Matchday Ticket Prices (11 Viewers)

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
I’ll be back over the Christmas period and will be going to games paying £45 a ticket and it doesn’t bother me a jot.

Occasional fans should be paying a lot more than season ticket holders who support the club every week and hand over their money when there is no cash flow during the summer.

Season tickets are great value and that should remain the same.

The issue is definitely kids tickets but we fucked that up ourselves with adults getting the cheap tickets.

You’re spot on. People are talking on here like this is every game.

People who attend more than 12 games a season should have a season ticket anyway.

For those who can’t/don’t want to attend every game, go to one of the many non A+ games instead.

I’d like to remind everyone that we’re a quarter of the way through the season already and had only one A+ game
 

pusbccfc

Well-Known Member
You’re spot on. People are talking on here like this is every game.

People who attend more than 12 games a season should have a season ticket anyway.

For those who can’t/don’t want to attend every game, go to one of the many non A+ games instead.

I’d like to remind everyone that we’re a quarter of the way through the season already and had only one A+ game

3 by Christmas. Leicester in mid Jan. I'd imagine Wrexham last game too.
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
3 by Christmas. Leicester in mid Jan. I'd imagine Wrexham last game too.

Which means 18 home games where these prices don’t apply
 

Flying Fokker

Well-Known Member
Which means 18 home games where these prices don’t apply
The underlying issue is not what is happening this season.

Ticket prices are historically high. Compare prices in the 80s /90s to today and we are paying more with inflation factored in.

For example 1980 League Cup Semi-final. Arguably a A+ match cost £4 in the west end. £23 quid today.

£5.50 seat. £31.35.
 

SkyBlueMatt

Well-Known Member
100%.
Imo any away ticket over £35 not including fees etc I'd say is very steep.

Fair price should be £30 capped for all of EFL.

Makes for a better product and chance of fuller away ends.
I agree, I'm not sure of an exact amount but the championship needs a cap.

I've always thought when I've bought away tickets, 30-34 is expensive. Anything more is taking the p*ss.




Sent from my M2101K6G using Tapatalk
 

skybluelee

Well-Known Member
No one is doing that. People aren't loving the club price gouging at Xmas and have pointed out that £35 for a kid to watch second tier football is a p*sstake.
Speaking as a non-STH I can just about begrudgingly get on board with paying £45 for 2nd tier football for me but £35 for kids is obscene and so far out of kilter with the rest of the league it surely needs to be looked at.
 

pusbccfc

Well-Known Member
These are why we need a proper voice with the club and the forum is the main way at the moment
The argument for a maximum price for children’s tickets is really important

Whenever it's been brought up, the question gets brushed under the carpet. The last Doug Q and A, he answered some tough questions but none about ticket prices.
 

chiefdave

Well-Known Member
The underlying issue is not what is happening this season.

Ticket prices are historically high. Compare prices in the 80s /90s to today and we are paying more with inflation factored in.

For example 1980 League Cup Semi-final. Arguably a A+ match cost £4 in the west end. £23 quid today.

£5.50 seat. £31.35.
Think we're kind of missing the actual issue. There's a bigger question around the price of football ticket being supressed below market value and that's going to become the bigger issue.

We have a mindset that football is a working class sport and therefore ticket prices should be set at a certain level. However increasingly those in charge are not of that mindset. We've seen in the last couple of decades and increased focus on hospitality and that focus now seems to include getting the most you can out of casual fans.

We've seeing top clubs putting in conditions to make life difficult for season ticket holders so they can reclaim the seats to sell to tourists or casual fans who will happily pay a premium.

The CEO of Live Nation was talking about this recently and point out that courtside seats for the NBA go into the thousands and this should be the model other clubs & sports should be looking to emulate.

World Series tickets, which is currently taking place, are going for over $10K.

Think if we don't have this discussion with those in charge we're just going to see things get worse and worse but I'm not sure the conversation from the fans side can just be 'twenty is plenty' or similar as that runs the risk of just being ignored.
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
The underlying issue is not what is happening this season.

Ticket prices are historically high. Compare prices in the 80s /90s to today and we are paying more with inflation factored in.

For example 1980 League Cup Semi-final. Arguably a A+ match cost £4 in the west end. £23 quid today.

£5.50 seat. £31.35.
So we go all out to make a moral standpoint, no one else does, and we end up with a crap team
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
The categorising of fixtures is more daft than the pricing.

Thats been going on for decades.

When I first started going you could only get a ticket to see us against Man Utd if you had a stub from our game against Wimbledon
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
No one is doing that. People aren't loving the club price gouging at Xmas and have pointed out that £35 for a kid to watch second tier football is a p*sstake.

It is a p*sstake I agree. But equally so it isn't the end of the world. That in itself isn't pricing people out of going. There are plenty of games throughout the season that people kids can go to and it not be £35.

Having a season ticket has to make financial sense, otherwise people wouldn't bother
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
The point is, West Brom should not be Cat A+.

If pricing was the same for every game, this is a fixture that the club anticipate having higher demand for than average.

If you're going to have a category system, it makes sense for this to be a higher price than average
 

mmttww

Well-Known Member
There are plenty of games throughout the season that people kids can go to and it not be £35.

Xmas football is a big thing for a lot of people. Price gouging families at a time of year when they'll be under financial pressures already is sh*t. End of.
 
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bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
Scrap the 18-21 reduction, and use the money generated from that to lower U-18 prices
 

Londonccfcfan

Well-Known Member
This is a big issue..doesn't directly effect me. Although does impact me if I want to buy a ticket for friend to join me.

This should be brought up at the fan forums with Doug by various fan representatives
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
This is a big issue..doesn't directly effect me. Although does impact me if I want to buy a ticket for friend to join me.

This should be brought up at the fan forums with Doug by various fan representatives

Just take your mate to one of the cheaper games
 

Senior Vick from Alicante

Well-Known Member
Has the club indicated the reason for the high away pricing for fans? WBA are looking to boycott as a response but is the pricing based on an average that others are charging and have home tickets been averaged in the same way? We presumably now have a mortgage to pay on the ground which is an understandable reason for the prices, success comes at a cost unfortunately.
 

bigfatronssba

Well-Known Member
Has the club indicated the reason for the high away pricing for fans? WBA are looking to boycott as a response but is the pricing based on an average that others are charging and have home tickets been averaged in the same way? We presumably now have a mortgage to pay on the ground which is an understandable reason for the prices, success comes at a cost unfortunately.

Its NOT away fans. Its all fans

We have to get out of this mindset of "Doug is fleecing away fans"
 

Senior Vick from Alicante

Well-Known Member
Its NOT away fans. Its all fans

We have to get out of this mindset of "Doug is fleecing away fans"
I know, my point was more to the fact that is it comparable or are we one of the most expensive tickets for away or casual supporters and the reason for it. Until we know that and the reason were all speculating, the only thing I can find is that the average in the championship is £36.79 for an on the day purchase all though due to demand these are going up. Last year we had the joint highest ticket for away with QPR but Sheff Utd were charging up to £52 for home fans.
 

Tommo1993

Well-Known Member
If pricing was the same for every game, this is a fixture that the club anticipate having higher demand for than average.

If you're going to have a category system, it makes sense for this to be a higher price than average

It doesn’t really make any decent sense to categorise any league game above another. You’re essentially placing particular teams on higher pedestals.
 

Sky_Blue_Dreamer

Well-Known Member
It doesn’t really make any decent sense to categorise any league game above another. You’re essentially placing particular teams on higher pedestals.
It's demand based.

There's more likely to be a higher demand for a game on boxing day, so you can set a higher price. Some teams, such as local derbies, are likely to attract more demand than ones from further afield. So again higher prices.

It's not about putting teams on a pedestal and claiming they're better, it's all about the likelihood of whether you can sell the tickets at a higher price.
 

alexccfc99

Well-Known Member
Has the club indicated the reason for the high away pricing for fans? WBA are looking to boycott as a response but is the pricing based on an average that others are charging and have home tickets been averaged in the same way? We presumably now have a mortgage to pay on the ground which is an understandable reason for the prices, success comes at a cost unfortunately.
It will sell out

They were on about boycotting a few years ago when we played them just before Xmas and they hired Corberan, won a few games, shot up the table and sold the allocation out
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
Not sure that bothers the money men. But maybe they’d be better to focus on how to get bums on seats in the areas of the ground currently empty.

We nearly sell out every week. What are you on about?
 

Grendel

Well-Known Member
The underlying issue is not what is happening this season.

Ticket prices are historically high. Compare prices in the 80s /90s to today and we are paying more with inflation factored in.

For example 1980 League Cup Semi-final. Arguably a A+ match cost £4 in the west end. £23 quid today.

£5.50 seat. £31.35.

My season ticket cost the same in 2007 as it does today?
 

Tommo1993

Well-Known Member
It's demand based.

There's more likely to be a higher demand for a game on boxing day, so you can set a higher price. Some teams, such as local derbies, are likely to attract more demand than ones from further afield. So again higher prices.

It's not about putting teams on a pedestal and claiming they're better, it's all about the likelihood of whether you can sell the tickets at a higher price.

Like I said, absolutely no decent sense.
 

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