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Ticketmaster Won't Be Broken Up. Half the Country's AGs Aren't Happy About It.

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Published Mar 9, 2026
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Summary:

  • Live Nation settled its federal antitrust case Monday — and kept Ticketmaster as a subsidiary.
  • The deal includes $280 million to states, divestiture of 13 venues, and new competition rules.
  • Twenty-seven states rejected the deal and are continuing their own lawsuit anyway.

The case that was supposed to break up the world's biggest live entertainment company ended not with a bang, but a settlement — and a furious judge.

What the Deal Actually Does

Live Nation and the DOJ reached a surprise settlement Monday, just one week into a landmark antitrust trial in Manhattan federal court. The company agreed to pay $280 million to participating states, divest 13 amphitheaters, and — most significantly — open up its ticketing technology to competitors. Under the new terms, venues can now use rivals like SeatGeek and StubHub to sell primary tickets, and Ticketmaster is prohibited from retaliating against venues that choose a different ticketing provider. A 15% service fee cap will apply at amphitheaters.

What it doesn't do: break up Live Nation and Ticketmaster. That was the central demand from states who sued alongside the Biden-era DOJ in 2024.

Why Some States Aren't Buying It

Twenty-seven states, including New York and California, rejected the deal and plan to continue their lawsuits. New York AG Letitia James called it "a settlement that benefits Live Nation at the expense of consumers." The political backdrop matters: the DOJ's aggressive antitrust chief, Gail Slater, was pushed out last month. And last year, Live Nation added Richard Grenell — one of Trump's closest advisers — to its board of directors. Antitrust advocates flagged the hire immediately.

Judge Arun Subramanian, who wasn't told of the tentative deal until late Sunday, called it "entirely unacceptable" and "absolute disrespect for the court."

What It Means for Concert Prices

Probably not much — at least not right away. Variety noted that experts were skeptical a breakup would have lowered ticket prices anyway. The bigger driver of sky-high concert costs is the secondary market: bots that scoop up tickets and resell them at huge markups — a problem the settlement doesn't address.

The fight isn't over. It just moved to 27 different state courtrooms.

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