If you've received payments on Ticketmaster you may have received a 1099-K Form at the end of the year.
If you're in the business of reselling tickets as a sole proprietor, you'll report the income on Schedule C (Form 1040). You'll need to include the total amount of payments you received through Ticketmaster together with other non-credit card sales, such as checks and cash on Line 1 (Gross receipts or sales). You should also include any expenses you incurred while conducting your business on Schedule C.
The gain on the sale of a personal item might be reported on a Form 1099-K. If you receive a Form 1099-K reporting the $600 that you received from the sale of your concert tickets that cost you only $200, you must report the gain on Form 8949 and Schedule D (Form 1040). The loss on the sale of a personal item is not deductible.
Even if you receive a 1099-K, your gross payments may not necessarily be taxable. For instance, if you spent $600 on a ticket and then sold it for $600 on Ticketmaster, you would not be required to pay federal taxes because there was no gain from the sale. But, Ticketmaster will probably send you a 1099-K form. Ticketmaster simply knows that you received $600 for the ticket you sold; they are unaware that you initially paid $600 for it and did not profit from the resale.