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what are make a difference tickets

Make A Difference tickets are special concert tickets where a small portion of the ticket price is earmarked as a donation to charity, most commonly for mental‑health organizations in the recent Noah Kahan tour context.

What “Make A Difference” Tickets Are

  • They are regular concert tickets (often same sections or general admission) that are branded as “Make A Difference” because part of the price is donated.
  • For Noah Kahan’s tour, the language shared in fan emails said that 1 dollar from each ticket goes to organizations providing mental‑health treatment and access to care via PLUS1, a charity partner.
  • Some venues or ticket types were labeled specifically “Make A Difference Ticket,” with wording that “a share of the Make A Difference proceeds will benefit organizations delivering mental‑health treatment and access to care.”

In short, it’s a charity‑branded ticket type where you pay for a show and a small slice of that payment is promised to a cause, usually mental health.

Why They’ve Become Controversial

A big part of the current forum and social buzz is not about the idea, but about the execution.

  • Fans noticed certain “Make A Difference” seats were much more expensive (sometimes nearly double) than nearby seats, while the explicit donation line still said only 1 dollar per ticket.
  • This led to accusations of “charity‑washing” (like “green‑washing”) — using a good cause as a marketing wrapper while the actual charitable portion is tiny compared with the price hike.
  • Some commenters pointed out that the 1‑dollar donation applied to every ticket at some shows, not just the premium “Make A Difference” ones, making the extra markup on those special tickets even more confusing.
  • Others described it as similar to a VIP seat with a charity twist: you pay more for location or status, and a slice (not clearly defined) goes to charity, while the artist may also receive a tax deduction.

This gap between marketing language (“Make A Difference”) and actual numbers (1 dollar vs. large markups) is what’s driving frustration on Reddit and other forums.

How It Usually Works (In Practice)

From the recent discussions around Noah Kahan’s shows:

  1. A charity partner (PLUS1) is named.
  2. The base promise: 1 dollar from each ticket sold goes to mental‑health organizations.
  1. Certain tickets are tagged “Make A Difference” and may be priced higher than neighboring seats.
  2. The promo text says “a share of the Make A Difference proceeds” goes to the cause, but it often doesn’t clearly say how much beyond that baseline 1 dollar, which is what bothers many buyers.

An example scenario from fan posts:

  • Regular seat: about normal price, still shows that 1 dollar goes to charity.
  • “Make A Difference” seat: same or similar location, but priced significantly higher, while public wording still only guarantees 1 dollar per ticket and vaguely references “a share” of proceeds.

Different Viewpoints People Have

Critical view:

  • Some fans and mental‑health workers feel it’s misleading and even exploitative, especially when mental health is the stated cause but only a tiny fraction of a very high ticket price is guaranteed to go there.
  • A few call it a “scam” or “disguised dynamic pricing,” where surge pricing is wrapped in charity branding to soften the backlash.

More sympathetic / neutral view:

  • Others note that at least some money and awareness are going to mental‑health organizations and that many tours now use similar models.
  • Some think vague wording may partly be a communication failure: copy‑pasted text, unclear breakdowns, or different deals by venue or promoter rather than an intentional scheme.

If You’re Considering Buying One

If you’re looking at “Make A Difference” tickets right now, here’s a practical approach:

  1. Compare prices
    • Check what nearby or equivalent seats cost without the “Make A Difference” label.
    • If the difference is huge, ask whether the charitable portion justifies it for you personally.
  1. Read the fine print
    • Look for exactly stated amounts (e.g., “1 dollar per ticket”) vs. vague phrases like “a portion of proceeds.”
 * If you can’t find a number beyond that 1 dollar, assume the actual donation is small.
  1. Check the charity
    • For recent tours, PLUS1 is the named partner; their site explains they route per‑ticket fees to specific causes (in this case, mental‑health treatment and access).
  1. Decide your intent
    • If you mainly care about the show and the seat, you might prefer a cheaper seat and donate directly to a mental‑health charity.
    • If having a charity‑branded ticket matters to you symbolically, you may still feel good about it even if the numerical donation is small.

TL;DR: Make A Difference tickets are concert tickets branded as charitable: a small amount (often around 1 dollar per ticket) goes to mental‑health organizations like those partnered through PLUS1, but fans are currently debating whether the big price markups on some of these tickets fairly match the tiny, often vaguely stated donation they actually provide.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.