A fee of "just a few percent per ticket" sounds like a rounding error. It isn't. It's a tax that scales with your success, and it's largest on exactly the events you worked hardest to fill.
Per-attendee pricing is the default on most event platforms because it's brilliant, for the platform. It starts invisible, grows quietly, and peaks at the worst possible moment: when you've sold out. Let's run the numbers the pricing pages tend to skip.
The math that compounds against you
Say you charge ₹2,000 a ticket and your platform takes a modest-sounding 5% plus a flat per-registration fee. Nothing about your software costs changes as you grow. The bill does.
What the platform takes as you fill the room
Illustrative: ₹2,000 ticket, ~6% all-in. Same software, same job, every row.
Nothing about your costs changed between the first bar and the last. The software did the same job. But the bill went up 25 times, because it was never priced to your usage. It was priced to your revenue. You're not paying for a tool. You're paying a commission on your own audience.
The costs that don't show up on the invoice
The headline percentage is only part of it. Per-attendee models quietly shape your decisions in ways that cost more than the fee itself.
- You hesitate to grow. Every extra registration carries a marginal cost, so "let's open more seats" stops being a clean yes.
- You pass it to attendees. Booking fees at checkout are among the most common abandonment triggers in online registration. The platform's margin becomes your conversion problem.
- You can't forecast. Your single biggest software line item is unknown until the event is over. Try budgeting around that.
- Free events still cost you. Many platforms charge per registration even when no money changes hands, so your community meetup subsidizes their growth.
What flat pricing changes
A flat monthly or per-event price flips the relationship. The cost is known before you sell a single ticket, it doesn't move when you have a great year, and growth becomes pure upside instead of a bigger bill. The platform makes its money by being worth keeping, not by taking a slice of every guest.
It also changes the incentives on the other side of the table. A vendor paid a flat fee wants you to renew, so they're motivated to make the product genuinely good. A vendor paid per head is motivated to maximize the number of heads flowing through their system, which is not always the same as serving your event well.
The one number to compare
When you evaluate platforms, ignore the percentage and compute one figure: total platform cost at your expected sell-out, divided by attendees. That's your true per-head cost. Run it for a flat-rate option and a percentage option at the same attendance. For any event of real size, the flat rate usually wins by a margin that's hard to believe until you see it in your own spreadsheet.
Flat, predictable pricing is one half of the same idea behind true white-label: a platform that earns its keep by serving you, not by monetizing the people who attend. Related reading: who actually owns your attendee data.
