Taylor Swift has been making headlines over the past 24 hours as the ticket selling of her highly-anticipated tour has started. For those who never got a chance to sign up for presale, there's still a possibility to get tickets by following the steps below.

According to NJ, presale tickets have started selling on November 15, and only those who registered before November 9 were granted to purchase seats.

Capital One cardholders also got a perk of accessing presale tickets on Tuesday before it opens for the general public.

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However, not all Swifties have the card nor got a chance to register for presale, but there are other ways to secure them.

'The Eras' Tour Tickets Without Presale Registration

The general public ticket selling will go live on Ticketmaster on November 18, 2022, at 10 a.m. Since passes are most likely to sell out in an instant, fans should wait in line queue at 10 a.m. sharp and wait on the website before the selling begins.

READ ALSO: Taylor Swift Tour 2023: Fans Left 'Traumatized' After Ticket-Selling Fiasco

Another way to buy tickets is through secondary merchants like TicketCity, StubHub, TicketNetwork, MegaSeats, and Vivid Seats. However, the only problem with other ticket-selling websites is it's more expensive than the original.

The outlet offered a $20 discount by using the code NJ20 at checkout through Vivid Seats' website.

Taylor Swift 'The Eras' Tour Ticket Fiasco

In early reports, many fans complained about resell tickets being sold at a higher price. Passes were originally priced at $300 to $800, but some people who got early access to tickets sell them from $2000 to a shocking $24,000.

The ultimate front row package, priced at $18,000 by resellers, will let fans have access to a private entrance, special restrooms, VIP passes, and more, at Swift's concert at Soldier Field in Chicago.

Online users immediately call out the resellers and ticket merchants online, saying they should put a limit on how much a person can resell tickets for because it's "absurd."

There were also fans who suggested that Ticketmaster should make the tickets non-transferable.

As of this writing, Taylor Swift and Ticketmaster have yet to issue a statement regarding the matter.

Aside from the ticket reselling issue, many Swifties also complained about the merchant's website as many of them experienced technical difficulties while trying to buy tickets online.

CNN Business reported that the website crashed due to the high number of people. The ticket-selling website confirmed to the outlet that their site isn't down and people are actively buying tickets at the time.

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