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Miami Beach Resort Offers $500,000 Ticket for Justin Bieber’s New Year’s Eve Concert

| Nov 07, 2016 04:15 AM EST

V Festival At Hylands Park - Day 1

Cash-rich fans of Canadian singer Justin Bieber may consider blowing a lot of money to end 2016 and begin 2017. A Miami Beach resort is organizing a yearend package that would cost $500,000.

The package includes tickets to Bieber’s “New Year’s Eve VIP experience” concert at Fountainbleau in Florida, five nights’ accommodation at the resort’s hotel for up to 10 guests and a stocked, private pool cabana, Sydney Morning Herald reported.

It also includes the exclusive use of supercars such as the Lamborghini Aventador Roadster, Rolls Royce Phantom or Ferrari 488 Spider. At the concert, the ticket holder has a stage-front table. After Bieber’s concert, the guests is whisked off to a nearby nightclub.

The gig assures the guests of personal access to a DJ booth which watching Skrillex perform and drinking a 15-liter bottle of premium champagne. The deal’s last part is a trip back to the hotel aboard a private yacht.

On the first day of 2017, the guests has a detox spa, unlimited Bloody Marys and upload of their “best night ever” to Facebook. Fountainbleau reminds buyers of the package that all sales are final and the half a million dollars would not be refunded in case another family event that crops up which the purchaser could not say “no.”

But the package excludes hanging out with Bieber who, in March, cancelled all future meet-and-greets with fans because such events leave him feeling “mentally and emotionally exhausted to the point of depression.”

Chances are Glasgow fans of Bieber would not purchase the Fountainbleau package since they have already been fleeced by up to £400 million ($496 million) a year in Scotland through ticket scalpers. The touts’ recent targets were fans who watch Bieber’s Hydro show since one-third of the tickets were snapped by the scalpers, earning them more than £1 million ($1.2 million) in just three days, purchased by desperate fans who were charged up to 10 times the original ticket price at the singer’s Clydeside show, Glasgow Live reported.

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