Eventbrite export → dashboard

Your orders, finally counted.

Eventbrite's orders report is one row per buyer. Export it, drop the CSV here, and watch sales trend over time while ticket types and payment methods become clickable breakdowns — with Total Paid and Quantity summed automatically.

01 · How it works

Export, drop, done.

An orders export is a sales ledger waiting to be read. The Order Date column drives the trend; Total Paid and Quantity sum up; every ticket type and payment method becomes a filter against the rest.

i. export

Export your orders

In Eventbrite: Manage event → Orders → Export → CSV (all attendees / orders).

ii. detect

Tickets become breakdowns

Order Date drives the sales trend; Total Paid and Quantity read as numbers; Ticket Type and Payment Type become clickable categories.

iii. read

Volume, mix, revenue

See tickets sold per day, revenue by ticket type, and the payment-method split — click any slice to filter every other chart.

02 · The views

The box-office view Eventbrite won't chart.

What sold, when it sold, and where the money actually came from.

  • 01

    Sales curve

    Orders plotted over time show your pre-sale spike, the mid-cycle lull, and the door rush before the event.

  • 02

    Ticket-type mix

    General vs VIP vs Early Bird — see which tiers carry the volume and which carry the revenue.

  • 03

    Revenue, summed

    Total Paid and Quantity total automatically, so a single drop tells you gross take and tickets moved.

  • 04

    Buyer privacy

    Attendee names and emails stay in your browser — nothing is uploaded anywhere.

"Saw it in one chart: Early Bird sold out in three days but VIP drove half the revenue. Next event, more VIP."
— an event organizer
03 · FAQ

Eventbrite dashboard questions.

Which Eventbrite export works?
The orders / attendees CSV from Manage event → Orders → Export. Any file with Order Date, Ticket Type, Quantity and Total Paid builds the full dashboard; extra columns add more breakdowns.
Yes — Total Paid is detected as a number and summed across orders, and you can sum by Ticket Type or Payment Type by clicking a slice.
No — the file is parsed entirely in your browser. To share a screenshot, anonymize the Email column first with the CSV anonymizer.
Yes — Ticket Type becomes a breakdown; click a tier and revenue, quantity and the date trend recompute for just that tier.
Yes — if the export includes an Event Name column it becomes a breakdown automatically, so you can compare events side by side.