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Getting tickets for the Fringe
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Getting tickets for the Fringe
Buying tickets from the Fringe
Buying Fringe tickets from the venues

If you haven't yet, please read our emergency update to this article. 

Fringe box officeThe amorphous Edinburgh Festival Fringe is by far the largest of Edinburgh's Festivals, spanning over 250 venues across the city centre. Its sheer size and variety makes for some unusually complex ticketing arrangements - and if you want to get your tickets without spending your days in queues, it's well worth getting your head around them before you come to Edinburgh.

If you remember nothing else about Fringe ticketing, remember this: there are two completely different ways of getting tickets for Fringe shows. You can either buy through the central box office run by the Fringe itself, or go directly through the venue (or chain of venues) hosting the performance.

That's nothing unusual so far - but unlike most of the festivals, where the central box office is linked to the venues', on the Fringe the two channels sell from separate ticket pools. That means it's common for one of the two systems to sell out while the other still has tickets available - and they won't always tell you that's what's happened. What's more, tickets centrally booked with the Fringe can only be collected from the Fringe box offices... while tickets booked with the venue can only be collected there.

It's complicated, but if you're planning on spending any time at the Fringe, it's really something you have to know. With the right choice, you'll breeze straight into the show; picking the wrong option will condemn you to a frustrating mile-long schlep to a box office on the wrong side of the city.

Choosing where to buy Fringe tickets

Here are the key advantages and disadvantages of the two options.

 

Fringe central box office

Venue box office

Recommended if...

You’re planning a whole day with several shows across different venues.

You’re just getting tickets for one or two shows at a single venue.

Advantages

You can book or collect tickets for shows at different venues from a single box office.

If you’re booking by phone or online, buying lots of tickets in a single transaction saves on booking fees.

The best online booking system on the Fringe.

Booking opens well before the Festival starts.

If you’ve booked in advance, you can collect your tickets from the same place that you see the show.

If you want to book in person, the major venues have a convenient network of box offices across the city.

You may get 2-for-1 or other venue special deals.

Disadvantages

Unless you are booking early enough to have your tickets posted, you will have to collect them from the Fringe box office or e-ticket tent – which may be some distance from the venue.

The Fringe’s allocation of tickets normally sells out first.

You can only buy tickets for this venue (and, sometimes, selected “allied” venues).

Smaller venues don’t have online booking systems.

Some small venues only open their box offices for a few hours a day.

Many box offices are not open for advance booking before the Festival starts.



Based on Festival 2008

Some details may be subject to change for 2009.  Check back with FringeGuru - we'll be updating our website with the latest information over the months to come.

Latest Ticket Alert

 

It feels like the dust's barely settled on the 2008 Festival, but the first tickets for next year are about to go on sale.  Seats for the 2009 Edinburgh Military Tattoo - the umatched soldierly spectacle which wows crowds of 8,500 nightly in front of Edinburgh Castle - will be on sale online from Monday 1 December.  And with recent Tattoo seasons booking out by mid-January, there's no time to waste securing your place.

Read more...