A:Not at this number; hours here are Mon-Sun 9am-9pm EST.The least busy day is Tuesday, and the most busy day is Thursday.If the call center is closed, you can schedule a call.
Q:
How long will I wait on hold?
A:The average hold time is 2 minutes.The longest hold times are on Monday, and the shortest are on Thursday.You can skip the hold time for free.
How do I get through the phone menu to a live person?
Consider using our free service that calls and talks to customer service for you, then sends you a report. Or use our free service that waits on hold and tells you when a human rep is on the line. But if those options don't appeal to you, our team has also documented the phone menu for Tickets.com below.
Our AI powered phone can dial, navigate the phone menu, wait on hold, and even talk to customer service for you, for free. You don't even need to learn about the path through the various phone options.
That same, free GetHuman Phone can call and navigate the menus and wait on hold for you, but you can opt to do all the talking. We notify you when a rep is on the line and ready to talk, so no need to worry about changing menu options and weaving your way through the maze.
Of course, we completely understand if you prefer to do all the dialing, waiting, and talking yourself. All of these free tools are optional.
GetHuman researchers routinely call this Tickets.com phone number to document the phone system.
Here is our latest tip for weaving through the phone menu to get to a real person the fastest:Press 1
What are the hours and when should I call?
Tickets.com operates the call center for this 800-352-0212 phone number Mon-Sun 9am-9pm ET.The short answer is that you should call on a Tuesday.This observation and the following section are based on analysis of a sample set of 65 calls made in the last 90 days using our free, web-based phone (see above).
When you use our free AI-powered phone to call and talk, wait on hold, or navigate for you, it will automatically wait until the Tickets.com call center opens before trying to call. It will ask your permission before it places the call, so you can also further delay that scheduled call until you are ready. But that means you can "set it and forget it" ahead of time.
An important note: busy times vs hold times vs best time to call
When we refer to busy or less busy times, we are talking about the volume of calls. The busiest times are when the most people are calling this Tickets.com phone number (least busy times have fewer people calling). This high call volume does not necessarily mean that you will have a long hold time when you call. Companies like Tickets.com staff their call centers differently based on the time of day and day of the week, so you may experience a shorter wait on hold at the busiest of times. When we refer to the best time to call, we are referring to the optimal combination of lower call volume and shorter wait times.
The least busy time to call
The least busy day to call Tickets.com is Tuesday.The most busy day to call is Thursday, which averages 250% more phone calls by comparison.Again, this is based on a sample of 65 calls made with our AI-powered, web-based phone in the last 90 days.
Sun
Mon
Tue
Quietest
Wed
Thu
Busiest
Fri
Sat
The shortest wait on hold
We measured the shortest hold times to be on Thursday.The longest wait in the queue on average occurs on Monday.
In summation, the best day to call Tickets.com is Tuesday.This is not the day with the shortest wait on hold in the phone system, but we still recommend it for its ideal combination of low call volume and short hold times. Plus we believe that Tickets.com staffs the call center well on Tuesday.
More Tickets.com Customer Service Contacts
There are of course other ways to contact Tickets.com customer service besides the phone. Below we list the best ones, by medium.
Corresponding with a customer service department by email may not be your first choice, especially if your issue is urgent or time-sensitive. But email is a nearly ubiquitous form of communication, and Tickets.com will reply our your email.
As a last, sometimes only, resort- Tickets.com customer service can be accessed through their website. This can entail digging through help articles before finding a form and "being allowed" to submit a problem to their team, and rarely leads to a real-time conversation, which is why GetHuman does not recommend this unless it's the only way.
Conclusion and closing notes
This is Tickets.com's best phone number, the real-time current wait on hold and tools for skipping right through those phone lines to get right to a Tickets.com agent. This phone number is Tickets.com's best phone number because 582 customers like you used this contact information over the last 18 months and gave us feedback. Common problems addressed by the customer care unit that answers calls to 800-352-0212 include Setup service, Service problem, Cancel service, Change plan, Overcharge/Strange charge and other customer service issues. Rather than trying to call Tickets.com first, consider describing your issue first; from that we may be able to recommend an optimal way to contact them via phone or email or web. In total, Tickets.com has 1 phone number. It's not always clear what is the best way to talk to Tickets.com representatives, so we started compiling this information built from suggestions from the customer community. Please keep sharing your experiences so we can continue to improve this free resource.
GetHuman does not provide call center services or customer support operations for Tickets.com. The two organizations are not related. GetHuman builds free tools and shares information to help customers of companies like Tickets.com. For large companies that includes tools such as our GetHuman Phone, which allows you to call a company but skip the part where you wait on the line to get a live human rep. We continue to work on these tools to help customers like you (and ourselves!) navigate the messy phone menus, hold times, and confusion with customer service. As long as you keep sharing it with your friends and loved ones, we'll keep doing it.