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The Fake Ticket Seller Scam

'Skip-the-line' and discount tickets sold outside the big attractions are often overpriced, used, or fake. Here's how to buy real tickets and skip the trap.

✓ What the scam is
✓ How to avoid it
✓ Where it happens

The fake ticket seller scam targets the long lines at the world's most popular attractions. Someone outside the gate offers "skip-the-line" passes or discounted tickets, and the deal looks great — until the ticket turns out to be overpriced, already used, or simply not valid, and you're turned away at the entrance. It's entirely avoidable with one rule: buy tickets only from the official source.

How the Fake Ticket Seller Scam Works

Near a major attraction with a notoriously long queue, a seller approaches with an attractive pitch: skip the wait, or get in cheaper than the official price. Sometimes they're working the line itself; sometimes it's a slick pop-up "ticket office" near the entrance, or a convincing website that mimics the official one. You pay, often in cash, and receive a ticket that's counterfeit, a duplicate of one already scanned, valid for the wrong date or time, or nothing at all once they've walked off. At the gate, staff reject it — and the seller is long gone.

Where You'll Encounter It

At big-name, timed-entry attractions and transport hubs:

  • Barcelona: outside the Sagrada Família and Park Güell.
  • Athens: around the Acropolis and at the ferry ports.
  • Rome and Paris: the Colosseum and Vatican, and major Paris museums and monuments.

The Red Flags

  • Someone working the queue or street offering "skip-the-line" or cheap tickets.
  • Pressure to buy quickly, usually with cash.
  • A "ticket office" that isn't the attraction's official box office.
  • A website that looks official but has an odd address or resells at a markup.

How to Avoid It

Buy timed-entry tickets only from each attraction's official website or its on-site box office, or through a clearly reputable, well-reviewed tour operator booked in advance. Check the web address carefully, since lookalike resale sites are common. Don't buy from anyone approaching you in line, and be wary of "official partner" claims you can't verify. Booking ahead from the official source also gets you the genuine skip-the-line entry that the scammers are pretending to sell. Buying on the spot from the official site means having data on your phone — a travel eSIM set up before you travel lets you book the real ticket yourself instead of trusting a stranger.

What to Do if You're Scammed

If a ticket is rejected at the gate, you'll usually have to buy a legitimate one to enter. Keep any receipt or screenshot, and if you paid by card, contact your bank promptly to dispute the charge — paying by card rather than cash gives you that protection. Report a fraudulent reseller website and, for a street seller, the local police or tourist authority. Our guide on what to do after a scam covers the next steps.

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Frequently Asked Questions

The people selling "skip-the-line" tickets in the queue or on the street outside major attractions are usually running a scam — the tickets are often overpriced, already used, valid for the wrong time, or fake. Buy only from the official source or a reputable operator.
Buy directly from each attraction's official website or its on-site box office, or through a clearly reputable, well-reviewed tour operator booked in advance. Check the web address carefully to avoid lookalike resale sites.
Start from the attraction's own homepage rather than a search ad, check the exact web address for misspellings or odd domains, and be suspicious of sites that charge well above the official price or claim to be an "official partner" without proof.
At big-name, timed-entry attractions with long queues — the Sagrada Família and Park Güell in Barcelona, the Acropolis in Athens, the Colosseum and Vatican in Rome, and major Paris museums and monuments.

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