The challenge
Keeping a neighbourhood party simple to join
A neighbourhood party often starts informally: a few neighbours pick a date, someone books a tent, another person asks around for tables, music, food, and drinks.
That works well until the money needs to be clear. Who has paid? How many people are coming? Is the barbecue covered? Are drinks included, or does everyone pay separately?
Clear ticketing keeps those practical details visible for everyone.
With Zoticket, you can turn the plan into one clear event page. Add the date, location, ticket price, poster, and any practical notes, then share one link in the neighbourhood app group.
Neighbours can buy their own tickets online, so you do not have to chase bank transfers or keep a manual payment list. You can see how many tickets have sold and adjust your planning before you order food, drinks, or equipment.
For a free walk-in party, you can also use tickets as simple RSVPs so you still know how many people are coming.
When the party starts, the guest list and scanner help volunteers check people in calmly. If Wi-Fi is unreliable in the street or courtyard, you still have a practical overview of who bought what.
That leaves the organising team with fewer loose notes, fewer payment questions, and a better sense of whether the budget still fits the plan.