

It’s a nice way of not overbooking your event with too many guests. Quantity: This allows you to set a cap on how many tickets can be sold.Is it $1? $100? $1,000,000? You get to decide, though you may want to check that Eventbrite can handle a million-dollar payment first. Notice that selecting the “Free” option makes the payment options below disappear. “Free” makes the event free and allows people to register for the event ( almost like an RSVP) instead of actually buying a ticket. “Donation Based” means people can decide how much they want to pay, if anything. Type: A “Set Price” is one where you determine the cost.That makes sense, right? We can’t sell tickets for an event that’s already happened! The end date also may not exceed the actual date of the event. These need to both be before the event itself begins, and must both be set sometime in the future. Date to Start/End Ticket Sales: When ticket sales will begin and end.For example, a description for your General Admission ticket might be something like, “Gets you in the door.” Description: A description for the ticket you’re creating.

“General Admission” or “Seniors.” This will be shown in the ticket options on the event page.

