This weekend, Saturday September 28, sees the Richmond Tigers take on the Greater Western Sydney Giants in the AFL Grand Final. If you’re a rabid fan who has followed either of those teams for 26 weeks, you will definitely want to be there – but there’s only 34,000 tickets for club members and the teams have a combined membership of over 120,000.
So how can you get tickets?
If you’re not aware, Grand Final tickets are allocated to members who have pre-registered on the Ticketek website, prior to the preliminary finals. Gold members are guaranteed tickets, but any lower tier memberships must go into a ballot and cross their fingers, hoping they’ll get the opportunity to be there on September 28.
At this stage of the year, it’s really bloody hard to acquire tickets to the Grand Final, especially considering the Tigers alone have over 100,000 members. With that said, it’s not impossible. Here are a few options that don’t involve sitting heading down the pub or sitting in front of the couch at home. (Not that those are bad options!)
Competitions
Radio stations, such as Triple M, are the most likely to be running Grand Final ticket giveaways, particularly if you’re living in NSW or Victoria. I wouldn’t be surprised if national broadcasters had a few tickets to be giving away also, so I’d be listening out and phoning in as much as possible.
If you’ve never called a radio station before, my hot tip is to be the most excitable, loud version of yourself that you can be – radio stations love that sort of thing.
Other than that, here are a couple of others I found with a quick Google search that are still open:
- 7 News are running a ‘watch out for the codeword’ promotion that ends on Wednesday night. The codeword is displayed during 7 News broadcasts and then you can enter it on this website. The grand prize includes tickets to the sold-out The Front Bar Grand Final Edition show at the Hotel Esplanade, St Kilda. Everyone will go into the draw to win double passes to the 2019 Toyota AFL Grand Final.
- The Herald Sun are also doing a codeword-based competition. You can find the codeword in today’s newspaper so grab a copy on the way home! Here’s the online comp page.
Supporters Forums
While most club members would rather give up their first-born child than part with their ticket, very occasionally you’ll see a post in supporter’s forums where an unfortunate member is trying to offload a ticket – for a price, of course. It’s best to scope this avenue out through Facebook, but be wary of those trying to take advantage of your desperation! Don’t hand over any cash until you’ve got the tickets in your hands.
This is super important because all Grand Final tickets have to be picked up from Ticketek, in person. The AFL Grand Final only has physical, paper tickets. If someone is offering to email or scan their tickets and send them to you, decline!
Here are a couple of supporter’s pages for the GWS Giants and a ton for Richmond too, that might help you out.
Auction Sites
Gumtree only has a tiny handful of results right now, but that could change as we get closer to Saturday. I’d bookmark this page to ensure that you’re always checking.
You can also put up a listing yourself requesting tickets, but you’ll need to compete with plenty of other die-hard fans. In other words, haggling won’t be an option. Note that a Category 1 ticket to the Grand Final costs under $500 while tix on Gumtree are going for over $2000. Only spend what you can afford and justify.
It’s also worth checking sites like eBay and Craigslist for any potential leads. If you jag one, just make sure it’s legitimate! (Keep an eye out for deals that look too good to be true, because they definitely are.)
Outside the MCG
Of course, you could just turn up to the MCG on Saturday morning, holding a handwritten sign that says “NEED A TICKET” and hope that someone is willing to offload to you. This is a tried and true, last-ditch, ultra-desperation method that has proven to work in the past.
On the day, there are likely to be a few people floating around with tickets in hand, so you could take a stack of cash and hope for the best. It’s a risk – especially if you aren’t based in Melbourne – but there should be a few fair-weather spectators willing to part with their tickets.
One thing to be wary of is the rules and regulations set by Ticketek, the company which provides access to AFL Grand Final tickets. Buying a ticket from an unauthorised reseller above face value is in breach of Ticketek’s Terms and Conditions of Sale. If the ticket you have bought is deemed to be in breach of Ticketek Terms and Conditions of Sale, then there is a chance that ticket is cancelled without a refund. That means you could be forking out for a dud ticket, get to the gates at the MCG and be denied entry. A truly horrible fate.
However, Ticketek also state that “if you can’t attend an event for legitimate reasons and want to sell your ticket via an online auction site, Ticketek will not object to your sale as long as the selling/offer price is no more than the face value of the ticket.”
Good luck!
How to watch the AFL Grand Final online
One of the best ways to catch the 2019 AFL Grand Final online is through Foxtel’s Kayo Sports app. If you haven’t signed up before, you can cop a free 14-day trial – just remember to cancel after the big game and you won’t be charged anything.
Click here for your free Kayo Sports trial!
Additional reporting by Jackson Ryan.
Comments
12 responses to “How To Get Tickets To The 2019 AFL Grand Final”
I guess you could pay the person for face value of the ticket, then add a convenience fee for giving them the ticket.
I am interested in the legalities of this.
Couldn’t be any more exorbitant than the “handling” fees already charged by Ticketek and Ticketmaster for any event.
Grand Final is one of two events (the other being Melbourne Cup) where it is actually illegal by state law to purchase (and therefore also sell) tickets from anyone other than the authorised retailers.
I went a couple years ago and they actually checked ID of me and my mate to confirm the tickets were ours. It was a random choice but be aware that it can happen.
“The AFL Grand Final is a Declared Event under the provisions of the Major Sporting Events Act (Vic) 2009, a breach of which may be an indictable offence and allows your ticket to be cancelled.”
This is an important note – thank you for this!
As for the ID thing – that is really unusual, because I am going on my grandparents tickets myself and there is no way they can’t let me in. It might be more related to them checking your tickets because of the concession/not concession perhaps?
That’s not strictly true. If a ticket-holder has a legitimate reason for not being able to attend they can resell their ticket to someone else for the original price. The Act was designed to stop deliberate scalping and states you can’t sell 5 or less tickets for more than the combined face value of all tickets.
http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdoc/au/legis/vic/consol_act/msea2009262/s166a.html
The penalty is 30 penalty units, which is about $4700.
I doubt it’s strongly enforced and lots of people will ignore it – both sellers and buyers. I’ve never read of anyone being denied entry to an event due to a breach of this act.
Strangely, the same Act states:
So presumably, everyone at the Grand Final will remained seated all day?
I’m in the pocket with Restricted View seats already… I have no idea HOW that could be restricted but.
How do you get a seat in the pocket? The only thing that could restrict your view from there would be the players. 😐
Agree – I assume that the fence next to the seat that runs under the scoreboard may be what they’re referring to? I mean, I hope so!
How high are you?
There are barriers on level 4 that restrict the view.
PS- Who can sell me a ticket?
Where are AFL 360 broadcasting from live on Friday and what time
AFL360 have a live site… I believe it is at the MCG tonight, from their usual time at 730pm