The short answer
Yes, TickPick is a legitimate and well-regarded ticket marketplace. Its standout feature is a no buyer fee policy — the price listed is the price you pay. TickPick has been operating since 2011 and is particularly popular among sports fans who want transparent, all-in pricing.
The no-fee model explained
Most ticket platforms charge buyers a service fee at checkout — typically 10–25% on top of the listed price. TickPick eliminates this entirely. Sellers on TickPick price their tickets higher to compensate, but in practice the all-in totals are usually lower than competing platforms with fees added.
What TickPick’s guarantee covers
TickPick backs every purchase with a buyer guarantee. If tickets are invalid, fail to arrive, or are materially different from what was listed, TickPick will replace them or issue a refund. The guarantee is standard for the industry.
Is the inventory competitive?
TickPick’s inventory is smaller than StubHub’s but covers all major sports leagues, concerts, and theater. For NBA and NFL games — where most listings appear across multiple platforms — TickPick usually has strong selection.
What to watch out for
TickPick is not always the cheapest option. Sellers set their own prices, and occasionally a fee-charging platform will list tickets below TickPick’s listed price even after fees. Always compare the final checkout total across platforms before buying.
Bottom line
TickPick is safe, legitimate, and often the cheapest option thanks to its no-fee model. It is a strong starting point for any sports ticket search.

















