Has anything changed since the great Oasis ticket war?

Photographs of Oasis Live '25 at Wembley Stadium 25th July 2025
Oasis’ reunion sparked ticket outrage across the UK (Picture: Big Brother Recordings)

We all remember where we were on August 31, 2024, when Oasis finally opened general sale for tickets to their reunion tour.

Most of us were probably in the same place: glued to our computers and sitting in queues with over 500,000 other people, praying for a ticket.

As the hope of seeing the Gallagher brothers live dwindled, fans across the UK realised ticket purchasing had become the wild west, from scalping to climbing costs.

Politicians got involved as Prime Minister Keir Starmer blasted the debacle as ‘not fair’ after fans realised the eye-watering price of resale tickets.

At the time, Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said: ‘After the incredible news of Oasis’ return, it’s depressing to see vastly inflated prices excluding ordinary fans from having a chance of enjoying their favourite band live.

BATH, UNITED KINGDOM - SEPTEMBER 08: In this photo illustration a laptop and a smart phone displays the Ticketmaster website on September 8, 2024 in Bath, England. The UK's Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is investigating whether Ticketmaster, the online ticket-selling platform breached consumer protection law. The investigation by the UK competition regulator was launched after the sale of Oasis reunion tickets included the use of "dynamic pricing", which meant prices prices rose in line with demand. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)
Most of us lost the great Oasis ticket war (Picture: Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

‘This Government is committed to putting fans back at the heart of music. So we will include issues around the transparency and use of dynamic pricing, including the technology around queuing systems which incentivise it, in our forthcoming consultation on consumer protections for ticket resales.’

So, almost a year on and with Oasis’ tour well underway, has anything actually changed in the ticketing world?

Dynamic pricing drama

After making their way through a stressful and potentially scalper-filled queue, Oasis fans were faced with a tough decision: cough up double the face value or abandon all hope.

Dynamic pricing became the centre of a huge backlash as Ticketmaster, the site most people use, pushed up the price due to the tickets being ‘in demand’.

Fans were not warned before the sale that the gig tickets would be dynamically priced, with the decision reportedly in the hands of artists’ teams.

Photographs of Oasis Live '25 at Wembley Stadium 25th July 2025
Dynamic pricing left fans feeling duped and angry (Picture: Big Brother Recordings)

Oasis denied knowing that demand pricing would be applied, with the feature removed for later sales for gigs outside of the UK. Fans who paid dynamic prices were not refunded the difference.

Unfortunately, we’re still in a position where surge pricing on tickets is legal, although some small changes are being made.

As of April, the Digital, Markets, Competition and Consumers Act 2024 (DMCC Act) bans the use of ‘drip pricing’ across every industry, so say goodbye to that sneaky booking fee added on at the end.

Under this, the Competition and Markets Authority have the ‘ability to decide when consumer law has been infringed and impose fines for poor corporate practice of up to 10% of worldwide turnover.’

Another positive step is that the industry bosses appear to have taken note of the sheer anger felt towards dynamic pricing and any artist who allows it to be used.

MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - JULY 11: Oasis fans arrive at Heaton Park for the first show in the hometown of Liam and Noel Gallagher on July 11, 2025 in Manchester, England. Oasis are playing a run of five sold-out shows to their hometown fans at Heaton Park in Manchester, between July 11-20. The rock band kicked off a 41-date reunion tour in Cardiff last week, with brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher reuniting for their first performances together since their dramatic split in 2009. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
Fans are still trying to find resale tickets on the door (Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)

The price surges are still around, but it seems to have fallen out of fashion for new tours (for now).

Keeping fans sweet is one of the most important things for touring artists, so never underestimate the power of complaining incredibly loudly on a national scale.

Resale regrets

If you didn’t make it through the queue before tickets sold out, your attention will have turned to the world of resale tickets.

Prices plucked out of thin air, fake tickets, scammers rife — this is where fans are hoping to see some serious clamping down from the government.

Good news, the promised consultation on this is moving ahead. Bad news is it’s still in very early stages, with recent calls for fans to have their say in a consultation.

File photo dated 31/08/24 person in a queue to access the Ticketmaster website on their phone, with the StubHub website in the background, detailing information about Oasis concert tickets for sale, in London. Consumer group Which? has called on Oasis and Ticketmaster to "do the right thing" and refund fans hit by inflated ticket prices. Issue date: Tuesday September 10, 2024. PA Photo. Many fans were shocked by the price of standard tickets for the reunion tour more than doubling from ?148 to ?355 on Ticketmaster amid surging demand, prompting the Government and the UK's competition watchdog to pledge they will look into the use of dynamic pricing. See PA story SHOWBIZ Oasis. Photo credit should read: Yui Mok/PA Wire
Ticket prices have been soaring over the past few years (Picture: Yui Mok/PA Wire)

Gareth Griffiths — director of partnerships and sponsorship at Virgin Media O2 — told Metro: ‘While the consultation earlier this year was a crucial first step toward reclaiming fairness in live music; with no news yet on legislation music fans continue to be at the mercy of touts making millions.’

He shared that O2’s latest research suggests some touts are flogging tickets at 500% above face value. They previously revealed this is costing music fans an extra £145m per year.

A cap on prices has been widely supported, including by O2’s ‘Stamp It Tout’ campaign, meaning resellers would be limited to a potential 30% inflation on face value (no word on if that includes dynamic prices).

Viagogo, one of the largest resellers, is concerned that this will drive sellers onto social media in hopes of securing a bigger profit and create more fraud.

They cited We Fight Fraud’s investigation into Premier League ticket-buying in March, which found that three out of four tickets purchased on social media were either fake or never arrived.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JULY 25: A general view of Oasis fans arriving at the Oasis Live '25 Tour at Wembley Stadium on July 25, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Ben Montgomery/Getty Images)
Fans were desperate to find tickets any way they could (Picture: Ben Montgomery/Getty Images)

Offers to buy tickets are rife on X, popping up immediately while sales are still going on.

A 25% chance of a real ticket is incredibly bad odds when you’re paying hundreds for a ticket, but social media is much harder to legislate than legitimate resale businesses.

Moving forward

Laws like the percentage resale cap, which has been proposed in the UK, are already in place in Ireland and Victoria, Australia, with effectiveness a mixed bag.

Ireland has not had any tout prosecutions since the ban on selling above face value in 2021; meanwhile, cases of fraud are said to be up 13.8% according to research by Bradshaw Advisory.

However, on the other side of this, their resale sites aren’t flooded with inflated ticket prices, and you can get genuine face value tickets after general sale.

Photographs of Oasis Live '25 at Wembley Stadium 25th July 2025
Oasis’ tour saw a huge portion of the UK population attempting to get tickets (Picture: Harriet T K Bols)

Viagogo noted that the prices do fluctuate, with tickets as low as £75 for Beyoncé before her UK shows, while the average Oasis ticket in the two weeks leading up to the first Cardiff gig was £255.

It also pointed out that Ticketmaster’s domination over primary sales isn’t helping the situation, something the CMA seems to agree with as it launched legal action against the company this month.

Viagogo said: ‘The solution to fix the ticketing industry requires collaboration with government, consumers and the entire ticketing industry. The path forward starts with opening the primary ticketing market to competition.

‘Without it, there is no incentive to innovate or improve the ticket-buying experience for fans. When you allow fair competition, regulated platforms can compete with each other, naturally driving prices down and benefit fans. A healthy, competitive market must be built on an open retail distribution model that champions transparency and gives consumers genuine choice on their terms.’

However, FanFair Alliance campaign manager Adam Webb told us: ‘Support for a price cap is clearly gaining momentum. What we now need is action.’

Photographs of Oasis Live '25 at Wembley Stadium 25th July 2025
Maybe, Oasis are gonna be the ones who save us (Picture: Big Brother Recordings)
Photographs of Oasis Live '25 at Wembley Stadium 25th July 2025
Because after all … you know the rest. (Picture: Big Brother Recordings)

Gareth added: ‘It’s important that government does not lose momentum and responds to the wishes of music fans with swift action.

‘At O2, we’re calling for a clear and enforceable 10% cap on the resale of tickets above face value – one that both incentivises fans to resell fairly when they can’t make a show, and disincentivises touts from operating at an industrial scale.

‘This is the only way to protect the UK’s live music industry and ensure tickets stay in the hands of real fans.’

Praising Lisa Nandy for reaffirming the law was moving forward, Adam concluded: ‘Come on then. Let’s get on with it.

‘Let’s make the UK’s live market the best in the world. Let’s get cracking.’ 

Metro has reached out to Ticketmaster and Lisa Nandy for comment.

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