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ti.to is an event registration and ticketing management SaaS platform from Ireland, focused on lightweight, easy-to-integrate ticketing solutions for tech conferences and B2B events. Unlike Eventbrite, which targets the broader consumer market, ti.to is especially popular among developer communities and tech companies. Its clean user interface and strong API support have made it the preferred choice for many international technology conferences.
ti.to was founded in 2012 and is headquartered in Dublin, Ireland. It first built its reputation in the Ruby and JavaScript developer communities. Its core service is helping event organizers manage online ticket sales, registration flows, check-in, and analytics. What sets it apart from other ticketing platforms is its “developer-friendly” approach: it offers a well-developed REST API, Webhooks, and third-party integrations such as Slack, Mailchimp, and Stripe. In terms of market position, it is a “small but polished” leader in its niche. Its customers include DjangoCon, RailsConf, GitHub’s Satellite events, and various open-source foundations. Its main customer base consists of tech conferences, developer summits, hackathons, and B2B industry salons, while it has relatively little presence in music festivals or mass entertainment events.
This platform is best suited to tech conference organizers and small to mid-sized B2B event teams. If you are an individual developer hosting a 50–200 person meetup, or a startup organizing a product launch, ti.to’s streamlined workflow and API capabilities will feel very convenient. It can also handle large enterprise events, such as internal conferences with thousands of attendees, but will likely need to be paired with your own CRM or marketing system. Less suitable use cases include mass-market consumer events that require complex tiered ticket pricing, such as concerts; global tours that need native multi-language and multi-currency support; or events in mainland China with strict localized invoicing requirements.
ti.to’s pricing is in the mid-to-high range among similar SaaS products, but specific monthly fees are not publicly listed on its website and require contacting sales. The known pricing model is a platform fee of around 2% + $0.50 per paid ticket sold, plus additional payment gateway fees from providers such as Stripe. For free events, ti.to charges a fixed fee of $0.50 per ticket. There is no clearly stated refund guarantee policy; most refunds are handled at the organizer’s discretion, and the platform generally does not intervene proactively. In terms of hidden costs, advanced features such as custom domains or white-label pages may require extra payment. Overall value for money depends on event size and ticket volume: for small events, the fees can feel relatively high as a percentage, while larger events may find the pricing more cost-effective.
Accessing ti.to from mainland China is generally possible, though page loading can sometimes be slow because its servers are overseas and it does not appear to deploy a CDN in China. In terms of payment methods, ti.to natively integrates with Stripe and PayPal, both of which have limitations in mainland China. Stripe cannot directly support RMB collection, while PayPal support is limited and fees are relatively high. This means Chinese organizers selling tickets to domestic users would need to configure local payment gateways such as WeChat Pay or Alipay separately, but ti.to does not support these directly; integration would have to be built through its API. Is a VPN required? The admin dashboard can generally be used without one, but ticketing page load speed may affect the purchase experience for domestic users. Local alternatives in China include 活动行 and 百格活动, which are more practical for payments, invoicing, and network speed, but are weaker than ti.to in API openness and internationalization.
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ti.to is best suited to the following scenarios: you are a tech conference organizer with development resources and want to deeply integrate ticketing with your own tools such as a CRM or email system via API; your event mainly targets overseas attendees and payments are primarily made by credit card or PayPal; and you have high requirements for clean design and brand consistency. It is not a good fit if your event mainly targets mainland Chinese users and requires WeChat Pay, Alipay, and formal invoices; if your budget is limited and the event is very small, making fees disproportionately high; or if you do not have technical staff to support API integration. It is recommended to first use the free option—ti.to offers capacity for free events—to test the workflow and network speed before deciding whether to upgrade to a paid plan. If a high proportion of your users are in mainland China, it is best to prepare a domestic ticketing platform as a backup.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on ti.to official site.
ti.to is an Ireland Events provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach ti.to directly.