Relating to factory-produced housing; and prescribing an effective date.
Creates statewide rules for primary, resale, and secondary ticket sales to curb bots and speculative listings, require clear pricing and refunds, and boost consumer protection.
Creates statewide rules for primary, resale, and secondary ticket sales to curb bots and speculative listings, require clear pricing and refunds, and boost consumer protection.
Status & timeline
- Introduced: February 18–21, 2025 (Rep. Will Guzzardi).
- Passed legislature, signed by Governor: July 18, 2025.
- Enacted as Chapter 501 (2025 Laws). Effective date: September 26, 2025.
- Note: the introduced draft listed an effective date of Jan 1, 2026; the enacted law is effective Sept 26, 2025.
Purpose
- Establish statewide rules for the primary sale, resale, and secondary-market sale of event tickets to promote transparency, protect consumers, curb abusive resale practices (including speculative listings and automated “bot” purchases), and provide oversight and enforcement.
Key definitions (selected)
- Bot: software or devices that bypass platform limits/security to buy tickets.
- Issuer: entity issuing tickets for initial sale (artists, venues, promoters, agents).
- Primary seller: entity that sells at initial/primary sale.
- Reseller / Secondary ticket exchange: person or marketplace engaged in resale transactions.
- Speculative ticket: a ticket listed for sale that the seller does not own or does not have under contract to transfer at the time of listing.
Major provisions
1. Price and listing disclosures
- Issuers, primary sellers, resellers, and secondary exchanges must conspicuously disclose at listing and before collecting payment: total ticket price (fees, taxes), an itemized fee breakdown, seat/section information (when applicable), and shipping costs before final purchase.
Ban on speculative sales
Pre-sale restrictions
Bot and online-sale restrictions
Consumer refunds
Ban on deceptive representation
Artist/venue ability to set conditions
Registration, bonding, oversight, penalties
Who is affected
- Consumers: greater price transparency, seat disclosure, refund protections.
- Resellers and secondary marketplaces: new disclosure, registration, bonding and reporting obligations; prohibited practices (speculative listings, bot usage, deceptive marketing).
- Issuers, primary sellers, venues, artists: maintain ability to control transferability and pre-sale authorization; must comply with disclosure rules when directly selling.
- Secretary of State: administrative oversight, registration, reporting duties.
Notes & limitations
- Full enforcement details (penalty amounts, bond amounts, exact registration process) are referenced but not available in the truncated excerpt.
- The enacted law replaces prior Ticket Sale and Resale provisions cited in the bill caption (815 ILCS 414/Act rep.).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
Sign in to ask a question.