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Understand free RSVPs vs paid tickets in HereNow

Choose the right registration setup for your event: low-friction free RSVP or paid tickets with checkout and payout requirements.

6 min readUpdated Jun 21, 2026
Audience

Curators deciding whether an event should be free, donation-like, or paid.

User need

I need to choose between a free RSVP page and paid tickets.

Start with the attendee decision

Free RSVP and paid ticket flows solve different problems. A free RSVP asks for commitment with minimal friction. A paid ticket asks for trust, payment, and a clearer value exchange.

If you are testing a new audience, hosting a casual community gathering, or trying to reduce drop-off, free RSVP is usually simpler. If the event includes paid instruction, materials, limited seats, or a professional service, paid tickets may fit better.

Free RSVP vs paid tickets

Setup
Best fit
Free RSVP
Community meetups, early audience tests, open classes, casual gatherings, and events where low friction matters most.
Paid tickets
Workshops, tastings, classes, tours, coaching sessions, and events with clear value, costs, or limited capacity.
Free now, paid later
Useful when validating demand. Start free, learn what attendees value, then create a stronger paid offer.
Invite-only or unlisted
Useful when you need a private link, cohort fit, or a small trusted group before public promotion.

Choose the right setup

1

Define the event promise

Write what attendees will do, learn, make, experience, or receive. Paid tickets need this promise to be especially clear.

2

Estimate operational cost

Consider venue, materials, food, tools, guest speakers, setup time, and host bandwidth.

3

Estimate audience trust

If your audience does not know you yet, a free or low-commitment first event may convert better than a paid launch.

4

Choose registration friction

Use the fewest fields and steps needed for the event. Paid checkout adds friction, so the value must justify it.

5

Review launch readiness

For paid tickets, check profile quality, payment settings, Stripe payouts, ticket settings, and refund expectations before promoting.

Use free RSVP when

You mainly want people to show interest or reserve a spot.

The event is informal, experimental, or community-oriented.

You do not need payment to cover materials or venue cost.

You want attendees to register without account creation or checkout friction.

You are still learning what the audience values.

The event can tolerate some no-shows.

Use paid tickets when

The event has a clear paid value proposition.

Seats, materials, or host time are genuinely limited.

You need payment commitment to manage no-shows.

Your curator profile and event page are credible enough for strangers.

Stripe payout readiness is complete.

Refund or transfer expectations are clear.

FAQ

Can I switch from free RSVP to paid tickets later?

You can create a new paid setup when your offer is ready. Be careful when changing a live event that already has registrants; communicate changes clearly.

Do paid tickets guarantee better attendance?

No. Payment can increase commitment, but attendance still depends on offer quality, trust, timing, reminders, and audience fit.

Is free RSVP always better for new hosts?

Not always. If the event has real costs or professional value, paid tickets can make sense. The key is whether the value is clear enough for the audience.

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