5 Tips for Selling LEGO on eBay
Category: Selling
By BrickBucks
Five tactics that consistently lift eBay LEGO realized prices — pricing, format, photos, shipping, and feedback.
eBay is the largest LEGO selling platform by raw audience size and the fastest path to liquidity on sealed and retired sets. It's also a platform where small tactical choices materially affect realized prices. Here are five tips that consistently lift eBay LEGO outcomes.
1. Price off "Sold" listings, never "Active" listings
This is the single most important habit in eBay selling. Every category has wishful-thinking sellers asking 2× market price. Their listings sit forever and distort the visible pricing. Use eBay's "Sold Items" filter (left sidebar after a search) to see what actually transacted in the last 60-90 days. That's your realistic price band. Aim for the middle of the sold range for a normal-velocity listing or the top of the range with Best Offer enabled if you're patient.
2. Use "Buy It Now + Best Offer" for sealed sets, auctions for hot collectibles
- Buy It Now + Best Offer: the default for sealed retired sets. You set a fair Buy It Now price, enable Best Offer with an automatic acceptance threshold (e.g., 90% of asking), and let buyers self-segment between immediate-purchase and negotiators.
- 7-day auction starting at $0.99: only for genuinely hot collectibles where competitive bidding will lift the final price. UCS Star Wars flagships, Modulars, and recently-discovered rare items can outperform Buy It Now in auction format. For everything else, auctions risk ending at a price below what a patient Buy It Now seller would have realized.
3. Photograph the box honestly
Box condition matters enormously to sealed-set buyers. A perfect-corner sealed box can sell for 30-50% more than a heavily creased one. Photograph:
- All six sides of the box (top, bottom, all four sides).
- Close-ups of any creases, dents, tears, or color fading.
- The factory seal (LEGO uses adhesive tape seals; show them intact).
- The bottom of the box and any "Made in" markings (helps with authenticity).
Hiding box damage doesn't avoid problems; it generates "item not as described" returns that cost you money and reputation.
4. Get shipping right (it's the silent killer)
eBay LEGO buyers cancel for two reasons: surprise shipping costs and shipping damage. To avoid both:
- Use calculated shipping with your real zip code so distant buyers see accurate pricing. Fixed shipping kills cross-country buyers.
- Always offer USPS Priority Mail as the default. It's reliable, includes tracking, and includes $100 of insurance.
- For sets over $200, add signature confirmation ($3-$4) to protect against porch-piracy claims.
- Use double-wall corrugated boxes with bubble wrap on all six sides for any sealed set worth $100+. A box-within-a-box approach is standard for $500+ sets.
- Add tracking immediately after shipping. eBay's Late Shipment Rate metric is one of the top drivers of seller demotion.
5. Build feedback velocity — especially in your first 50 sales
eBay's algorithm heavily weights seller feedback count and percentage. A seller with 5 ratings looks risky; one with 50 looks established. Strategies:
- Ship within 24 hours of payment for the first 50 orders. Speed begets positive feedback.
- Include a printed thank-you note politely requesting feedback if the buyer's happy. Most buyers leave nothing unless asked.
- Solve any problem with a refund first, then negotiate. A $20 partial refund on a $100 sale is cheaper than the lifetime impact of one negative feedback.
- List a low-risk $5-$15 item early on to generate a few quick positive ratings before listing the big-ticket items.
The eBay fee reality
Plan for ~14% to leave your pocket on every sale: 13% final value fee (Toys & Games) + ~1% payment processing buffer. A $200 sealed set nets you ~$172 before shipping costs. Factor that into your pricing.
For platform comparisons, see Bricklink vs eBay and where to sell LEGO.