This document summarizes an analysis of Titanic passenger data to determine if higher fares paid resulted in a higher likelihood of survival. The analysis involved: 1) Shuffling survival statuses 300 times and calculating median fares paid, finding the actual difference was larger than would be expected by chance. 2) Repeating the analysis using mean fares which showed a smaller actual difference not as extreme as using medians. 3) Concluding that the amount paid for a Titanic ticket likely affected survival chances, as the actual difference in median fares between survivors and non-survivors was many standard deviations from what would be expected by chance.