General Admission (GA) events can include various ticket types — Donation, Pay-as-you-wish, Free, and Paid. Below is a focused guide on ticket settings for these four options, including how to configure pricing, set purchase limits, and schedule when sales start or end.
While a donation ticket does not generate a ticket, an event must have at least one free, pay-as-you-wish, or paid ticket active to be shown as “on sale.” If only a donation ticket is available, the event will be shown as “sold out.” For donation-only events, consider adding a free ticket type or using a hidden ticket with password protection.
The listed amount for a Pay-as-you-wish ticket represents a minimum required payment, not just a suggested amount. Customers must pay at least this amount, but can choose to pay more if they wish. At checkout, customers will see a field where they can enter their chosen amount (which must be equal to or greater than the minimum).
While Donation tickets do not issue a ticket or require many settings, the other three ticket types share the same configuration options:
Ticket Name
Quantity (Max Available)
Price
Ticket Description
Who Can Purchase
Minimum/Maximum Tickets per Order
Service Fee Mode
Sales Start
Sales End
Password Protect
Disable at a Specific Time Slot
Disable for the Entire Event
This feature is especially helpful if you want to temporarily halt sales without removing or editing each ticket type.
After adjusting ticket settings:
By focusing on these ticket settings, especially the differences among Donation, Pay-as-you-wish, Free, and Paid options, you can tailor your General Admission events to suit a variety of pricing structures and attendee needs.
General Admission (GA) events can include various ticket types — Donation, Pay-as-you-wish, Free, and Paid. Below is a focused guide on ticket settings for these four options, including how to configure pricing, set purchase limits, and schedule when sales start or end.
While a donation ticket does not generate a ticket, an event must have at least one free, pay-as-you-wish, or paid ticket active to be shown as “on sale.” If only a donation ticket is available, the event will be shown as “sold out.” For donation-only events, consider adding a free ticket type or using a hidden ticket with password protection.
The listed amount for a Pay-as-you-wish ticket represents a minimum required payment, not just a suggested amount. Customers must pay at least this amount, but can choose to pay more if they wish. At checkout, customers will see a field where they can enter their chosen amount (which must be equal to or greater than the minimum).
While Donation tickets do not issue a ticket or require many settings, the other three ticket types share the same configuration options:
Ticket Name
Quantity (Max Available)
Price
Ticket Description
Who Can Purchase
Minimum/Maximum Tickets per Order
Service Fee Mode
Sales Start
Sales End
Password Protect
Disable at a Specific Time Slot
Disable for the Entire Event
This feature is especially helpful if you want to temporarily halt sales without removing or editing each ticket type.
After adjusting ticket settings:
By focusing on these ticket settings, especially the differences among Donation, Pay-as-you-wish, Free, and Paid options, you can tailor your General Admission events to suit a variety of pricing structures and attendee needs.