FTC Announces Plans to Issue “Drip Pricing” Fee Regulations

FTC Announces Plans to Issue “Drip Pricing” Fee Regulations

The Federal Trade Commission voted to issue an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on Junk Fees on Thursday, which could involve regulation surrounding so-called “drip pricing” tactics in event ticketing. Drip pricing is the tactic of showing one price to consumers at the start of a transaction, only to have unavoidable fees added later on, which many characterize as a deceptive trade practice.

“American consumers, workers, and small businesses today are swamped with junk fees that frustrate consumers, erode trust, impair comparison shopping, and facilitate inflation,” the FTC announcement regarding the decision reads, in part. It defined “junk fees” as “unfair or deceptive fees that are charged for goods or services that have little or no added value to the consumer… the term also encompasses “hidden fees,” which are fees for goods or services that are deceptive or unfair, including because they are disclosed only at a later stage in the consumer purchasing  process or not at all.”

Those who have shopped for tickets are very familiar with the hidden fees that are frequently used in the sales process on many websites. When shopping for tickets, one price is displayed – say $100 per ticket. But when you add those tickets to your shopping cart, various fees are tacked on, including service, facility, and other fees with vague meanings that are all based off of the listing price and unavoidable. Such tactics make true comparison shopping across ticketing marketplaces almost impossible, particularly when some ticketing platforms like Vivid Seats regularly mark ticket prices down below wholesale at the initial price display, only to make up for the artificially low initial impression by adding a higher percentage fee after payment details are added by the customer lured in by the implied “deal.”

This avalanche of fees has long been a part of the ticket buying process, to the point of satire: