VouchFirst
VouchFirst
Check the sender domain before paying a seller. Keep in mind that a Ticketmaster logo, display name, or forwarded confirmation screenshot can easily be faked. Always confirm that the tickets appear directly inside your own Ticketmaster account.
Protect yourself: Before proceeding with a transaction, check if the seller is trustworthy. Learn how people use fake emails to trick buyers, find vouched sellers on our platform, or report a suspicious seller to protect others.
Data accuracy on this page is maintained by cross-referencing email addresses and metadata sent directly by our community of vouched ticket sellers. Every reported domain goes through systematic validation to shield buyers from phishing tactics and ticket transfer counterfeits.
email.ticketmaster.comDocumented domainUsed by Ticketmaster for account verification and transactional emails.
Used for 'You Got The Tickets' confirmation emails
Used for 'Payment confirmed' emails for ticket resale
Used by Ticketmaster for account verification and transactional emails in France.
Used for 'You Got the Tickets!' confirmation emails
Used for 'You're in' confirmation emails
@auth-ticketmaster.comReports: 1Used to imitate a Ticketmaster ticket-transfer page after sending a fake confirmation email.
ticketmasster.comReports: 1Used to imitate a Ticketmaster ticket-transfer page after sending a fake confirmation email.
ticketmastar.comReports: 1Used to imitate a Ticketmaster ticket-transfer page after sending a fake confirmation email.
No. While a real domain means the email notification itself is valid, it does not prevent a rogue seller from malicious actions. They can easily double-sell the same ticket to multiple buyers, or simply ghost you completely the minute you transfer the money.
To keep your transaction safe, always use payment methods with strong buyer protection like PayPal Goods & Services (G&S), and cross-reference their usernames in the VouchFirst scammer directory before sending anything.