As has been noted previously during October eBay UK removed their Final Value Fees on most items for sellers, however those who thought this sounded too good to be true appear to have been proven right.
From the 4th Feb eBay are introducing a compulsory ‘Buyers Protection Fee’ This means that anyone buying from the eBay.co.uk site will now have to pay extra for the privilege.
According to the info released today the ‘Buyer Protection Fee’ will be calculated as:
Also, sellers are going to see more changes as any funds you receive for items sold will now only become available to be withdrawn 2 calendar days after confirmation of a successful delivery has been received from whichever tracked shipping service is used.
How all these changes affects buying and selling obviously remains to be seen, however my immediate thought as someone who certainly buys more than they sell is that I’m going to be buying fewer items (or at least paying less)
Consequently this will probably also lead to deflation in final sales prices on higher priced items and buyers are going to be receiving less for their items. For example: if your overall budget is £500 you won’t be willing to pay the extra £16.75 and will probably offer somewhere around £485.
From the 4th Feb eBay are introducing a compulsory ‘Buyers Protection Fee’ This means that anyone buying from the eBay.co.uk site will now have to pay extra for the privilege.
According to the info released today the ‘Buyer Protection Fee’ will be calculated as:
- A flat fee of £0.75 per item, and
- 4% of the item price up to £300, and
- 2% of any portion of the item price from £300 to £4,000
Also, sellers are going to see more changes as any funds you receive for items sold will now only become available to be withdrawn 2 calendar days after confirmation of a successful delivery has been received from whichever tracked shipping service is used.
How all these changes affects buying and selling obviously remains to be seen, however my immediate thought as someone who certainly buys more than they sell is that I’m going to be buying fewer items (or at least paying less)
Consequently this will probably also lead to deflation in final sales prices on higher priced items and buyers are going to be receiving less for their items. For example: if your overall budget is £500 you won’t be willing to pay the extra £16.75 and will probably offer somewhere around £485.