Live Nation reached a settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice in a long-running antitrust lawsuit, avoiding a breakup with Ticketmaster but agreeing to operational changes, including amphitheater divestments and opening ticketing to competitors. The deal, announced during trial on March 9, 2026, drew criticism from several state attorneys general who plan to continue separate litigation.
One week after the antitrust trial opened in New York federal court, Live Nation and the DOJ announced a settlement on March 9, 2026, resolving accusations from the May 2024 lawsuit—brought by the DOJ and 38 states plus D.C.—of monopolistic practices through exclusive contracts and tied services. The agreement, first reported by Politico and detailed by NBC News, was signed March 5 but disclosed during trial before Judge Arun Subramanian, who criticized the timing as 'absolute disrespect' and scheduled a March 10 hearing.
Key terms include divesting exclusive booking rights at more than 13 amphitheaters, limiting Ticketmaster venue exclusivity to four years with non-exclusive options, establishing a standalone ticketing system open to rivals like SeatGeek and Eventbrite, allowing venues to sell tickets via third parties, capping fees at 15% for its amphitheaters, and creating a $280 million fund for settling states (with no DOJ penalty). Live Nation is also barred from retaliating against venues choosing other providers.
Ten states accepted the deal, but 26 attorneys general led by New York's Letitia James rejected it and vowed to pursue their lawsuit, with James stating in a press release: "The settlement fails to address the monopoly at the center of this case and would benefit Live Nation at the expense of consumers." Sen. Amy Klobuchar called it a 'backroom deal.' Critics including the National Independent Venue Association and SeatGeek argued it won't restore competition, citing harms like the 2022 Taylor Swift ticketing crash. Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino welcomed the changes as empowering venues and artists.