Festival tokens in court - Parookaville dances away from the consumer protectors!

Published on: May 05, 2025Categories: LegalReading time: 2 min.
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Kilian Floß writes blog articles on legal and current topics for the Love & Law Blog.

Image source: Instagram @parookaville

Cash check on the dancefloor: Parookaville wins in court

Parookaville - the electro festival in Weeze that transports tens of thousands of fans into a parallel world of beats, bass and flashing lights every year - is not only in the spotlight musically, but now also legally. And with a clear victory: the Düsseldorf Higher Regional Court has dismissed a lawsuit brought against the festival by a consumer protection association.

Specifically, it was about the so-called token system, i.e. cashless payment on site. The accusation: non-transparent, impractical and unfair - especially because unused tokens could only be exchanged for up to 50 euros and only during the festival. But the court took a completely different view.

Token? No problem, says the OLG Düsseldorf

The ruling makes it clear: Parookaville is an annual, independent event - comparable to folk festivals where tokens are also used for payment. Visitors are sufficiently informed that the tokens are only valid at the respective event. Although it is possible to exchange them back, this is limited to 50 euros for reasons of counterfeit protection - and according to the festival operators, more than 35 euros are rarely exchanged back anyway.

The court does not see this as a violation of consumer rights. A complete return of the tokens after the festival would mean too much effort for all sides - and, according to the judge, is also not to be expected if you deal with the system beforehand.

A ruling with a signal effect for the entire festival scene?

Parookaville is not the only festival that has had to deal with such accusations. Other organizers have also been criticized because their cash alternatives are considered too intransparent or customer-unfriendly. However, Parookaville was the first festival to be proven right in court.

Although the ruling is not yet legally binding and an appeal to the Federal Court of Justice remains possible, the legal tailwind for the festival industry is clearly noticeable.

And ironically, the ruling loses some of its significance with a view to the future: Parookaville is planning to introduce a new, more modern payment system in 2025 anyway - completely cashless, probably via app or wristband. The classic token should soon be history anyway.

Freedom, fairness - and festival!

Honestly, we understand the annoyance about tokens, queues and redemption limits. But we also understand the organizers. A festival is not a supermarket outlet - it's a temporary state of emergency. Anyone who parties there knows (or should know) how the game works.

The ruling shows that consumer protection is important - but with moderation and a sense of reality. Not every restriction is automatically a rip-off. Sometimes it is simply necessary for organizational reasons, especially at huge events with tens of thousands of visitors.

Parookaville made a clever argument - and deserved to win. If you want to party, you should inform yourself beforehand. And those who dance with tokens should know: In the end, it's the beat that counts, not the receipt.

Do you have legal questions about the token system at festivals? Book a consultation now and protect your rights as a consumer!

At a fixed price of 119 EURO (gross)