Ticket alerts for any event page
Extra dates, returned seats and resale drops appear at random and vanish in minutes. TabEye watches the ticket page in your own browser and alerts you the moment availability changes, so you are in before the queue forms.
Why watch the ticket page yourself
Ticket platforms release returned and held-back seats continuously, not in one announced batch. Fan alert services only cover the big platforms and often notify thousands of people at once. TabEye checks the exact page you point it at, from your own browser, on your own schedule. That includes presale pages you are logged into and seat maps that alert services cannot see.
When seats appear, TabEye can switch you straight to the tab and play a sound, so the seconds between the drop and your click are as short as possible.
Set up a ticket alert in under a minute
Step-by-step setup
- Install TabEye from the Chrome Web Store and open the event's ticket page, logged in and ready to buy.
- Click the TabEye icon. On the Monitor tab, set the interval. Every 10 to 30 seconds works well for an active on-sale; every few minutes is enough while you wait for a resale wave.
- Add a keyword. Watching for tickets available to appear, or sold out to disappear, filters out everything else that moves on a busy event page.
- Even better: press P and drag a box around the seat map or the availability section, so price banners and countdown clocks never trigger a false alarm.
- Click Start Monitoring This Tab and get on with your day.
Get the alert wherever you are
Resale seats do not wait for you to be at your desk. Connect a Telegram bot or Discord webhook in the Connect tab and the alert reaches your phone. Reply /screenshot 1 to your Telegram bot to see the seat map before you sprint to a computer. Setup for both is in the documentation.
Tips for on-sale day
- Turn on focus on alert so TabEye switches you to the ticket tab the instant availability changes.
- Use Instant detection mode. For tickets, a false alarm costs a glance; a missed drop costs the show.
- Watch several dates of the same tour in separate tabs, each with its own monitor.
- If the site starts showing a CAPTCHA, TabEye alerts you separately so you can solve it and keep the watch alive.
Ticket alert questions
Does it work on presale pages that need a login?
Yes. TabEye watches the page in your own browser session, so any presale or member page you can open, it can watch.
Can I watch several events at once?
Yes. Every watched tab has its own monitor and its own interval, so a hot on-sale and a slow resale watch can run side by side.
Can it watch just the seat map?
Yes. Press P on the page and drag a box around the seat map. TabEye then ignores everything else on the page, including countdowns and rotating banners.
Will it buy tickets for me?
No. TabEye alerts you and can jump you to the tab, but checkout is yours. That also means it does not violate platform rules the way purchase bots do.
Never miss a drop again
Put the ticket page on watch now. It takes less than a minute.
Add TabEye to Chrome