Ultra Music Festival (UMF) is just around the corner and we can no longer contain our excitement.

Personally, I am a big sucker for artiste such as Above & Beyond, and there was little consideration when they are part of this year’s lineup.

If you have no idea who Above & Beyond are, here you go:

My attempt to catch my favourite DJs in action costs me S$179.50 (including S$2.50 worth of fees).

How much revenue does Ultra Music Festival (UMF) Make?

Looking back at the numbers from the year 2017, we are quite surprised that Ultra Singapore is actually one of the bigger scale events in terms of capacity when it comes to Asia.

Here is a breakdown of the scale of the event in terms of crowd attendance:

Ultra Korea and Ultra Japan dominated in terms of size at 150,000 and 120,000 attendance.

Singapore surprisingly managed a 50,000 pax attendance

This exceeds 20,000 strong Ultra India, 40,000 strong Ultra China, and 27,000 Road to Ultra in Taiwan.

While the actual revenue and profit made from Ultra Music Festival Singapore is not fully disclosed to the public, we use various sources to give a good range of profit.

Estimating UMF’s revenue using ticket price

With that in mind, we went on to find out the price of the tickets for Ultra Music Festival (UMF) 2018.

Standing VVIP Ticket Price

Tier Price VVIP 2 Day Ticket S$550 VVIP 1 Day Ticket S$300

Premium General Admission Ticket Price

Tier Price Tier 1

PGA 2 Day Ticket S$185 Tier 2

PGA 2 Day Ticket S$210 Tier 3

PGA 2 Day Ticket S$245

General Admission Ticket Price

Tier Price General Admission, Single Day S$120 General Admission

Two Day

(Tier 1) S$155 General Admission

Two Day

(Tier 2) S$170 General Admission

Two Day

(Tier 3) S$185

To do a quick calculation, we assume an average price of S$180 spent on tickets per person, that adds up to be S$9,000,000 revenue from ticket sales alone.

This is on top of income from drinks and cigarettes sales, booth rental and sponsorships that can add on to the revenue amount.

Costs involved in organising UMF

The cost involved for Ultra Music Festival includes:

Venue rental cost

Cost of setting up al the stages

Payment for performers

Marketing cost

Estimating UMF Singapore’s revenue using data of past events

source: Tomorrowland

Tomorrowland 2013, Belgium

According to an insight from Quora, music festival such as Tomorrowland made a gross profit of S$25 million (15.9 million Euros) for their year 2013 edition.

The event hosted 180,000 party-goers, paying an average price of S$472 (300 Euros) each.

Assuming we put this number into UMF Singapore’s context, at 50,000 and ticket price at about S$180, we might be looking at a gross profit of S$2.64 million.

source: UMF TV

Ultra Music Festival 2013, Miami

When we look at Ultra Miami in the year 2013, they made a total of S$40 million (US$30) from ticket sales, with S$1.6 million (US1.2 million) being the cost.

Assuming the same percentage of cost, Ultra Singapore can bag S$8.64 million profit.

Other benefits that music festivals benefit Singapore

For a music festival on such a scale, there is a positive impact on the economy as well.

Ultra Miami brought South Florida US$79 million in economic impact when they hosted the festival.

The same benefit can apply to Singapore too. Some example of such economic impacts include:

Tourists flying down to attend the music festival

Revenue made from these tourists hotel stay

Helps put Singapore on the world map

Tourists’ spending in the country when it comes to food and drinks can help contribute to the economy too.

Not All That Glitter Is Gold – SFX Entertainment

Based in New York, SFX Entertainment owns and operates some of the biggest names in dance music festivals and events. Some of these big festivals under them include Electric Zoo and Mysterland.

SFX Entertainment went public in the year 2013 but filed for bankruptcy shortly after in the year 2016.

Valued at $1 billion in the year 2013, SFX’s market value dipped to less than $10 million in just two and a half years.

I guess the entertainment industry is usually lost in all the fame and glitters that the public sometimes missed out the struggles behind every festival.

With production cost this high, Ultra Singapore has their own fair share of payment issue last year too. Fortunately, it was resolved really quickly.

Kuddos to Ultra Singapore!

Further Reading: Should I even go to Ultra Music Festival?

For a start, make sure that you are not forgoing some aspect of your basic needs in the process of buying the tickets.

The expenses for the ticket should come from the 20% portion of your monthly salary. I personally feel that heading to a music festival once a while to party away some of those cooped up stress sounds like a good idea. It is always healthy to work hard and play hard.

What are your thoughts? Let us know by commenting below.

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