A ticket bundle combines several pieces of access or value into one offer. Use it when the buyer should understand the purchase as a package, not as separate unrelated tickets.
Bundles can support multi-day events, table packages, VIP offers, family deals or combined access to multiple moments.
Use a bundle when the offer belongs together
A bundle can be useful for:
- Weekend or multi-day access.
- Dinner plus event access.
- Table or booth packages.
- VIP entry plus add-ons.
- Sponsor or partner allocations.
If the buyer simply needs multiple identical tickets, a group ticket may be simpler. Read Sell tickets in groups for that setup.
Make the package clear
Bundle names and descriptions should explain exactly what is included. Avoid vague names like "Premium package" unless the description lists the benefits.
Check whether every included ticket or access right has the correct capacity, price logic and scanning expectation.
Watch personalisation requirements
Some bundles need attendee details for every person. Others only need buyer details. Decide this before sales start, because changing personalisation later can create extra communication.
If each attendee must be known, read Require personalisation per ticket.
Review reporting and fulfilment
Before publishing, confirm how your team will fulfil and scan the bundle. The finance and operations view should still make sense after buyers purchase the package.