Thousands of Oasis tickets are now being cancelled by Ticketmaster in bot crackdown – but many fans are unhappy

Fans have taken to social media to complain that their tickets have been wrongfully cancelled The post Thousands of Oasis tickets are now being cancelled by Ticketmaster in bot crackdown – but many fans are unhappy appeared first on NME.

Feb 7, 2025 - 21:06
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Thousands of Oasis tickets are now being cancelled by Ticketmaster in bot crackdown – but many fans are unhappy

Oasis' Liam and Noel Gallagher

Thousands of tickets to this year’s Oasis reunion shows are being cancelled by Ticketmaster in a crackdown on bots, but many fans are claiming they have been targeted wrongfully.

When UK tickets for the return of Liam and Noel Gallagher went on sale last August, it was reported that four per cent of them – or roughly 50,000 – ended up on resale sites. This was despite efforts having been put in place to prevent touts from re-selling tickets at inflated prices.

In a statement at the time from the band’s promoters Live Nation and SJM, it was said that all tickets sold via secondary ticketing sites other than Twickets would be cancelled, with all invalidated tickets to be made available again through Ticketmaster at face value.

“Ticket resale is permitted at no more than the price you paid (face value + booking fees),” read the statement. “Please only use the official resale partners Twickets and Ticketmaster. Selling tickets through unauthorised resale platforms will breach these T&Cs and those tickets may be cancelled”.

Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher (Photo by Michel Linssen/Redferns)

Now, Ticketmaster have been contacting some ticket holders to inform them that their tickets have been refunded as “it has been identified that bots were used to make this purchase”, meaning they “violate the tour’s terms and conditions”.

“These terms were specifically established to limit resale of tickets on unauthorised ticketing platforms for profit,” the message continues. “Fans have been strongly advised by all parties not to purchase tickets from unauthorised resale sites, to protect them from fraud or refunding.”

The news has been met with anger by many Oasis fans, however, who claim that they are being targeted despite buying their tickets legitimately.