Reviews

Tennis ticket source reviews

Where you buy your tennis tickets matters as much as which tickets you buy. These reviews look at the main places fans turn to — official tournament channels, the ticket-vip platform and the wider resale market — and judge each on the things that protect you: transparency, ticket validity, delivery and support. Every review ends with a clear verdict and a rating, and where caution is warranted, we say so plainly. Our aim is reassurance through honesty, not hype.

Updated 2026-06-11 · 2 min read

How we review ticket sources

We assess each source the way a careful buyer would: how clearly prices and fees are shown, whether tickets are guaranteed valid, how and when you receive them, and what happens if something goes wrong. We're transparent about our position too — some pages on this site link to ticket-vip as a partner platform, and we review it on the same terms as everyone else. A rating only means something if the method behind it is consistent, so we apply the same lens to every source below.

Our reviews

Three honest looks at where tennis tickets come from.

Frequently asked questions

How do you decide your ratings?
We weigh transparency of prices and fees, whether tickets are guaranteed valid, how and when they're delivered, and the quality of support if something goes wrong. Safety factors count for the most, so a source can be convenient yet still score low if it can't guarantee a valid ticket.
Do you favour ticket-vip because it's a partner?
We disclose that some pages link to ticket-vip as a partner, and we review it on exactly the same criteria as every other source. Our verdicts note both strengths and the things to check, so you can judge for yourself.
Which type of source is safest overall?
Official tournament channels and their named partners are the safest, which is why they earn our highest rating. Resale marketplaces sit at the other end and warrant real caution, especially for non-transferable tickets.