Recurring memberships offer arts and live entertainment organisations a unique opportunity. Rather than depending on a steady stream of one-off transactions, they can build an ongoing relationship with their audiences: one that benefits both sides. Members get a smoother, more connected experience. Organisations get income they can actually plan around.

It's not a new idea, but it's one that's gaining real momentum. The subscription economy has grown by more than 435% since 2012, and a 2023 study from Chargebee found that subscription businesses retain customers at a rate 34% higher than transaction-only models. For arts and cultural organisations navigating uncertain funding landscapes, that kind of loyalty matters.

Ticketsolve supports recurring payments through Ticketsolve Pay, letting organisations collect membership fees automatically on a monthly or annual basis. But before you set anything up, there's a question worth thinking through carefully: which should you choose?

The case for monthly: meet people where they are

Monthly payments work because they remove the moment of hesitation. A smaller, recurring cost feels manageable in a way that a lump annual sum simply doesn't, especially for audiences who want to support you but are watching their spending.

There's also something to be said for letting a membership prove its worth over time. A first-time visitor who signs up monthly has the chance to fall in love with what you offer before they've committed to a year of it. That gradual buy-in can actually build stronger long-term loyalty than an annual sign-up made on impulse.

New Brand Assets Squarish (2)The advantages:

  • Lower entry point makes membership accessible to a wider audience
  • Easier to try without feeling locked in
  • Flexibility for members whose financial situations may change
  • Steady, predictable income stream throughout the year

Worth bearing in mind:

  • Easier to cancel: retention strategies become more important
  • More transactions means more opportunities for payment failures

The case for annual: depth over breadth

Annual memberships attract a different kind of member: one who already knows they want to be part of what you do. That upfront commitment tends to come with a higher lifetime value, and the revenue itself arrives in a way that's genuinely useful for planning.

For smaller organisations especially, knowing that a cohort of members is secured for the year can make a real difference to how confidently you commission work, schedule programming, or hire staff.

New Brand Assets Squarish (3)The advantages:

  • Members are retained for the full year from day one
  • Upfront revenue makes budgeting and resource allocation easier
  • Fewer payment events means fewer chances for things to go wrong
  • Discounts or exclusive perks can make the annual option more appealing

Worth bearing in mind:

  • The larger upfront cost can put some audiences off
  • New or occasional visitors may hesitate to commit before experiencing the value

You don't have to pick just one

New Brand Assets Squarish (1)Many organisations find the most success by offering both, and letting audiences self-select. In practice, monthly memberships tend to attract newer or younger supporters taking a first step, while annual memberships appeal to those who already feel a strong connection and want to show it.

Ticketsolve Pay is built to handle both without creating extra work for your team: including a four-stage renewal automation, a five-stage payment retry process to recover failed payments, and integrated payment handling so everything lives in one place.

The goal, ultimately, isn't to optimise a payment model. It's to make it as easy as  possible for people who care about your work to stay connected to it, and to give your organisation the stability to keep doing it.