
- Over 500 Professionally Designed Website Templates
- Drag and Drop Website Builder for Total Design Freedom
- Free Trial with No Credit Card Required

- Publish Unlimited Events of Any Size for Free — No Upfront Costs
- 14-Day Refund Window on Eventbrite Pro Subscription Plans
- Access to 90M+ Active Ticket-Buyers via Eventbrite\'s Global Discovery Marketplace
Quick Summary
Wix wins this comparison for most users. As a general-purpose website builder with native event tools, it handles event creation alongside the full business website in a single platform. Its design flexibility, 500+ app market, and stronger performance benchmarks make it the better all-in-one choice.
Eventbrite wins for a specific and well-defined user: an event organizer who needs a dedicated ticketing and discovery platform with a built-in marketplace of over 90 million active ticket buyers, automatic schema markup for Google search visibility, and a fee structure that costs nothing unless tickets sell.
The mistake most people make comparing these two is treating Eventbrite as a website builder. It is not. It is an event management and ticketing platform that creates event pages not full websites.
1. Pricing and Value for Money
Eventbrite wins on pricing for event organizers. Publishing events costs nothing, and the per-ticket fee structure means organizers pay only when they generate revenue.
Wix
Wix’s free forever plan allows unlimited building and testing before any payment commitment. Paid tiers break down as follows:
- Light ($17/mo): entry paid, no ecommerce
- Core ($29/mo): native store with 0% platform fees, abandoned cart recovery, subscriptions
- Business ($39/mo): adds multi-currency checkout
- Business Elite ($159/mo): unlimited storage and advanced ecommerce tools
For an event organizer on Wix, selling tickets requires the Core plan at $29 per month minimum.
That is the same plan tier whether they are running one event per year or ten. The monthly cost is fixed regardless of event volume or ticket revenue.
Eventbrite
Eventbrite’s pricing model is built around events rather than a monthly subscription. Publishing is free for all events. For paid events, Eventbrite charges a service fee of 3.7% + $1.79 per ticket, plus a 2.9% payment processing fee per order.
By default, those fees are passed to attendees, and the organizer receives the full ticket price. If the organizer chooses to absorb the fees instead, that cost comes out of their revenue.
For free events, Eventbrite is genuinely free to use with no hidden charges.
The optional Pro add-on unlocks higher email marketing limits and 24/7 chat support for all events:
- Pro 2K: $15/mo (or $144/yr), up to 2,000 marketing emails per day
- Pro 6K: $50/mo (or $480/yr), up to 6,000 marketing emails per day
- Pro 10K: $100/mo (or $960/yr), up to 10,000 marketing emails per day
The free plan allows 250 marketing emails per day, which covers most small to mid-size event operations without any subscription cost.
What makes Eventbrite’s pricing compelling for pure event organizers is the absence of a fixed monthly commitment. An organization that runs two events per year pays nothing until tickets sell and can pass the ticketing fees to attendees. A Wix user running two events per year still pays $29 per month for Core, or $348 per year, regardless of event activity.
2. Core Features and Capabilities
Eventbrite wins on event-specific features. Wix’s native event tools are functional but shallower than what Eventbrite provides for managing tickets, attendees, and event operations at scale.
Wix
Wix’s event capability runs through the Wix Events app, which integrates natively with the rest of the Wix site.

Organizers can create events, set ticket types, accept payments, and manage RSVPs from the same dashboard used to manage the website.

The integration is Wix’s strongest argument for event management: a visitor lands on a business homepage, reads about the company, sees upcoming events in a dedicated section, and registers, all without leaving the site or being redirected to a third-party platform.
There is no handoff to an Eventbrite-branded page. The brand experience stays consistent end to end.
Where Wix’s event tools become limiting for serious organizers:
- Reserved seating requires a third-party app
- Waitlist management requires a third-party app
- Timed entry tickets are not available natively

- Scheduled ticket releases (e.g. early bird windows that open at a specific time) are not a native feature
- The check-in experience requires a third-party app rather than a purpose-built scanning tool
Eventbrite
Eventbrite’s feature set is built entirely around the needs of event organizers, and it shows in the depth of what is native to the platform.
Multiple ticket tiers within a single event (early bird, general admission, VIP) can be configured with individual pricing, capacity limits, and sale windows that open and close automatically.

Hidden tickets accessible only via password allow organizers to manage press, sponsor, or staff access without creating a separate event. Waitlists activate automatically when capacity fills.
The check-in experience is handled through Eventbrite’s dedicated mobile app, which scans QR codes from attendee tickets and syncs across multiple devices at the door simultaneously. For an event with multiple check-in stations, this coordination happens in real time without additional setup.
The marketplace is the feature Wix cannot replicate. When an event is published on Eventbrite, it appears in personalized recommendations to users who have attended similar events, in category and location browsing, and in search results.
Organizers with a following on Eventbrite get automatic notifications sent to followers when new events are published. Some organizers report that Eventbrite’s marketplace drives 20-30% of their total ticket sales independently of their own promotion.
3. Ease of Use
Wix wins on general ease of use. Eventbrite is fast and simple specifically for event creation, but the comparison as a whole-platform experience favors Wix.
Wix
Wix’s AI builder generates a full site with written copy from a conversational prompt before any manual editing begins.

The open canvas editor gives element-level control over every aspect of the site.

For a business that needs a website plus events, Wix’s onboarding produces a functional starting point across both needs in one session.
The tradeoff is that Wix’s full platform carries more complexity than Eventbrite’s focused event creation flow. A first-time user creating their first event on Wix is navigating a complete website builder alongside the Wix Events configuration: more options, more decisions, more screens.
Eventbrite
Eventbrite’s event creation flow is purpose-built and genuinely fast. A new organizer can go from signup to a published event page in under ten minutes: enter the event name, date, location, description, and ticket details, add an image, and publish. The form-based approach requires no design decisions, no template selection, and no layout choices.

The event page structure is fixed and familiar to attendees who have used Eventbrite before.

The simplicity that makes event creation fast is also Eventbrite’s primary limitation outside of events.
The platform does not build websites, manage blogs, or handle anything beyond the event creation and management workflow. An organizer who also needs a homepage, an about page, or a store has to maintain those elsewhere.
4. Design Quality and Templates
Wix wins on design by a significant margin. Eventbrite event pages are functional but offer limited visual customization. Wix gives you full control over the site’s visual identity.
Wix
Wix’s 2,000+ templates and Wix Vibe AI design agents give full control over how an events page looks within the broader site.

An event organizer can build a homepage that reflects the brand, use consistent typography and color throughout, and embed event listings in a section that matches the site’s visual identity.
Attendees see the organizer’s brand, not a third-party platform’s.
The open canvas editor extends that control to every element: hero images, speaker grids, sponsor logos, and schedule tables, all of which can be built as rich pages alongside the ticket purchase flow.
Eventbrite
Eventbrite event pages follow a consistent template across all organizers. You can upload a cover image, write a description with basic formatting, list ticket types, and add a venue map.

Beyond that, the design is fixed. The page header, layout, typography, button styles, and overall structure are Eventbrite’s, not the organizer’s.
This consistency is intentional: attendees know what to expect on an Eventbrite page, which builds trust and reduces friction at checkout. For an organizer whose primary goal is ticket sales rather than brand expression, the limited design control is an acceptable trade-off.
For a brand-conscious organization that wants events to feel like a seamless extension of their website, it is a real constraint.
5. Performance and Reliability
Wix wins on published infrastructure benchmarks. Eventbrite performs well as an event platform, but Wix’s documented uptime SLA and CDN coverage are the stronger technical commitments.
Wix
Wix publishes a 99.99% uptime SLA for paid plans, backed by automatic disaster recovery.
Its infrastructure runs on Google Cloud, AWS, and Fastly with over 200 CDN nodes globally included on all paid plans. Wix achieves a 74.86% Core Web Vitals pass rate as of November 2025.
Eventbrite
Eventbrite does not publish an uptime SLA or CDN infrastructure details. What it does have is infrastructure experience handling sudden ticket-sale surges.
When a popular event goes on sale and thousands of buyers hit the page simultaneously, Eventbrite’s systems are built for that load pattern in a way that a general-purpose website builder may not be.
For a standard business event or workshop, the distinction does not matter. For a high-demand concert or conference where thousands of tickets sell in minutes, Eventbrite’s specific resilience for on-sale surges is a meaningful infrastructure advantage that does not appear in general-purpose benchmarks.
6. SEO and Marketing Tools
Eventbrite wins on event-specific discovery. For general website SEO, Wix leads. For getting event pages in front of potential attendees, Eventbrite’s marketplace and automatic schema markup are difficult to match.
Wix
Wix provides full technical SEO control on every paid plan from a single dashboard: custom URL slugs, a Redirect Manager for up to 5,000 redirects, a robots.txt editor, direct Google Search Console integration, native Semrush keyword research, AI-generated meta tags, and an AI Visibility Overview tracking how the site appears in ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude.

Email marketing scales to one million sends per month depending on plan tier.

For a business website that hosts events as one of many activities, Wix’s SEO tools cover everything needed. What Wix cannot replicate is an event-specific discovery engine with tens of millions of active users browsing for things to attend.
Eventbrite
Eventbrite’s discovery advantage comes from two sources: the marketplace itself and its technical SEO infrastructure for events.
On the marketplace side, events are surfaced through personalized recommendations to users who have attended similar events, category browsing, location-based search, and automatic notifications to followers. Some organizers report that the marketplace drives 20-30% of their total ticket sales independently of their own promotion.
This depends heavily on event category and location. Well-established categories like music, fitness, and food events see stronger marketplace performance than niche B2B events.
On the technical SEO side, Eventbrite automatically applies structured data schema markup to every event page it hosts. This markup tells Google’s crawlers exactly what type of content the page contains (event name, date, location, organizer) and enables Eventbrite events to appear in Google’s dedicated event search experience.
Because Eventbrite operates with high domain authority built over years, its event pages often rank for location-based event searches faster than a new organizer’s own website would.

A first-time organizer gets that ranking power immediately without building it.
7. Integrations and Ecosystem
Wix wins on accessible integrations. Eventbrite connects with many marketing and CRM tools, but Wix’s 500+ curated app market covers a broader range of business needs.
Wix
Wix’s 500+ app market covers CRM, email marketing, bookings, memberships, shipping, accounting, and analytics.

The Velo developer platform supports custom JavaScript and external API connections for advanced requirements. Payment gateways cover 80+ options globally through a single checkout setup.
Eventbrite
Eventbrite connects natively with tools event organizers use most: Mailchimp for email list growth, Salesforce and HubSpot for CRM sync, Zoom for virtual event streaming, and Facebook and Instagram for social promotion.

Zapier bridges Eventbrite to hundreds of additional tools for organizers who need custom workflows. Native TikTok ticket selling is a recent addition that allows direct checkout from TikTok without leaving the app.
The integration gap is less about category coverage and more about business breadth. Eventbrite’s integrations are purpose-selected for event management workflows. Wix’s 500+ app market covers the full spectrum of what a business website needs beyond events.
The Bottom Line
Wix wins this comparison 4-3. As a general-purpose website builder with native event tools, it handles everything a business needs (the website, the brand, the store, and the events) in a single platform. Its 2,000+ templates, 500+ app market, and 99.99% uptime SLA make it the more complete solution for most users.
Eventbrite wins for a specific and well-defined user: an event organizer whose primary or exclusive need is ticketing, attendee management, and discovery. The zero-monthly-cost model, marketplace of 90 million active buyers, automatic schema markup, and native check-in app are built for that use case with a depth that Wix’s native event tools do not match.


