DICE

DICE built its reputation on clean ticketing, face-value resale through its wait list, and no booking fees layered on top of the headline price. The flip side is a catalogue that misses many smaller shows, a wait-list system that does not always trigger, and a no-screenshot ticket policy that frustrates people who want to plan with friends. If any of that has pushed you to look elsewhere, the ticketing space has plenty of options that handle the parts DICE skimps on. These seven DICE alternatives cover wider catalogues, true secondary resale, artist tracking, and city-specific event discovery.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planBooking feeStandout feature
TicketmasterMajor tours and stadium showsFree appVaries, often 10-25%Biggest catalogue worldwide
EventbriteIndependent events and meetupsFree appVaries by organiserSelf-serve ticketing for small promoters
BandsintownTracking artists you likeFree appNone on appConcert alerts based on your listening
SongkickConcert calendar by artistFree appNone on appAggregates tickets across multiple sellers
FeverLocal experiences and pop-upsFree appBuilt into priceCurated nightlife and food events
SkiddleUK clubs, gigs, festivalsFree appBooking fee variesStrong UK underground coverage
MixcloudDiscovering DJs to bookYes, with adsNot a ticket appFind the DJ first, then their tour

Why people leave DICE

The reviews and Reddit threads come back to a few specific friction points.

The catalogue gap is the loudest one. DICE has a strong relationship with independent venues in London, Berlin, and New York but thin coverage of arena and stadium tours, most major festivals, and smaller regional cities. If the tour you want is on Ticketmaster or AXS, DICE simply will not have it.

The wait-list system is a hit or miss. When a sold-out show has dropouts, DICE distributes returned tickets to wait-list users at face value. In theory this is great. In practice the wait list often fails to trigger for high-demand shows, leaving fans empty-handed while resale sites list tickets at 5x face.

The no-screenshot, no-PDF ticket policy is a deliberate anti-resale choice that frustrates anyone wanting to send a friend a backup or print a copy for offline access at a venue with bad reception.

Customer support is slow. Refund requests sit in the queue for days, and the only support channel is in-app messaging.

The alternatives

1. Ticketmaster — best for major tours

Ticketmaster is the default for arena tours, stadium shows, and most large festivals across the US, UK, and EU. If a major artist is on tour, the tickets are here. The catalogue includes pre-sales, fan-club allocations, and Verified Resale at face-value caps in some markets.

The trade-off is heavy fees layered on top of the headline price, occasional Dynamic Pricing surges, and a search interface that nudges you toward Platinum and VIP tiers ahead of standard allocations.

Pricing. Free app. Booking fees typically 10 to 25 percent depending on event, plus a flat order fee.

Migrating from DICE. No transfer of past purchases. Search artist tour by name and buy in-app. Ticketmaster account is separate from DICE.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Ticketmaster for arena shows and major festivals. Avoid for indie gigs where the fees double the price.

2. Eventbrite — best for independent events

Eventbrite is the self-serve platform of choice for small promoters, conferences, workshops, community gigs, and one-off events. The catalogue skews toward sub-2,000-capacity events that never make it to Ticketmaster or DICE. The interface is fast and the checkout flow is clean.

Fees vary by event because organisers set their own pricing. Some absorb them, others pass full cost to the buyer.

Pricing. Free app. Fees set per event by the organiser.

Migrating from DICE. Search the event by name. Most independent festivals and one-day events list across both platforms, so check if your saved DICE event is also on Eventbrite at a better price.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Eventbrite for community events, classes, and small festivals. Less useful for major touring acts.

3. Bandsintown — best for artist tracking

Bandsintown is built around alerts. Connect your music streaming account or import a Spotify playlist, and the app sends a notification any time one of your tracked artists announces a show within a radius you set. Ticketing happens through links to Ticketmaster, AXS, DICE, Eventbrite, or whoever the artist sold through, so the inventory is broader than any single seller.

The app itself is free with no booking fees on its end. The fees come from whichever ticketing partner the artist chose.

Pricing. Free.

Migrating from DICE. Import a Spotify or Apple Music account in 30 seconds. Your followed artists are tracked automatically.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Bandsintown to make sure you never miss an artist tour announcement again.

4. Songkick — best concert calendar

Songkick aggregates concert listings across most major sellers and presents them as a personal calendar. Track an artist and Songkick adds every tour date to your feed with the right ticket link. The app does not sell tickets directly; it routes you to Ticketmaster, AXS, See Tickets, or wherever the artist sold.

The interface is calendar-first, which makes it easier than DICE to plan a month of gigs in one view.

Pricing. Free.

Migrating from DICE. Import Spotify or last.fm history, then Songkick auto-tracks based on listening. Past DICE purchases do not import.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Songkick if you want a calendar of upcoming gigs based on your listening, with ticket links to whichever seller has them.

5. Fever — best for local experiences

Fever is more than a gig app. It curates city-specific listings of pop-up dinners, candlelight concerts, immersive experiences, exhibitions, and nightlife. The interface is photo-led and pushes discovery over search, which works well if you want to find new things to do rather than book a known artist.

Booking fees are built into the headline price, so what you see is what you pay.

Pricing. Free app. Fees built into ticket price.

Migrating from DICE. Not a direct swap. Use Fever for the experiential side of going out and DICE for the gig side.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Fever if you want to discover things to do in your city beyond live music.

6. Skiddle — best for UK clubs and festivals

Skiddle is the UK-focused alternative with deep coverage of clubs, smaller festivals, and grassroots gigs that DICE often misses outside London. The app handles ticketing in-app, and the wait-list system on sold-out shows works reliably.

Fees are typical for the UK market, comparable to or slightly cheaper than DICE on smaller events.

Pricing. Free app. Booking fee varies by event, typically 10-15 percent.

Migrating from DICE. Search the venue or event by name. Most UK independent venues list on both platforms; Skiddle often has the same show with a longer wait list.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Skiddle for UK clubbing, regional festivals, and any gig outside London that DICE does not list.

7. Mixcloud — best for finding the right DJ first

Mixcloud is not a ticketing app, but for dance music fans the path to a good night out often starts with finding the right DJ. The app hosts millions of DJ mixes, radio shows, and venue residencies. Once you find a DJ you like, follow them for tour announcements that link out to the appropriate ticketing platform.

For curated discovery of underground dance music ahead of booking tickets, Mixcloud is the missing first step.

Pricing. Free with audio ads. Pro £8.99/month for ad-free and offline.

Migrating from DICE. Not direct. Use Mixcloud to find DJs, then check DICE, Skiddle, or Resident Advisor for their next show.

Download: Aptoide · Google Play · App Store

Bottom line. Pick Mixcloud to discover DJs, then ticket their gigs through whichever platform they use.

How to choose

Pick Ticketmaster for arena tours and stadium shows.

Pick Eventbrite for community events, conferences, and one-off independent festivals.

Pick Bandsintown if you want push alerts the moment your favourite artist announces a date.

Pick Songkick if you want a clean calendar of upcoming gigs across all ticket sellers.

Pick Fever to discover non-music experiences in your city.

Pick Skiddle for UK clubbing and regional gigs DICE does not cover.

Pick Mixcloud to find DJs ahead of booking dance music tickets.

Stay on DICE if you go to a lot of independent shows in London, Berlin, New York, or LA and the face-value resale wait list works for you. For that audience and those cities, nothing else is cleaner.

FAQ

Does DICE charge booking fees? DICE typically rolls fees into the headline price rather than adding them at checkout, so the price you see is the price you pay. Some events do show a small in-app fee at checkout.

Can I sell my DICE ticket? Only through the in-app wait list at face value. DICE does not allow private resale or screenshots, which is the trade-off for keeping resale-site markups out.

Is Bandsintown free? Yes, completely free. It does not sell tickets directly; it links to whichever seller has the inventory.

What is the best app for festival tickets? Festicket used to be the dedicated festival app; since its 2023 closure most festivals sell through Skiddle, Eventbrite, See Tickets, or their own apps. For the major commercial festivals, Ticketmaster covers most of them.

Which ticket app has the lowest fees? Eventbrite and Bandsintown have the lowest add-on fees, because the event organiser sets the pricing. Ticketmaster and AXS sit at the top of the fee range.

Can I transfer my DICE tickets to a friend? DICE supports transfers in-app to other DICE users at no charge. The friend needs to install the app and have a verified account.