30 states want to break up the company that controls your concert tickets

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For years, fans have felt like they are being robbed just to see their favorite bands. Now, the government is finally trying to give that power back to the people.

WHAT HAPPENED

Thirty states joined together on Thursday to take a stand. They asked a court to force Live Nation to sell off Ticketmaster.

This move follows a jury's decision that the company is an illegal monopoly. The states say the company uses its size to bully smaller venues and artists.

By owning the venues and the ticket site, they leave fans with no other choice. This lack of competition keeps ticket prices high and adds extra fees.

WHAT THE EVIDENCE SHOWS

30 states signed the formal court request.

  • The goal is to undo a merger that started in 2010.
  • A jury already ruled the company used illegal tactics.
  • The filing asks for a permanent order to split the two firms.
  • Fans have fought "junk fees" and site crashes for over a decade.

THE BIGGER QUESTION

If one company owns the venue, the artist, and the tickets, do we even have a choice? We have to ask if the ease of one big site is worth losing the soul of live music.

Is it possible to have a fair market when the biggest player owns every part of the game? This case is about more than just tickets; it is about who gets to control our culture.

THE OTHER SIDE

Live Nation says they do not set the high prices and that artists and teams make those calls. They argue that breaking them up will not actually make tickets cheaper for fans. Based on the jury's recent ruling, the argument that they haven't hurt competition seems very weak.

WHAT HAPPENS NOW

If the court agrees to this split, the concert world will change. More companies might start selling tickets for the same shows.

This could lead to lower fees and better websites that do not crash when big stars go on tour. It may take a long time, but the process to fix the system has finally begun.

WHAT WE STILL DON'T KNOW

How many years will this legal fight take to finish?

  • Will ticket prices actually drop if the company is split?
  • Which parts of the company will be sold off first?

Transparency notes

Published: May 22, 2026. No major post-publication update has been logged.

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Sources

External source links were not provided in this article body. Our editors reference publicly available materials and update stories as new verified information arrives.

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