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AGs Win Jury Verdict Against Live Nation Ticketmaster Monopoly

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Summary

A five-week trial concluded on April 15, 2026, with a jury finding that Live Nation and Ticketmaster maintain illegal monopolies in the live events industry, overcharging fans for tickets as a direct result. A coalition of 40 state attorneys general proved the companies locked venues into exclusive contracts, forced competitors out of the industry, and limited artists' venue choices. In the coming months the coalition will ask the court to impose remedies including financial consequences and a breakup of Live Nation's monopoly.

“After a five-week trial, our coalition of attorneys general proved that Live Nation and Ticketmaster's illegal monopoly drives up prices and hurts fans, artists, and venues across the country.”

NY AG , verbatim from source
Why this matters

Venues and live events companies that were previously locked into exclusive contracts or squeezed out of the market by Live Nation's dominance should treat this verdict as a signal to review their contractual positions and explore re-entry opportunities. Any competitor that was forced out, bullied, or denied access to venues should assess whether documentation of that conduct exists and whether it supports independent claims or participation in the remedies proceedings.

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Published by NY AG on ag.ny.gov . Detected, standardized, and enriched by GovPing. Review our methodology and editorial standards .

About this source

GovPing monitors NY Attorney General Press Releases for new courts & legal regulatory changes. Every update since tracking began is archived, classified, and available as free RSS or email alerts — 49 changes logged to date.

What changed

A jury agreed with a coalition of 40 state attorneys general that Live Nation and Ticketmaster violated antitrust law by maintaining illegal monopolies that drive up ticket prices and limit consumer choice. The verdict covers the companies' practices of locking venues into exclusive contracts, forcing competitors out of the market, and restricting artists' performance options. The coalition prevailed on every count after a five-week trial. Affected parties in the live events ecosystem — including venues, competing promoters, and ticketing platforms — should anticipate significant structural changes if the court grants the requested breakup remedy. The companies face potential financial consequences as part of the remedies phase.

Archived snapshot

Apr 24, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

Attorney General James and Attorney General Skrmetti Declare Live Nation Court Victory a Win for Fans

April 23, 2026

NEW YORK – New York Attorney General Letitia James and Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti published an op-ed in Rolling Stone detailing the significance of their recent victory in court against Live Nation and Ticketmaster. On April 15, Attorney General James and a coalition of 33 other attorneys general won their case when the jury decided that Live Nation and Ticketmaster maintain illegal monopolies in the live events industry that lead to fans being overcharged for tickets.

The full text of the op-ed is available below and can be viewed online.

Last month, customers of Live Nation learned that company executives love “robbing them blind” because they are “so stupid.” Behind closed doors, these executives bragged about “goug[ing]” customers in every possible way, such as by charging “$50 to park in the grass” and “$60 to park in closer grass.”

Their CEO led by example. For instance, he banned customers from bringing lawn chairs to an outdoor venue — for their safety, he said — and then turned around and made millions of dollars renting them lawn chairs.

For many Americans, that didn’t come as a surprise. It confirmed what they already knew from experience.

Anyone who has tried to buy a concert ticket in recent years knows the feeling. You log on early to an unreliable platform, wait in a digital line, finally secure a seat — and then watch the price balloon with a cascade of mysterious fees. Service fees. Convenience fees. Processing fees. Facility fees. By the time you check out, the cost has exploded.

For decades, fans said the system was rigged. Artists complained about excessive fees. Venue owners were forced to contend with Live Nation’s bullying. In functional markets, companies that behave that way won’t last long. The live events market is broken.

That’s why we built a coalition of 40 state attorneys general to sue Live Nation and Ticketmaster for maintaining illegal monopolies in the live events industry. Our lawsuit showed that they unfairly manipulated the marketplace in their favor. They locked venues into exclusive contracts, forced competitors out of the industry, and limited artists’ choices of where they could perform.

Last week, a jury agreed.

After a five-week trial, our coalition of attorneys general proved that Live Nation and Ticketmaster’s illegal monopoly drives up prices and hurts fans, artists, and venues across the country.

The verdict was clear: we won on every count.

This case was never about one bad fee or one frustrating checkout experience. It was about how one company came to dominate nearly every aspect of live events — from promoting shows to owning venues to selling tickets — and then used that power to take advantage of consumers.

The result? Higher prices, fewer options, and a worse experience for fans, artists, and venues alike.

The evidence was overwhelming. The jury found that fans were overcharged for tickets as a direct result of this monopoly, paying higher fees for their tickets.

For decades, artists and fans alike have raised the alarm. Way back in 1994, Pearl Jam accused Ticketmaster of using its dominance to block competition and punish those who challenged its pricing. More recently, fans trying to buy tickets for major tours, like Taylor Swift, Beyoncé, BTS, Bruce Springsteen, and Harry Styles have faced sky-high prices, system failures, and a lack of real alternatives.

Until now, little has changed.

This verdict is a turning point for the live events industry and for every American who has felt powerless in the face of rising ticket costs. It affirms that no company, no matter how powerful, is above the law. And it proves that strong antitrust enforcement works.

This was a bipartisan effort, led by state attorneys general from across the country and across the political spectrum, because this isn’t a partisan issue. Fair markets are the foundation of our nation’s economy. Competition drives innovation, lowers prices, and gives consumers real choice. When companies break those rules, it’s our job to step in.

We are going to fix this broken system. In the coming months, we will ask the court to impose remedies that restore competition and deliver real relief to fans. That includes financial consequences for the company and, more importantly, a breakup of Live Nation’s monopoly.

We’re fighting for a live events marketplace where fans come first, where artists have real autonomy, and where buying a ticket doesn’t feel like a race to break the bank. The only way to get there is through real competition.

For too long, Live Nation and Ticketmaster held fans captive. Now that era is coming to an end.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NY AG
Published
April 23rd, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
Executive
Joint with
Tennessee AG
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Consumers Retailers Entertainment companies
Industry sector
7110 Performing Arts & Spectator Sports
Activity scope
Antitrust litigation Ticket sales Venue management
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Antitrust & Competition
Operational domain
Legal
Compliance frameworks
Dodd-Frank
Topics
Consumer Protection Securities

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