Updated March 2026

Eventbrite vs Skiddle --
Fees Compared 2026

How do Eventbrite (6.95% + 59p) and Skiddle (10% + 25p) compare? See the exact fees side by side at every price point.

Fee Comparison: Eventbrite vs Skiddle

Here is what fans actually pay after booking fees on each platform, compared at four common UK ticket price points. The final row shows tickts, which charges zero booking fees on every ticket.

Ticket Price Eventbrite Fee Fan Pays Skiddle Fee Fan Pays
£10 £1.29 £11.29 £1.25 £11.25
£25 £2.33 £27.33 £2.75 £27.75
£50 £4.07 £54.07 £5.25 £55.25
£100 £7.54 £107.54 £10.25 £110.25
Any price £0 Face value £0 Face value

What the Numbers Mean

On a £25 ticket, Eventbrite adds £2.33 in fees while Skiddle adds £2.75. At £100, the gap widens: Eventbrite charges £7.54 versus £10.25 from Skiddle.

For an event selling 1,000 tickets at £25 each, the combined fees across both platforms average around £2,540.00. That money comes either from your fans' pockets or your own revenue. With tickts, that figure is £0.

Feature Comparison

Fees are not the only consideration. Here is how Eventbrite and Skiddle compare on key features that matter to UK event organisers.

Feature Eventbrite Skiddle
Free eventsYesYes
Custom brandingYesNo
Seating plansNoNo
Box office / door salesYesYes
Mobile app for scanningYesYes
WaitlistsYesYes
Discount codesYesYes
Multi-event managementYesYes
Payout speed5-7 business days14 days after event
Payment processorEventbrite PaymentsSkiddle

Pros and Cons

Eventbrite

Pros

  • Well-known brand with large audience reach
  • Strong marketing and discovery tools
  • Comprehensive event management dashboard
  • Good API for integrations

Cons

  • 6.95% + 59p per ticket adds up fast
  • No seating plan support
  • Payouts can take 5-7 business days
  • Fees are per ticket, not per order

Skiddle

Pros

  • Strong UK nightlife and festival audience
  • Good discovery platform for promoters
  • Established reputation in club events
  • Promotion network included

Cons

  • 10% + 25p is one of the highest fee rates
  • Payouts held until 14 days after event
  • Limited customisation options
  • No seating plan support

The Verdict

Eventbrite (6.95% + 59p) is the cheaper option at £2.33 on a £25 ticket versus £2.75 with Skiddle (10% + 25p). But both platforms still add fees that inflate the price your fans pay.

If you want to eliminate booking fees entirely, tickts charges £0 -- no percentage, no fixed fee, nothing. The price you set is the price your fans pay, with payments going directly to your Stripe account.

Eventbrite vs Skiddle FAQ

On a £25 ticket, Eventbrite charges £2.33 while Skiddle charges £2.75. However, both still charge fees. tickts is the only UK platform that charges genuinely zero booking fees.

Eventbrite charges 6.95% + 59p per ticket in 2026. On a £25 ticket that works out to £2.33 in booking fees.

Skiddle charges 10% + 25p per ticket in 2026. On a £25 ticket that works out to £2.75 in booking fees.

Yes. tickts charges zero booking fees, zero commission, and zero subscriptions. Payments go directly to your Stripe account. It's free for organisers and free for fans.

Switching between ticketing platforms is straightforward for future events -- you simply create new events on the new platform. Past ticket data stays with the original platform. If you're switching, consider going directly to a zero-fee option like tickts rather than trading one set of fees for another.

More Comparisons

Looking for a specific matchup? Browse fee breakdowns for individual platforms or see how other pairs stack up. You can also explore UK Venue Guide to find the right venues for your events.

Why Pay Fees at All?

Both Eventbrite and Skiddle charge your fans extra. tickts charges nothing -- zero booking fees, zero commission, direct Stripe payments.

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