
District of Columbia Attorney General Brian L. Schwalb announced the District is joining 26 other states in continuing an antitrust lawsuit against Live Nation, which owns Ticketmaster. The coalition seeks to restore competition to the live entertainment industry and ticketing marketplace.
What changed
Attorney General Schwalb announced that the District of Columbia is joining a bipartisan coalition of 26 state attorneys general to continue a significant antitrust lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment, Inc., and its subsidiary Ticketmaster. This action follows a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice, with the states asserting the DOJ's settlement is insufficient. The lawsuit alleges Live Nation illegally monopolizes the live entertainment industry and concert ticketing services, harming artists, venues, and consumers by inflating ticket prices. The states are seeking to compel Live Nation to divest Ticketmaster, secure financial compensation for overcharged fans and the District, and prohibit anticompetitive practices.
Regulated entities, particularly those in the live entertainment and ticketing sectors, should be aware of this ongoing litigation and its potential impact on market competition and business practices. While specific compliance deadlines are not detailed in this announcement, the coalition's motion for a mistrial indicates a continued aggressive pursuit of remedies. The original lawsuit sought divestiture of Ticketmaster and financial compensation, suggesting potential future obligations or penalties for Live Nation if the states prevail. Companies operating in this space should monitor the case's progress and consider the implications for their own operations and market strategies.
What to do next
- Monitor the progress of the Live Nation antitrust lawsuit.
- Review internal practices for potential anticompetitive conduct in the live entertainment and ticketing markets.
Penalties
Financial compensation for the District and fans who were overcharged.
Source document (simplified)
Attorney General Schwalb Joins State Attorneys General to Continue Live Nation Lawsuit
March 9, 2026
Following DOJ Settlement, Bipartisan 27-AG Coalition Will Keep Fighting to Restore Fair Competition to Live Music Marketplace
Attorney General Brian L. Schwalb released the following statement regarding the ongoing antitrust case against Live Nation, which owns Ticketmaster, for illegally monopolizing the live entertainment industry and concert ticketing services:
“DC’s live entertainment scene is vital to our local economy and culture, and the recently announced settlement is simply not adequate,” said Attorney General Schwalb. “Live Nation has raked in billions from an illegal monopoly that stifles artists, harms venues, and makes it harder for fans to see the performers they love. We will continue fighting to hold Live Nation accountable and restore competition to the live entertainment industry.”
Background on Lawsuit
In May 2024, a bipartisan group of state attorneys general joined the U.S. Department of Justice to sue Live Nation for monopolizing the market for ticketing and using its monopoly power in the concert venue market to reinforce and protect that monopoly.
The District is home to more than 20 music venues of varying sizes, from Capital One Arena, which can fit more than 20,000 fans, to more intimate venues. Ticketmaster sales data for recent years show the District had far higher per capita Ticketmaster ticket sales than any state. Live Nation controls two of the most important parts of the live entertainment industry at District concert venues: ticketing and artists. Live Nation is the exclusive ticketer to nearly all sizable venues in DC. Live Nation is the dominant content provider to those venues because its monopoly of concert promotions means neither artists nor venues have comparable, competitive alternatives to Live Nation. That means for most shows at major concert venues in and around the District, Live Nation’s misconduct results in fans paying more to see the show.
The original lawsuit asked the court to restore competition to the live entertainment industry by:
Ordering Live Nation to divest Ticketmaster.
Securing financial compensation for the District, as well as for fans who were overcharged by Live Nation, leading them to pay more than they would have in a competitive market for tickets.
Prohibiting Live Nation from engaging in its anticompetitive practices.
Joining Attorney General Schwalb in continuing the lawsuit against Live Nation are the attorneys general of Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin and Wyoming.
The coalition’s motion for a mistrial so that the states can have a fair trial to challenge Live Nation’s conduct is available here.
OAG’s Antitrust Enforcement Actions
OAG has a long record of holding companies accountable for antitrust violations that harm District consumers. OAG sued RealPage and 14 of the largest residential landlords in the District for colluding to illegally raise rents for tens of thousands of DC residents, and has also opposed anticompetitive mergers such as those between Kroger and Albertsons, JetBlue and Spirit, Anthem and Cigna, Staples and Office Depot, and fantasy sports sites DraftKings and FanDuel.
Related changes
Source
Classification
Who this affects
Taxonomy
Browse Categories
Get Courts & Legal alerts
Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.
Free. Unsubscribe anytime.
Get alerts for this source
We'll email you when AG: DC Newsroom publishes new changes.