How to Sell More Theatre Tickets with Paid Social

The fastest way to sell more theatre tickets with paid social is to run Meta (Facebook and Instagram) campaigns built around your booking curve: warm audiences up at the announcement stage, push conversions hard once tickets are on sale using your own booker and remarketing data, sustain interest with fresh creative and social proof, then retarget warm audiences in the final fortnight.

Since Meta’s 2026 changes, creative and first-party data, rather than interest targeting, decide whether your ads sell tickets. This guide covers how to get each stage right.

Why does paid social work so well for theatre?

Nobody wakes up searching for a show they don’t know exists. Where search advertising captures demand; paid social creates it, and theatre is exactly what social feeds reward: visual, emotional and local. You also hold an asset most advertisers would love: box office records of everyone who has ever booked with you. Used properly (and with consent), that data is the engine of every campaign below.

What changed in Meta advertising in 2026?

If your campaigns are still built the way they were in 2023, they are working against the platform. Three changes matter:

  1. Interest targeting has been stripped back. In January 2026 Meta removed and consolidated dozens of detailed targeting categories. Stacking “theatre” and “musicals” interests is largely a thing of the past.
  2. Advantage+ is now the default. In February 2026 Meta merged manual and Advantage+ campaign flows into one AI-driven system. Only location and minimum age remain hard limits; everything else you set is a suggestion the algorithm can expand beyond. However, please note, at the moment, if you know how, we can turn this feature off.
  3. Creative is the new targeting. The algorithm decides who sees your ads based on who responds to them. Your creative now does the audience selection that your targeting settings used to do.

The practical upshot: stop fighting the automation. Feed it strong creative and clean first-party data, and it will find your bookers.

How should you structure a campaign around the booking curve?

Theatre sales follow a predictable curve: a spike at on-sale, a long middle, and a rush at the end. Your campaign structure should mirror it:

  1. Announce. Before tickets go on sale, run low-cost awareness and video-view campaigns. You are building the warm audience you will convert later; don’t ask for the sale yet.
  2. On-sale. Switch to conversion campaigns the day booking opens, seeded with your past-booker data. This is when intent is highest among your existing audience.
  3. Sustain. Keep a steady spend through the middle weeks. Refresh creative every two to three weeks and add social proof, such as star ratings, review pull-quotes, and audience reactions as soon as you have it. If available UGC and Influencer campaigns should also be used here.
  4. Final push and in-week. Retarget website visitors and basket abandoners with genuine urgency. Retargeting converts best in the last two weeks, when “final performances” and “limited tickets” is true.

Which audiences actually sell tickets?

With interest targeting diminished, these are the audiences that still work:

  1. Past bookers. Upload consented customer lists from your ticketing system, segmented by genre and booking frequency. A musicals booker and a drama booker should not see the same ads.
  2. Lookalike audiences from owned data. Your booker lists act as guide that steer Advantage+ towards people who are like your best customers.
  3. Engaged audiences. People who watched your videos or engaged with your Instagram or Facebook already know you; they convert at a fraction of cold-audience cost.
  4. Website retargeting. Visitors to a show’s ticket page who didn’t buy are your highest-intent audience of all.

What creative sells theatre tickets?

  1. Short video wins. Under 15 seconds for Stories and Reels, always captioned as most people watch with sound off.
  2. Refresh relentlessly. Creative fatigue is the most common reason theatre campaigns plateau. Plan variants from day one.

How do you measure whether it’s actually working?

Reach and clicks don’t pay for productions. You need the Meta Pixel running together across your ticketing journey (most major ticketing platforms now support this) so you can report on sales and return on ad spend (ROAS) per campaign. Also remember the customer journey is messy: a good paid social also lifts your direct and “walk-up” sales, so track the whole sales curve against spend, not just what Meta claims.

Does this work in practice?

Yes. We manage paid social for a range of venues and touring shows, achieving millions in revenue and a ROAS up to 3,629%.

Frequently asked questions

When should ads start running?
Ideally at announcement, so you have a warm audience ready for on-sale day. The final two weeks are the strongest for retargeting, but far too late to start from cold.

Is boosting posts enough?
No. Boosting buys engagement, not tickets. Ticket sales come from conversion campaigns built in Ads Manager with proper tracking, which is a different discipline entirely. If you want to bring organic content into a campaign, use the “existing post” option when building ad creative. This allows you to “boost” the content, leverage the social proof but use the technicality of Ads Manager.

Do interest audiences still work in 2026?
Yes, but it’s not consistent any more. All campaigns now should be about balance, an ad set for interests is fine, however it must be within a campaign that also includes Advantage +, owned data or lookalike audiences ad sets.

Should theatres advertise on TikTok too?
For direct ticket sales, Meta remains the workhorse. TikTok earns its place for younger-skewing productions and awareness, but prove the model on Meta first.

Not sure you have the time or in-house expertise to do all of this properly? Read our honest guide: When Should a Theatre Outsource Its Paid Social? or get in touch. Oh So Social is a Cornwall-based paid social agency working with theatres, venues and productions, including Hall for Cornwall and Murder Trial Tonight.