Arsenal fans who thought they had secured their place in history were told their tickets were void – after money had already left their accounts. A system error in the away ballot for the title-clinching fixture at Crystal Palace forced the club to scrap the entire draw and run it again, leaving hundreds of supporters who had ‘won’ the first ballot empty-handed the second time around. On the biggest away day in 22 years, Arsenal’s ticketing system picked the worst possible moment to fall apart.
This is the full story of what went wrong, why fans are genuinely furious, and whether the ballot system that was supposed to fix everything is actually making things worse.
What Went Wrong With the Arsenal Ballot
The away ticket allocation for Arsenal’s final Premier League fixture at Selhurst Park was run through the club’s weighted ballot – a system introduced in 2022-23 for high-demand games, where Platinum and Gold members with higher away credits enter the draw multiple times, theoretically rewarding loyalty. The ballot ran. Winners were notified. Card holds were placed.
Then Arsenal pulled the plug on the whole thing. The club confirmed that a processing error had affected the ballot weightings, meaning the draw had failed to correctly apply the criteria that are supposed to make the system fair across membership tiers. The entire first ballot was voided and re-run – and fans who had been told they were going to Selhurst Park suddenly found out they were not.
Supporters on fan forums and the GoonersAtGames Telegram channel shared screenshots of confirmation emails and card holds that were subsequently reversed, with many describing it as the worst away ticketing failure in years. Some estimates from inside the club suggested more than a thousand supporters were temporarily shown as successful before being removed. Read that again.
Arsenal Admit the Error – But ‘Sorry’ Only Goes So Far
Arsenal issued an apology and confirmed that supporters successful in the first ballot but unsuccessful in the second would receive full refunds. The club attributed the chaos to a ‘system error’ that failed to account for certain fairness criteria within the membership weighting. Fans who had money debited were promised it back.
Promising a refund for money you should never have taken is not a recovery plan. It is damage limitation. The club’s response said very little about how the error occurred in a system that has been in place for multiple seasons, nothing about independent oversight, and nothing about what changes – if any – would be made before the next high-demand ballot. For a club that has been pulling in the most passionate away followings in the Premier League all season, that silence is tone-deaf.
Fans Are Furious – And They Have Every Right to Be
The Arsenal Supporters’ Trust has been flooded with complaints, and the anger runs deeper than one bad ballot. Silver members have spent the entire 2025-26 season struggling to secure any away game at all – the shift to a 100% ballot-based system, designed to beat bots, has instead created a lottery that many loyal travellers feel punishes consistency rather than rewarding it.

The specific injustice here is concrete: fans who entered the ballot properly, were told they had won, and had their money held – then lost out in a re-run caused entirely by a club error they had no part in. That is not bad luck. That is being let down by a system you were told to trust. The Arsenal Supporters’ Trust has previously warned that digital ticketing failures erode fan confidence fast, and the fan protest energy building around this issue is exactly what that kind of warning looks like in practice.
And while all this plays out behind the scenes, away end tickets for Selhurst Park are being listed on the resale site SeatPick – headquartered in Israel and named on the Premier League’s own list of unauthorised ticket websites – for up to £45,000. The cheapest available sit at £3,000. That is the direct consequence of desperate fans with no legitimate route in.
The Ballot System Is Broken – And This Proves It
Crystal Palace have done their part to clamp down, disabling ticket sharing for the fixture on May 12 and warning that any supporter found sharing a ticket faces a ban from buying a season ticket or membership next season. Tickets for the Arsenal match at Selhurst Park were restricted to fans with a Palace club account registered before December 1, with enhanced security checks confirmed for the day. Those are serious measures – and they still have not stopped hundreds of home section tickets appearing on SeatPick, ranging from £944 to over £72,000.
The broader point is that Premier League matchday access has become genuinely broken at the top end of the demand curve. The Football Supporters’ Association has been lobbying for statutory regulation of resale platforms and clearer redress when club systems fail. The Premier League’s own ticketing terms require ‘fair and transparent’ access – but enforcement is left almost entirely to individual clubs, and this week shows exactly where that leads.
Arsenal’s ballot was supposed to be the fair solution. A technical failure on the most important away day of the decade rather suggests it is not.
The Verdict
Arsenal need to commission an independent review of this ballot failure and publish the findings before next season’s ticketing policy is confirmed. Not a quiet internal debrief – a proper, transparent audit with results that members can actually read. The AST has been making this case for years and this week has handed them the clearest possible argument.
The fans who lost seats due to a club error deserve more than a refund and an apology. They deserve a system that works. And right now, as Crystal Palace prepare to host one of the biggest occasions Selhurst Park has ever seen, Arsenal’s most loyal away travellers are watching from their sofas.
Our Verdict:
A title win 22 years in the making, and the club’s ticketing infrastructure couldn’t hold it together for the biggest away ballot of the season. Fix the system, Arsenal. Your fans have earned better than this.






























