About · the data desk
The Stage Tracker,
est 2024
The Stage Trackeris a concert data desk. We snapshot Ticketmaster prices on every major North American and European tour every hour, then publish what the numbers actually say about who's overpriced, who just got cheaper, and what week of the year a given seat is statistically most likely to drop.
We started this because most ticket-buying advice is decorative — vibes, scarcity language, copy-pasted "tips" that don't hold up against the data. Our edge is measurement: hourly price snapshots, dedupe-aware artist tracking, and 24h rolling deltas that let you compare a Tuesday on-sale against the same tour's Saturday reprice. The dashboard on the homepage is the actual tool we use ourselves.
How we make money
When you click a ticket link on this site and buy a ticket from Ticketmaster, we earn a small commission. It doesn't change your price one cent. If our data says a link is a bad deal — overpriced relative to its 7-day floor, for example — we say so, even when that link still pays us. The credibility of the data desk is the only asset worth defending.
What the data covers
- Hourly price floors on every confirmed Ticketmaster on-sale we can crawl.
- 24h, 7d, and 30d rolling deltas per artist + per venue.
- Tour-level coverage: dates, venue scale, presale calendars, on-sale URLs.
- Daily digest of headlines that move ticket demand (cancellations, venue swaps, etc).
What we won't do
- Push you toward a resale site with inflated prices.
- Run scarcity-bait email blasts about "last chance" tickets that aren't.
- Sell, rent, or share your email. The Daily Data Vault is one-way.
- Recommend ticket insurance products we wouldn't buy ourselves.
Get in touch
Questions, corrections, a tour we should cover, or a data partnership — email hello@thestagetracker.com. We read every message.