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Live Nation and Ticketmaster Found Liable for Antitrust Violations by Jury

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Summary

A jury found Live Nation and Ticketmaster liable for violating federal and state antitrust laws after a five-week trial. The jury determined that Ticketmaster unlawfully maintains a monopoly in ticketing services at major concert venues, and Live Nation has a monopoly in large amphitheaters while unlawfully requiring artists to use its event promotion services. Fans have been overcharged for concert tickets. Remedies and financial penalties will be determined at a separate bench trial.

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What changed

The jury found Live Nation and Ticketmaster liable for violating federal and state antitrust laws by engaging in anticompetitive conduct. Specifically, Ticketmaster was found to unlawfully maintain a monopoly in ticketing services at major concert venues, while Live Nation was found to monopolize large amphitheaters and unlawfully tie its event promotion services to artists using those venues.\n\nAffected parties include Live Nation, Ticketmaster, competing ticketing services, venue owners, concert promoters, artists, and consumers. The verdict establishes precedent for antitrust enforcement against ticketing industry consolidation. A separate bench trial will determine remedies and potential financial penalties. Companies in the live entertainment industry should monitor these proceedings for implications on competitive practices.

Archived snapshot

Apr 17, 2026

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APR 16, 2026

Attorney General Alan Wilson and coalition of states win trial against Live Nation and Ticketmaster

Jury finds Live Nation and Ticketmaster illegally eliminated competition, hurting fans, artists, and competing venues

(COLUMBIA, S.C.) - Attorney General Alan Wilson and a coalition of 33 other attorneys general on Wednesday won their lawsuit against Live Nation after a jury found that Live Nation and Ticketmaster violated federal and state antitrust laws by eliminating competition and driving up costs for fans, artists, and venues across the country. After a five-week trial, the jury found that Attorney General Wilson and the coalition successfully proved that Live Nation and Ticketmaster have unlawfully maintained and abused their monopoly power that prevents other ticketing services, venue owners, and concert promoters from successfully competing. As a result, fans are charged higher prices for tickets.

“This was a fight about fair market competition to ensure fans and artists aren’t gouged by a monopoly that raises prices because it controls the entire concert system,” Attorney General Wilson said. “My goal was to protect the people of South Carolina, and I’m grateful the jury looked at the evidence and ruled in our favor.”

In May 2024, Attorney General Wilson, a coalition of 40 other states, and the United States Department of Justice (DOJ) sued Live Nation, alleging that its control over almost every aspect of the live event business – from venue ownership to event promotion to ticketing services through Ticketmaster – allowed it to raise costs for both fans and artists and to suppress competition. During the trial that began on March 2, 2026, the DOJ reached a settlement with Live Nation, which Attorney General Wilson and the coalition of 33 states rejected, choosing to continue litigation.

The jury today found Live Nation and Ticketmaster liable for violating federal and state laws by engaging in anticompetitive conduct. The jury found that Ticketmaster unlawfully maintains a monopoly in the market for ticketing services at major concert venues. The jury also found that Live Nation has a monopoly in the market for large amphitheaters used by artists and that Live Nation unlawfully requires artists who use the amphitheaters it owns to also use its event promotion services. In addition, the jury determined that fans have been overcharged for concert tickets at major concert venues across the country.

Having successfully proven their case on liability to the jury, Attorney General Wilson and the coalition will argue for remedies and financial penalties at a separate bench trial.

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
SC AG
Published
April 16th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive

Who this affects

Applies to
Technology companies Retailers Entertainment companies
Industry sector
5112 Software & Technology 4411 Retail Trade
Activity scope
Antitrust enforcement Monopoly litigation Ticketing services
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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