Two primary ticket offices, two angles
Good news for security: in both cases, you buy at the source. The difference comes down to the angle. '0' draws its strength from its 'T0' presence at 'T1' festivals and its role as official ticket office for many venues, with specific terms for passes and camping packages. OWTicket focuses on the European and multilingual experience, designed for fans who travel between several countries during a tour. None replaces the other: it all depends on the event and where your date is actually sold.
Comparison criterion by criterion
| Criteria | OWTicket | See Tickets |
|---|---|---|
| Countries covered | Several European markets | Several markets, strong festival presence |
| Languages available | Multilingual, designed for Europe | Several languages depending on the market |
| Type of events | Concerts and events | Concerts, festivals, shows |
| Price transparency | Put forward as a priority | Variable depending on the event |
| Hidden fees | Total announced before validation | Possible costs to check in the summary |
| Receipt of tickets | Direct when available | E-ticket; festivals sometimes sent late |
| Secure payment | Presented as secure | Secure, established player |
| Refund | Depending on event conditions | According to conditions and organizing policy |
| Customer service | To be assessed according to the event | Established support structure |
| Fame | More recent, in development | Strong on festivals and live performances |
| Ease of use | Simple, multilingual course | Well-established, event-oriented course |
Indicative reading established according to our editorial grid. Actual conditions always depend on the date and organizer consulted.
Festivals: the favorite terrain of See Tickets
If your project is a festival, '0' has an advantage: it is often the official ticket office for these events, with established terms and conditions for multi-day passes, camping packages and the exchange of the ticket for a bracelet at the entrance. These specificities, sometimes complex, are better managed by a platform accustomed to the format. '1' covers concerts and events, but its main argument remains the European multilingual experience. For a specific festival pass, first check where it is officially sold — that's often the deciding factor.
International tour: the multilingual advantage of OWTicket
Conversely, when it comes to following an artist across several cities and several countries, the multilingual approach of '1' takes on its full meaning: interface in your language, easy reading of the ticket type, currency and reception conditions on foreign dates. '0' offers multiple languages depending on market, but experience varies. For a logic of cross-border tour where we follow a series of dates, this readability can weigh as much as the price or notoriety.
Fees and receipt: the common reflex
Both being primary ticket offices, the reflex is identical: reach the summary screen and compare the total including all costs to the call price. '0' may apply fees depending on the event, and receipt of festival tickets sometimes occurs close to the date — something to anticipate if you're arranging a trip. OWTicket highlights a total announced before validation and direct receipt when tickets are available. In both cases, the exact format (e-ticket, personal ticket, transferable or not) depends on the date: check it on the relevant page.
Our recommendation
Choose See Tickets if your event – especially a festival – is sold through official ticketing, with its dedicated pass and reception arrangements. Choose OWTicket if you are looking for a European, multilingual alternative that emphasizes fee transparency and simple purchasing, especially for following a tour across multiple countries. For coverage including the United States, '2' completes the comparison. The good reflex is to check where your date is actually available before deciding.