LAGIC
Lead Audience Growth Intelligence Computing
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Facebook Events Scraper — Facebook | Lagic

Built For

Extract detailed data from Facebook Events for market research and lead generation.

Curated by Lagic·Verified working

Configure Agent

Search you want to use to discover new events. You can provide search for topics, such as 'Sport', or for places, such as 'New York', or combine them 'Sport New York'.

URLs to start with. You can provide URLs of event details here or search/explore URLs, e.g. '' or '' or '' or '

Maximum number of events you want to extract data for. If you leave this field empty, the number of events won't be limited.

Results to deliver

1,000 credits

This agent actively searches live listings — results may vary. You are only charged for what is delivered, up to this number.

Lagic Proxy

Country auto-rotated. Need a specific region? Contact support.

Pricing

10 credits per result
✓ 30 free credits on signup✓ Refund if 0 results✓ No card required

Sample Data Preview

Event Name, Description, and CategoryStart and End Dates/Times (UTC)Event Status (e.g., Canceled, Past Event, Online)Physical Address and Location Details for In-Person EventsCounts of Users Going and InterestedOrganizer Name, Profile URL, and Verification Status
Sample Text...2026-04-05Value...Value...358https://...
Sample Text...2026-04-05Value...Value...107https://...
..................
Exports as:CSVXLSXJSON

Overview

Scrape public Facebook Events by search term or URL to get attendee counts, organizer details, locations, and descriptions. Use the data to analyze local trends or find partnership opportunities.

This tool extracts structured data from public Facebook Events pages. It's designed for event promoters, local marketers, sales teams, and researchers who need to gather information about events without manual data entry. You can find events in two ways: by providing search terms (like 'tech meetups in San Francisco') or by supplying a list of direct URLs to specific event pages or search results pages. The tool then visits these pages and pulls down the available details for each event. ### What You Get The output includes the event's name, full description, start and end times, and location data, including a physical address for in-person events. You'll also get key engagement metrics like the number of people marked as 'Going' and 'Interested.' Crucially, it identifies the event organizers, providing their name, profile URL, and whether their account is verified, which is useful for outreach and partnership building. This data is valuable for a few reasons. Event service providers (like caterers, A/V companies, or security firms) can use it to build a targeted list of upcoming events to pitch their services to. Marketers can analyze competitor events to understand their positioning, attendance, and promotional strategy. Local businesses can discover sponsorship or collaboration opportunities at community gatherings.

Key Capabilities

  • Event Name, Description, and Category
  • Start and End Dates/Times (UTC)
  • Event Status (e.g., Canceled, Past Event, Online)
  • Physical Address and Location Details for In-Person Events
  • Counts of Users Going and Interested
  • Organizer Name, Profile URL, and Verification Status
  • Links to External Websites (e.g., for tickets)
  • Event Cover Image and Video URLs
  • Indication of Paid Content or Ticketing Information
  • Competitor Event Analysis: An event promotion company scrapes all competing events in their city to analyze ticket pricing, attendance, and venue choices.
  • Lead Generation for Event Services: A catering business extracts upcoming corporate events to build a targeted sales outreach list.
  • Market Research for Venues: A concert hall analyzes the types of events happening in their area to identify gaps in the market.
  • Sponsorship Opportunity Discovery: A local brand finds community festivals and charity functions to sponsor by searching for relevant keywords.
  • Content Creation for Local Media: A journalist or blogger compiles a 'What's On This Weekend' guide by scraping all public events in their region.
  • Tourism and Hospitality Planning: A city's tourism board monitors major upcoming events to forecast hotel and restaurant demand.

Field Dictionary

How To Run This Extractor

1

Enter search terms like 'live music in Austin' into the 'Search' field.

2

Alternatively, paste specific Facebook Event URLs or search page URLs into the 'direct URLs' field.

3

Set the maximum number of events you want to extract, or leave it blank for no limit.

4

Run the tool to begin the extraction process.

5

Once the run is complete, download the collected event data as a CSV, Excel, or JSON file.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to know how to code?
No, this tool is operated through a user interface. No coding is required.
In what format can I get the data?
Is it legal to scrape Facebook Events?
How many events can I scrape?
Can I use this for client work?
Can I scrape events from a specific city or for a certain topic?
Does this tool extract the names of people attending an event?
How is this different from just searching on Facebook?
Can I schedule this tool to run automatically?
How fresh is the data?
How much will it cost to run?