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Tixur is an online ticketing platform for event organizers, though its website currently shows that it is still in the Coming Soon stage. Its positioning is very clear: to replace the common ticketing-platform model of percentage commissions plus service fees, processing fees, and booking fees with a simpler and more transparent pricing structure.
Based on the information disclosed so far, Tixur appears to offer a lightweight workflow: organizers create an event, enter the event details, date, and venue, then set ticket types and prices. The system adds a fixed £0.40 fee on top of the ticket price. The company emphasizes that events can go live “in minutes,” making it suitable for organizers who do not want to deal with a complex ticketing backend.
At present, the available text does not mention common ticketing SaaS features such as seating charts, promo codes, guest list management, QR-code check-in, refunds, analytics, email notifications, team collaboration, or permission controls. As a result, it is not yet possible to judge whether Tixur can support full-scale event operations.
Tixur’s biggest selling point is its fixed £0.40 fee per ticket, with no percentage-based commission. For events with £50 or higher ticket prices, this model could significantly reduce costs compared with percentage-based platforms. The page gives an example where a typical platform charges £3.65 on a £50 ticket, while Tixur charges £0.40.
For payments, the platform states that funds go directly into the organizer’s Stripe account. This means money is not held by the platform as a long-term intermediary, giving organizers more direct control over their revenue. However, it also means users need to have, or be able to open, a Stripe account.
The advantages are an extremely clear fee structure, no setup fees, no contracts, and no hidden charges, making it especially friendly to higher-ticket events. The transparent checkout experience may also help reduce attendee frustration over additional fees.
The downsides are also clear: the product has not yet launched, so its stability, support, and actual feature depth remain unknown. Only Stripe integration has been disclosed, with no visible details on local payment methods, APIs, compliance, security, permissions, or other concerns that enterprise buyers typically care about.
Tixur is better suited to small events, community gatherings, classes, conferences, or organizers of higher-priced events—especially teams that want to reduce platform commissions and already have the ability to accept payments via Stripe.
Users in China should evaluate it carefully: the page does not state whether the service is accessible from mainland China, nor does it mention Alipay, WeChat Pay, or RMB settlement. If the target attendees are in China, local alternatives such as 活动行, 秀动, or 有赞活动 may be more practical in terms of payments and operational support.
⚠ 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 tixur.com official site.
tixur.com is an United Kingdom SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, with monthly pricing from $0.51, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach tixur.com directly.