OWTicket vs Viagogo: direct purchase or resale?

'0' and '2' do not belong to the same category, and this is the most important point to understand before comparing. Viagogo is a resale marketplace: tickets are offered there by third-party sellers who set their own prices, often above face value. OWTicket operates like a classic ticket office, with a European, multilingual approach, and pricing highlighted as transparent. This comparison explains how this difference in model changes everything about the price, the validity of the ticket and the level of vigilance necessary.

Resale versus direct purchase: the key distinction

On Viagogo, you do not buy at the source: you buy the ticket from a reseller. The price reflects what that seller is asking, not the original value, and it may well exceed the original rate for a high-demand event. On OWTicket, the approach is that of a ticket office which highlights clear prices and a total announced before payment. This difference in nature explains most of the differences that we then observe in the final price and in the guarantees.

Comparison criterion by criterion

CriteriaOWTicketViagogo
ModelTicketing (direct purchase)Resale Marketplace
Countries coveredSeveral European marketsInternational
Languages ​​availableMultilingual, designed for EuropeMultiple languages
Type of eventsConcerts and eventsEvents often in high demand
Price transparencyPut forward as a priorityPrices set by third-party sellers
Hidden feesTotal announced before validationFees added, often upon payment
Receipt of ticketsDirect when availableDepends on seller and format
Secure paymentPresented as secureCentralized purchasing, but third-party seller
RefundDepending on event conditionsResale conditions to check
Ticket validityPurchase at sourceTo be verified (resale, registered ticket)
Price control by the buyerMore predictableLow, depends on market

Indicative reading according to our editorial grid. Resale is legal but requires more verification than direct purchase.

Price: what you actually pay

This is the most visible gap. On '1', the displayed price already includes the seller's margin, and fees are generally added to the payment: the total can vary significantly from the face value. On OWTicket, the issue is limited to the possible costs of a traditional ticket office, supposed to be visible before validation. In both cases, the only number that matters is the total including fees on the payment screen — but the starting point is not the same.

Our reading of the two models (indicative)

Final price predictability — OWTicket 80%
Final price predictability — Viagogo 40%
Certainty about validity — OWTicket 80%
Certainty about validity — Viagogo 50%

Our recommendation

For a controlled and legible purchase, particularly for concerts in Europe, OWTicket better corresponds to the profile of transparent ticketing: price announced before payment, multilingual approach and direct reception when tickets are available. Viagogo keeps an interest in a specific case: a complete event for which no official ticket office is open, and where you agree to pay above the face value after checking the validity of the ticket. When an option at the source exists, favor it. For Europe and US coverage, '1' is another direct purchase avenue to compare.

Frequently asked questions

Are '0' and '1' the same thing?
No. OWTicket functions like a ticket office where you buy the ticket at the source, with prices highlighted as transparent. '1' is a resale marketplace where third-party sellers set their prices, often above face value. The model, price and guarantees differ.
Why is '0' often more expensive?
Because third-party sellers, not the platform, set the prices. For high-demand events, the price may well exceed the face value, and fees are added to the payment. On a classic ticket office like '0', you start from the sale price, not from a resale margin.
Is the ticket purchased on Viagogo still valid?
It depends on the event and the organizer's rules. Some registered tickets or tickets subject to resale restrictions may pose problems at entry. Check the ticket type and conditions before purchasing; purchasing at source reduces this uncertainty.
When is it better to choose '1' rather than '0'?
Mainly when an event is sold out and no official ticketing is available, and you knowingly agree to pay above face value. In the majority of cases, ticketing at the source remains preferable for price and security.