Target Center tickets: transfer rules, entry tips, and how to buy safely
Target Center tickets: transfer rules, entry tips, and how to buy safely
A calm, practical Target Center guide: official-first buying, mobile ticket setup, small-bag rules, no re-entry, parking and skyway entry realities, and the checks that matter before you commit to resale.
Quick answer
- Start official: begin with the official Target Center event page and follow the official ticket link.
- Expect mobile tickets: Target Center uses AXS or Ticketmaster depending on the event, and the venue says you should refresh the correct app before arriving.
- If it is sold out: compare verified resale totals after fees and confirm delivery method before you buy.
- Travel light: Target Center says permitted bags are limited to bags no larger than 5" x 9", plus diaper bags and medical bags subject to search.
- Do not plan on stepping back outside: Target Center has a no re-entry policy for events.
Before you lock anything in, keep the core playbooks that matter most for this venue close by:
- Ticket scams checklist
- Sold out tickets playbook
- Last-minute tickets guide
- Ticket transfer not available
If you are comparing options more broadly, start with Minneapolis tickets.
Target Center tickets: the calm venue guide
Target Center is the kind of venue where buyers usually know the event matters, but they underestimate the process details.
That is where avoidable mistakes happen.
The venue is in downtown Minneapolis, handles major sports and touring events, uses mobile ticketing through more than one ticketing platform, limits bag size tightly, and does not allow re-entry. None of that is complicated on its own. The trouble starts when buyers assume they can figure it all out at the curb.
This page is the practical checklist to avoid that.
Step 1: Buy official first
When people search for Target Center tickets, they quickly run into a mix of official pages, resale marketplaces, broker-style listings, and search results that make everything look equally legitimate.
It is not.
Your safest order is still the same:
- start on the official event page
- follow the official ticket link
- use verified resale only if the official route is no longer workable
For the cleanest starting point, use the official Target Center event page. That gives you the venue calendar and event pages instead of forcing you to guess which listing is primary and which is resale.
If the page you are considering feels vague about delivery, heavy on pressure, or unclear about fees and support, reset with the ticket scams checklist.
Step 2: Mobile ticket setup matters more than buyers expect
Target Center says mobile delivery is standard, but the app depends on the event. Some events use AXS Mobile ID, while Ticketmaster Mobile Entry is used on a show-by-show basis. The venue also tells guests to refresh the correct app before arriving.
That matters because buyers often assume every Target Center event works exactly the same way.
Not always.
Before event day, make sure you can:
- confirm whether your event uses AXS or Ticketmaster
- sign into the correct account on your phone
- open the live ticket before you leave
- refresh the app if needed
- make sure everyone in your group has a workable ticket plan
If you are buying resale, the real question is not just whether a ticket exists. The real question is whether it will reach you in the correct app, in time, under the rules of your specific event. If that part feels uncertain, read ticket transfer not available before paying.
Step 3: If it is sold out, use verified resale carefully
Target Center can tighten quickly for playoff dates, major arena tours, one-night-only appearances, and events that attract a broader regional crowd.
If the official route is gone, verified resale can be a workable Plan B, but only if you check the details that affect actual entry:
- total price after fees
- delivery method
- delivery deadline
- refund or replacement terms
- whether the listing clearly explains how the ticket will reach you
If you are buying close to showtime, combine that with the last-minute tickets guide. If the event is already unavailable through official channels, move through the sold out tickets playbook before you panic-buy.
Step 4: Bag policy, strollers, and what buyers get wrong here
Target Center’s bag policy is stricter than many casual buyers expect.
According to the venue’s Know Before You Go page and Arena Policies & FAQ, permitted items include bags no larger than 5" x 9", plus diaper bags and medical bags subject to search. Strollers are not permitted inside.
The practical takeaway is simple:
- do not bring a standard purse or larger everyday bag unless you have checked the size carefully
- expect tight screening rules even if your event feels casual
- do not assume you can carry extra items “just in case” without slowing yourself down
- if you are bringing a child or have medical needs, sort those details before arrival
This is one of those venues where traveling light is not optional advice. It is part of getting in smoothly.
Step 5: Entrances, no re-entry, and day-of flow
Target Center says the main gate entrance is on skyway level, with additional entry points in the Life Time Lobby on 1st Avenue and via the south skyway near Ramp A. Depending on the event, floor-ticket holders may need to enter through the lobby.
The venue also says there is no re-entry for events. Once you leave the building, you will not be permitted to return.
So before you go inside, make sure:
- the right person has the right ticket on the right phone
- your phone is charged
- your bag situation is already settled
- your group knows which entrance to use
- you have handled anything you would otherwise need to step back outside for
A venue like this rewards simple preparation and punishes improvising after you reach the doors.
Step 6: Parking, skyways, and downtown Minneapolis friction
Target Center is downtown, which means your arrival plan matters.
The official Getting Here page and Parking page say the venue is connected by skyway to nearby parking, including Ramps A and B, and recommends booking parking in advance through SpotHero.
The practical rule is this:
- if you are driving, reserve parking in advance
- if you are planning to use the skyway, confirm your route and timing before event night
- if accessibility matters, note that the venue points guests needing elevator access toward Ramp A or B and provides an ADA drop-off and pick-up location near 1st Ave and 6th St
- if you are arriving late, do not assume downtown traffic and arena entry will sort themselves out
This is not a venue where a vague parking plan stays harmless once event traffic starts stacking.
Step 7: Accessibility and event-specific differences
Target Center’s policies also make it clear that event-specific rules can vary.
The venue’s Arena Policies & FAQ notes accessibility support, interpreter seating contact details, and sensory-room availability. If accessibility matters for anyone in your group, confirm the details before event night instead of trying to solve them at the concourse.
That matters because arena logistics often seem simple until one accommodation need changes the plan.
Step 8: Refunds, presales, and payment realities
Target Center creates two familiar buyer traps.
The first is assuming presale access guarantees a good outcome.
The second is assuming a large arena venue will be flexible if your plans change.
Neither is a safe assumption.
If you are trying to get in early, read ticket presales explained before the next onsale. If flexibility matters to you, read event ticket refunds before you buy.
The venue’s FAQ says Target Center does not offer refunds of any kind. That is exactly why refund policy should be treated as a before-you-buy issue.
Day-of checklist for Target Center
Use this quick checklist before you leave:
- confirm whether your event uses AXS or Ticketmaster
- open your ticket before traveling
- refresh the correct app before arrival
- charge your phone or bring a battery pack
- travel light and stay within the bag-size rules
- reserve parking early or confirm your skyway route in advance
- give yourself time for downtown traffic, entry lines, and security
Related guides
Final word
Buying Target Center tickets goes more smoothly when you keep the process calm: official first, verified resale only when necessary, app access confirmed before arrival, bags kept small, and your entry and parking plan solved before the rush.
The biggest mistakes here are usually not dramatic. They are the kind that feel small until they stack together: the wrong ticketing app, a bag that does not meet policy, an assumption that re-entry will be allowed, or a parking plan that falls apart too close to doors.
Avoid those, and Target Center gets much simpler.
Next step: if your event is already tight or sold out, start with the sold out tickets playbook and keep the last-minute tickets guide open as your backup plan.