Amazon / Sports / KICK IT TICKETS
REVIEW
Kick It Tickets is a thin resale aggregator with a sharper name than catalogue.
A Fire-tablet ticketing app that promises last-minute sports seats and mostly delivers a search box pointed at the same secondary-market inventory you can find anywhere else.
BY THE APP COMRADE DESK · MAY 11, 2026 · 3 MIN READ
Kick It Tickets
PHINEAS WEB INC.
OUR SCORE
6.4
AMAZON
★ 5.0
PRICE
Free
The ticket-resale market is mature enough that a new entrant needs more than a competent search box to matter. Kick It Tickets, distributed through the Amazon Appstore for Fire tablets, has the competent search box and not much else.
That isn’t a fatal flaw. The Fire OS app marketplace is thin enough that “competent and present” beats “great and absent,” and a sports fan with a Fire HD on the couch will reach for whatever loads first when a friend texts about same-day seats. Kick It Tickets loads first because it loads at all.
What’s missing is a reason to come back after the first transaction — a price guarantee, an exclusive listing, a fan-club tie-in, anything that pulls a buyer out of the StubHub habit. Without one of those, this is a serviceable backup with a sharper name than catalogue.
Kick It Tickets isn't selling tickets so much as renting you a window into other people's listings.
FEATURES
Kick It Tickets is a sports-focused ticket marketplace wrapped for the Amazon Fire ecosystem. The catalogue spans NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL, MLS, college football, NASCAR, and the larger boxing and UFC cards. Browse is by league, team, or venue; each event view shows an interactive seat map with section-level pricing, a row of filters for quantity and price band, and a checkout flow that takes card details inside the app.
The inventory is not first-party. Listings come from the broader secondary-market supply chain — the same pool feeding StubHub, Vivid Seats, and the dozen smaller resellers that licence the data. Prices include a service fee disclosed late in checkout. Mobile tickets arrive as a PDF emailed to the account on file, with no in-app wallet and no transfer to Apple or Google Wallet from the Fire build.
Notifications are basic — a watchlist will email when a tracked event's lowest price drops past a threshold, but there is no push channel on Fire OS and no SMS option.
MISSION ACCOMPLISHED
Search is fast and the seat-map renderer is responsive on a five-year-old Fire HD 10, which is more than can be said for several of the larger ticket apps when run on the same hardware. The team-first browse structure suits the audience — most Fire tablet ticket buyers know which team they are buying for, not which venue — and the filters land where a sports fan would expect them.
Pricing is at least visible in the seat map rather than hidden behind a tap-through, which makes side-by-side comparison with a competitor app in another tab faster than the alternatives.
ROOM TO IMPROVE
The fee disclosure is the standard secondary-market sleight of hand — a $90 ticket becomes $118 at the final screen. That is the industry norm, not a Kick It-specific sin, but the app does nothing to differentiate itself on transparency, and a smaller player has more to gain from leading on price honesty than a market leader does.
Beyond pricing, the app is thin. There is no loyalty programme, no exclusive inventory, no buyer protection language that meaningfully exceeds what a card chargeback already provides, and no obvious reason to choose it over a browser tab pointed at a larger marketplace. The Fire-only distribution is a constraint, not a feature.
CONCLUSION
Kick It Tickets is worth installing if you already shop on a Fire tablet and want a second price source open while you compare. It is not worth installing as your default. The bones are competent — search works, the seat map is legible, checkout completes — but nothing here pulls a buyer away from the marketplace they already trust.