Things You'll Need:
-
Step 1
Find friends, family members or coworkers who are season ticket holders for one of the playoff teams. They have the best chance at getting a ticket at the face value price.
-
Step 2
Check the tickets section of the team's website to see if tickets are still available. You just might get lucky.
-
Step 3
Try to purchase tickets from the team by phone or over the Internet during the scheduled sale period. These tickets will often sell out within 30 minutes. When the ticket agency or team provides multiple phone numbers to call - try to call the one that will be less busy. For example, if you want SF Giants playoff tickets don't call the San Francisco phone number; call the one in the small town of Redding a few hours north of the crowds.
-
Step 4
Visit an independent ticket marketplace like StubHub.com and click on World Series tickets to see a wide selection of tickets and prices for any game available for purchase. These tickets are posted for sale by season ticket holders who can't make the game. Sites like this often sell the best seats in the house but you will need a major league bank account to afford them. While playoff tickets are never cheap, these sites will also sell tickets in the more affordable sections as well.
-
Step 5
Consider the multitude of ticket broker websites you can find by searching on Google, but make sure to only deal with reputable sellers.
-
Step 6
Drive in desperation to the game and try to buy a ticket from a scalper in front of the stadium. Expect to pay top dollar and work to minimize your risk of fraud. If you wait till after the start of the game, ticket prices may drop but there may be no more tickets left to buy.












Comments
alltickets said
on 1/20/2009 Buy them early, if the game doesn't play you will get a 100% refund.
huanton said
on 11/3/2008 Great stuff! I'll try this!
Anonymous said
on 9/9/2006 I learned this the hard way....StubHubs 100% guarantee is only valid if the seller verifies the sale. Meaning, a seller can post tickets, a buyer can "buy" them, but the seller can sit on them until he/she accepts or verifies the email StubHub sends to the seller. Until this happens, StubHub guarantees nothing. I bought tickets to a Yanks/Seattle game well in advance, never heard from the seller and StubHub said too bad. Of course you credit card is not charged, but you still have no tickets. Be careful of this 100% guarantee...always read the fine print.