31-03-2025 10:45 AM
AS OF 15TH APRIL MY DAYS AS A PRIVATE EBAY SELLER WILL STOP AFTER 19 YEARS.
I AM FED UP OF THE GREED OF EBAY AND I HOPE OTHER EBAY SELLERS DECIDE TO NO LONGER LET THE EBAY CONTROL FREAKS HAVE THIS MUCH CONTROL OVER PRIVATE SELLERS.
19-10-2025 1:11 AM
yes because it's even put me off buying on ebay if postage is inflated by SD & my own sales have tanked- 3 years ago had 20-30 orders per month now I'm lucky to get a tenth of that so it's not even worth becoming a business seller except to avoid SD
19-10-2025 1:13 AM
And business sellers will suffer because they need some private sellers to buy their stuff
19-10-2025 1:16 AM
You could got to medium parcel SD was only charging just over £5
19-10-2025 1:18 AM
Postcards are under 100g so should be exempt from simple delivery
19-10-2025 1:21 AM
I have some pre WW2 postcards which I tried to sell on ebay years ago but to no avail. I could sell as a joblot if people were interested. I don't like wasting time on ebay listing these days I've simply lost the motivation
19-10-2025 10:27 AM
I was just looking at another well known ecommerce site. They have recently taken advantage of the dissatisfaction at ebay by opening more and more new categories. I looked at the arts and crafts category and some of the big names in arts & crafts are selling on there - Hobbycraft, The Works, The Range, Winsor & Newton (brand leader in artists paints) etc. I also noticed B&M, Dulux, Johnstone's Paint etc.
It's unbelievably incompetent for a company like ebay to have engineered a situation where the backlash to SD and possibly other recent changes has given competitors the opportunity to develop from a single product range to a serious competitor for many (and probably ultimately all) ebay's categories. Heads should roll.
19-10-2025 10:34 AM
On the Business Sellers board, there are business sellers saying that sales on here are virtually non-existent, whilst their sales on other platforms are holding up, so they are winding down their shops on here and defecting to other sites. No doubt the latest changes to the promotional fees have played a part in their decision, but I'm sure SD has played a part as well - the fact that many private sellers have stopped selling means that many have stopped buying as well.
It's insane that ebay is doing nothing to stop the rot.
19-10-2025 10:55 AM - edited 19-10-2025 10:56 AM
Ebay have a cop out for paying compensation if they deem the item was inadequately packed.
I was seaching the terms under SD for packing items. Wow the packaging would cost sellers a fortune and are very very specific.
These tips are general guidelines. We can’t be held responsible if your item is damaged in transit.
19-10-2025 11:24 AM
moonlight-rhapsody wrote: I was just looking at another well known ecommerce site. They have recently taken advantage of the dissatisfaction at ebay by opening more and more new categories. I looked at the arts and crafts category and some of the big names in arts & crafts are selling on there...
Thanks for the info.
That's canny of that other platform as it's in time for the run up to Christmas, when a lot of crafters are buying materials to make cards and gifts. And the set-up work would've been mainly organisational.
I personally know eBay's lost buyers in the past 18 months. A social group (online & offline) that I'm part of (mentioned elsewhere here) has 72, of whom 25-40 are active, depending. Among other things we share a lot of shopping tips, and recently I found out that no one visits eBay any more - it's like it's gone out of fashion since BPF. I'm the only person left who uses eBay, but not much nowadays. It's sad for eBay. It's sad for me as I've lost a (rare) topic of conversation. Thanks for the info, moonlight-rhapsody, I'll be passing it on!
19-10-2025 11:27 AM
Spose we have to take pictures of every side of the parcel, picture of the label attached, pictures with a ruler beside every side of the parcel and a picture on a set of weighing scales, and by ebay packaging as well.
19-10-2025 12:02 PM
'Ebay have a cop out for paying compensation if they deem the item was inadequately packed.'
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That doesn't suprise me one little bit.
But, who gets to check?
Once the item is unpacked (which it'd have to be to find out it was broken...) how on earth can a third party see how it was originally packaged?
Unless it was obviously a bone-china tea service posted in a plastic bag, it would all seem rather difficult to prove.
19-10-2025 12:19 PM
this is why I used a much larger box to pack an item & will photo it before sending. I virtually stopped sending large items on ebay a while ago as it was much easier to try to sell on FB marketplace first & people mainly picked items up. They still wanted some things sending & would pay by bank transfer but sadly FB has got unreliable - my music K/board hadn't sold for near 4 months despite many msgs of interest so I listed it on here & it sold within hours. I even worked out the correct SD postage size (after a lot of digging on ebay)
I don't send much so have time to photo the box but imagine doing that for many orders in which case people would have to go to business seller where you order your own postage
19-10-2025 12:28 PM
@dunstun365 wrote:You could got to medium parcel SD was only charging just over £5
Yesterday, I was charged medium parcel rates (£5.15) for something that could have gone £3.99 via InPost (Yodel), and how it was packaged, would have been fine as a small parcel in width! Didn't check the length but if that was in too, then I've been well and truly stitched up!