Class Action Claims SeatGeek Overcharges for Resale Tickets to Certain Events, Parks in Florida
by Chloe Gocher
Weinstein v. SeatGeek, Inc.
Filed: October 23, 2025 ◆§ 9:25-cv-81314
A class action lawsuit claims SeatGeek illegally overcharges for resale tickets to certain concerts, parks and entertainment complexes in Florida.
Florida
A proposed class action lawsuit claims that SeatGeek has violated Florida law by selling resale tickets to multiday concerts, entertainment events and/or recreational activities in the state for more than $1 above the regular admission price.
Get class action lawsuit and settlement news sent to your inbox – sign up for ClassAction.org’s free weekly newsletter.
According to the 23-page lawsuit, the Florida Deceptive and Unfair Trade Practices Act forbids resale tickets to be sold at a price higher than one dollar more than the original ticket price, specifically for “multiday or multievent tickets to a park or entertainment complex or to a concert, entertainment event, permanent exhibition or recreational activity within such a park or complex, including an entertainment/resort complex.”
Per the complaint, SeatGeek offers tickets for many such events, a significant portion of which are resale and exponentially more expensive than the base price of the tickets as they are originally sold on the event or park websites.
For example, the filing compares the price of a three-day ticket for the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix 2026 on SeatGeek and on the event’s website. According to the case, the exact same ticket, while originally sold for $1,250 on the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix 2026 website, is sold by SeatGeek for $1,433, plus an additional $285.06 in nondescript fees. In this example, even before the addition of almost $300 in fees, the complaint says, SeatGeek has illegally exceeded Florida’s legal limit of one extra dollar on resale tickets by $182.
As another example, the lawsuit points to the price of SeatGeek’s resale tickets for the two-day III Points Music Festival, hosted in Miami. The filing says that the tickets were originally sold on the festival’s website for $309 but were resold by SeatGeek for $466, plus $101.27 in “Fees” and $17.44 in “Delivery Fees.”
The lawsuit claims that these examples are only two of many instances of illegal price gouging by SeatGeek.
The SeatGeek class action lawsuit seeks to represent anyone who purchased resale tickets from SeatGeek.com and paid a price that was more than one dollar higher than the price charged by the original seller for a multiday or multievent ticket to a park or entertainment complex, or to a concert, entertainment event, permanent exhibition or recreational activity in such park or complex, in Florida.
Check out ClassAction.org’s lawsuit list for the latest top class action lawsuits.
Video Game Addiction Lawsuits
If your child suffers from video game addiction — including Fortnite addiction or Roblox addiction — you may be able to take legal action. Gamers 18 to 22 may also qualify.
Learn more:Video Game Addiction Lawsuit
Depo-Provera Lawsuits
Anyone who received Depo-Provera or Depo-Provera SubQ injections and has been diagnosed with meningioma, a type of brain tumor, may be able to take legal action.
Read more: Depo-Provera Lawsuit
How Do I Join a Class Action Lawsuit?
Did you know there's usually nothing you need to do to join, sign up for, or add your name to new class action lawsuits when they're initially filed?
Read more here: How Do I Join a Class Action Lawsuit?
Stay Current
Sign Up For
Our Newsletter
New cases and investigations, settlement deadlines, and news straight to your inbox.
Before commenting, please review our comment policy.