The Eras Tour broke Ticketmaster. It broke the secondary market. It broke a lot of friendships. If Taylor announces additional dates — and the persistent rumors suggest she might — fans who learned from the first round will be at a serious advantage.

Here's what we'd do differently if we had a clean shot at it.

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Sign up for verified fan early

The Verified Fan presale system is the single biggest factor in whether you'll get a fair-priced ticket. Registration windows close before the dates are announced. If you wait until you know the dates, you're already too late.

Sign up for Ticketmaster Verified Fan and the artist's official mailing list before any tour announcement. This is the lowest-effort, highest-impact thing you can do.

Have multiple devices ready

On presale day, queue position is largely a lottery. Having two or three devices in the queue increases your odds proportionally without any of them being against the rules. A phone, a laptop, and a tablet on the same access code is standard.

What you cannot do is use bots or automated tools. Ticketmaster's defenses against these have gotten significantly better and they will void purchases.

Know the venue map before you're in the queue

When you finally make it to the seat selection screen, you'll have minutes — sometimes seconds — to decide. Study the venue map ahead of time. Know your top three section preferences and a backup. Do not start trying to compare sections after you're already in.

The fans who got the best Eras tickets were not the luckiest. They were the most prepared.

Be honest about your budget before you start

Dynamic pricing during the original Eras presale pushed standard floor seats from $250 to over $1,000 in real time. If you have a hard ceiling, decide it before you're in the queue. The pressure of "I waited eight hours for this" pushes a lot of people past budgets they would never have agreed to in a calmer moment.

The secondary market timeline

For the original tour, secondary prices peaked the week of each show and dropped meaningfully in the 48 hours before. For a fan with budget flexibility but no presale code, waiting until that window often produced better seats at lower prices than the primary onsale.

For any new dates, expect a similar pattern. The exception is the opening night in any city and any potential final-show dates, which will hold premium pricing all the way to door close.

Where to actually shop the secondary

Compare the same seats across at least two marketplaces. The all-in difference can be substantial.

The bottom line

Eras-level demand events reward preparation more than they reward willingness to pay. The most prepared fans got fair-priced tickets. The least prepared fans either missed the tour entirely or paid four-figure premiums.

If the announcement comes, you'll know within minutes. Have your accounts already set up, your devices already charged, and your seat preferences already mapped. The window between announcement and onsale is too short to do this work from scratch.