Entertainment

Toronto International Film Festival tickets are selling for hundreds of dollars on resale sites

Ticket scalping has become a recurring issue, and Ticketmaster came under firing earlier this month for its handling of tickets for Taylor Swift's Eras tour. 

Tickets to some high-profile films are reselling for more than $1,000

A TIFF logo with colorful blocks around them.
This image shows the Toronto International Film Festival's logo. Tickets for some of the movie festival's premieres are going for more than $1,000 on some ticket reselling sites. (CBC)

The Toronto International Film Festival is more than a week away, but tickets for some films are already being resold at significantly higher prices.

Tickets for screenings at the festival, which runs from Sept. 7 to 17, have been met with high demand through the festival's formal vendor Ticketmaster, which has led to a resale market where some single tickets are selling for more than $1,000. 

Tickets for the premiere of Dumb Money, a biographical comedy that chronicles the 2021 GameStop short squeeze and features high-profile stars like Pete Davidson, America Ferrera and Seth Rogen are currently being resold on StubHub for upwards of $1,300. 

Tickets for Dumb Money are being resold on StubHub for more than $1,300.
Tickets for Dumb Money are being resold on StubHub for more than $1,300. (StubHub)

Tickets for the film are currently "sold out" on Ticketmaster. 

Tickets for Next Goal Wins, the Taika Waititi-directed comedy featuring Michael Fassbender and Elisabeth Moss about the American Samoa soccer team's attempt to make a World Cup, are also being resold for $416.50 on Ticketmaster.

People are taking notice, and they're not happy. 

"Ticketmaster is a scourge," reads one post on social media site X, formerly known as Twitter, from writer and filmmaker Siddhant Adlakha. 

Ticket reselling has become a recurring issue. Ticketmaster came under firing earlier this month for its handling of tickets for Taylor Swift's Eras tour. 

Challenge of preventing scalping

Pascal Courty, an economics professor at the University of Victoria, says the issue is being able to ensure that fans are the ones who get tickets without people scooping them up to resell at inflated prices.

"Some people will try to slide in, and they don't want to go to the concert, but they realize that they can buy low and sell high," he said in an interview with CBC News earlier this month. "That's another reason why there would be massive demand and it would be hard to manage."

Courty says he thinks Ticketmaster's verified fan program, a process designed to manage demand, filter bots and avoid high-priced tickets, likely helps prevent some of those people "from just grabbing money." But he also noted that other methods could completely eliminate scalping.

Courty says one way to deter it is to make tickets nominative, like airline tickets, where people have to declare a name at the time of purchase.

"In the event something happens to you, you can't show up anymore at the last minute, you give the ticket back," he said, noting that in that scenario, someone new would be drawn from a virtual line, and people could access the venue only if they had a ticket and matching ID. 

"That system would completely prevent resale for profits because there's no way for this third party to slide in," Courty said, since they would only be able to transfer tickets back to the primary seller.

Neither TIFF or Ticketmaster responded to CBC News's requests for comment. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Brock Wilson

Journalist

Brock Wilson is a producer based in Toronto. He can often be found producing episodes for About That with Andrew Chang and writing stories for the web. You can reach him at brock.wilson@cbc.ca.

With files from Joe Pugh