July 16, 2026
Expensive events aren’t always better
Every vendor remembers the first time they saw a booth fee that made them pause.
Maybe it was a large holiday market. Maybe it was a well-known street fair that everyone seemed to be talking about. You look at the application, see the price, and immediately start doing the math in your head and maybe roll your eyes.
There has to be a reason they’re charging this much.
Bigger doesn't always mean better
One of the easiest traps to fall into is assuming an expensive event must be a better event. It feels logical. If vendors keep paying the fee year after year, surely the event is worth it. But after a few seasons of vending, you realize that’s not how it works. Expensive events can be fantastic investments, terrible investments, or something in between. The booth fee doesn’t tell you which one you’re looking at.
The first thing to understand is that organizers aren’t simply charging you for a 10x10 space on the pavement. They’re charging for everything they believe makes that space valuable. A downtown location costs more than a neighborhood park. Advertising costs money. Security, staff, permits, entertainment, insurance, road closures, sanitation, and months of planning all add up. Well-run events are expensive to produce, and those costs eventually make their way to vendors.
None of that is unreasonable.
The question isn’t whether an organizer has expenses. Of course they do. The question is whether those expenses create value for the vendors paying the bill.
Experienced vendors start looking beyond the booth fee
A higher fee can absolutely be justified if the organizer consistently attracts buyers, communicates well, keeps the event organized, limits duplicate vendors, and creates an environment where people actually want to shop. In that situation, the booth fee starts looking less like an expense and more like an investment.
Unfortunately, not every expensive event delivers on that promise.
Some events charge premium prices because they have a strong reputation built over many years. Others charge more because demand exceeds the number of available booths. And sometimes, if we’re being honest, an event is simply expensive because vendors keep paying the fee. Those aren’t necessarily bad events, but price alone doesn’t tell you whether you’ll make your money back.
Comparing booth fees by themselves rarely tells the whole story
A $300 event that consistently produces strong sales is cheaper than a $75 event where you spend the entire day watching people walk past your booth. Vendors often focus on what it costs to get into an event while forgetting to ask what it costs to have a disappointing weekend. The booth fee is only one part of that equation.
Think about everything that goes into working a market. Before the first customer arrives, you’ve already invested hours loading inventory, driving to the venue, setting up your booth, and getting ready for the day. After the market closes, there’s another round of packing, loading, driving, and unloading when you finally get home. Add fuel, parking, meals, supplies, credit card fees, and the cost of producing your inventory, and suddenly the booth fee is only one line item on a much longer list.
That’s why two vendors can attend the same event and walk away with completely different opinions.
Imagine one vendor sells handcrafted leather bags for $150 each while another sells art prints for $20. They paid the same booth fee and worked the same crowd, but they’re running two completely different businesses. One may only need a few sales to justify the weekend. The other needs steady traffic from the moment the gates open.
Neither vendor is wrong when they talk about their experience. They’re simply measuring success differently.
The same thing happens with product categories. Every event attracts its own type of customer. Holiday markets encourage gift buying. Community festivals often attract families looking for a fun afternoon. Farmers markets bring in regular locals, while art festivals attract buyers who expect handmade work and are comfortable spending more for it. A product that sells exceptionally well at one event may struggle at another without anything being wrong with the product itself.
This is why experienced vendors rarely ask whether an event is “good.” They ask whether it’s good for them.
Whenever I’m considering an expensive event, I try to figure out exactly what I’m paying for. Is the organizer known for attracting serious shoppers? Is the event professionally run? Do vendors return year after year because they’re making money, or simply because the event has a recognizable name? Does the location naturally generate customers, or does the organizer have to create that traffic through marketing?
Those answers tell me far more than the booth fee ever will.
Whenever I’m considering an expensive event, I do a little homework first. I’ve written more about evaluating events elsewhere, but the short version is simple: see the event for yourself if you can and talk to vendors who’ve already invested their time and money. Their perspective is usually the one that matters most.
Eventually, though, every vendor reaches the point where outside opinions become less important than their own records.
The best decisions I’ve made haven’t come from Facebook groups or vendor forums. They’ve come from looking back at previous seasons and asking a simple question: Would I do that event again? Sometimes the answer surprises you. A market that felt busy may not have been particularly profitable. Another that felt slow may have quietly become one of your best events because customers bought higher-priced items instead of making lots of small purchases.
Memory is a poor accountant. Your records aren’t.
That’s one of the biggest reasons I encourage vendors to track every event they work. Record the booth fee, your expenses, your sales, your average transaction, and your overall impression of the day. After a year or two, those numbers become far more valuable than anyone else’s recommendations because they’re based on your products, your prices, and your customers. (Hint: I've built this feature into Canopy Season).
So, are expensive vending events worth it?
Sometimes they’re the best investment you’ll make all year. Sometimes they’re an expensive lesson. Most fall somewhere in between.
The trick is recognizing that you’re not buying booth space. You’re buying an opportunity. The real question isn’t whether the opportunity is expensive. It’s whether the organizer has created an event that gives your business a realistic chance to succeed.
That’s a question no booth fee can answer on its own.
