New UK Ticket Resale Law: Football Left Out
Fans are being charged up to four times the face value for digital tickets from resale websites based outside the UK

New UK Ticket Resale Law: Football Left Out

What’s Happening?

The UK government has introduced new legislation to ban ticket touting (reselling tickets above face value) for sporting eventsbut not for football matches.

This move follows a BBC investigation in September that exposed a massive black market reselling thousands of Premier League tickets at up to 4× the original price.

Why Football Is Excluded

  • Football is already governed by the 1994 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act.

  • This Act prohibits the resale of football tickets unless through club-approved channels (e.g., official ticket exchanges).

  • Its original purpose: combat hooliganism and reduce matchday disorder, not price control.

  • It only applies in England and Wales, which limits its power over international black market operators.

The Black Market Loophole

  • Over 50 unauthorised sites are reselling Premier League tickets, including StubHub and Vivid Seats (where Chelsea owner Todd Boehly is a director).

  • These platforms are often registered abroad (Spain, Dubai, Estonia, Germany) and out of reach of UK laws.

  • Example:

    • Arsenal v Nottingham Forest had 18,000 tickets listed on unauthorised sites—almost ⅓ of Emirates’ capacity.

    • Ticket prices ranged from £55 to £14,962, often delivered as last-minute mobile passes.

Wimbledon’s Debenture Exemption & United’s Opportunity

Wimbledon

:

  • Their debenture system (premium seats valid for 5 years + hospitality access) has been granted an exemption from the resale cap.

  • 3,770 seats can be sold via official trading platforms or privately.

Manchester United’s Stadium Plan

:

  • The Wimbledon precedent could benefit Man United, who are exploring “seat licences” to help fund a £2bn stadium rebuild.

  • A seat licence allows fans to:

    • Pay a lump sum to reserve a specific seat

    • Get priority to buy tickets

    • Possibly resell their rights, generating long-term value

These seat licences resemble Wimbledon’s debentures — meaning Man United could argue for a similar exemption to fund stadium development.

Key Takeaways

  • New resale laws will help control inflated prices — but NOT for football.

  • The 1994 law is outdated and ineffective against international resellers.

  • Football’s black market remains “endemic”, with no immediate fix.

  • Wimbledon’s exemption sets a key precedent for other major venues.

  • Manchester United could benefit via licensed seat models for stadium funding.

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