16-04-2025 10:15 AM
I list a few things on ebay occasionally, but this new simple delivery is just rubbish for sellers. It assumes that ebay actually know the size and weight of items And that everyone can easily get to Evri or other courier services easily. Why did they have to stop the seller from deciding how to post items? Put me right off bothering to use Ebay.
Solved! Go to Solution.
13-10-2025 5:45 PM
@podlingsmum2007 wrote:I couldn't send it at the post office as I wasn't given a QR code as I had booked collection. I managed to cancel the collection beforehand so they aren't coming with the label. I don't have a printer so I asked customer service. They said it's not possible for me to cancel a collection and wanted to see the email confirmation that it was cancelled. They won't supply a QR code. They said to go to a Xerox store to print it 🤔 or pay 30p to book collection again. What is Xerox as I've never heard of it? Far from simple! They said the only other thing is to cancel the sale and get the buyer to hopefully buy it again. All this rigmarole to make money on labels for ebay.
I'd be making note of the delivery details, paying my own postage to get it to the customer (via whatever method I'd choose) then just get the Simple Delivery label refunded. Then never use Simple Delivery again, as it's more farcical than useful.
13-10-2025 6:11 PM
13-10-2025 8:17 PM
I would guess by Xerox store they mean a print shop, which in real terms means anywhere you could print the shipping label (if you've only cancelled the collection not the label itself). You could try e.g. at a library, a photo shop (or anywhere with a printer that looks helpful and not busy!)
13-10-2025 9:31 PM
I know its pointless telling you but eBay covers you upto £750 so buying a special delivery is a waste of money, but you do you though.
13-10-2025 10:31 PM
13-10-2025 11:48 PM
@pegr-834437 wrote:I know its pointless telling you but eBay covers you upto £750 so buying a special delivery is a waste of money, but you do you though.
I would personally have more confidence in Royal Mail Special Delivery than I would eBay correcting things if they went wrong with a pre-paid label. Remember that the buyer has to open a case saying there was an issue with the delivery, yet if it gets damaged in transit they might instead say "doesn't work or is defective", or "doesn't match description or photos" - both of those are not covered by seller protections.
14-10-2025 2:36 AM
I had not charged for postage so I cancelled the order. Hopefully the buyer will choose to buy it again. It is a shame there isn't an option to cancel for the reason 'problem with un-simple delivery label'
14-10-2025 10:35 AM
14-10-2025 11:23 AM
Yeah I agree with you its a risk, customer services are probably a bit (a lot) better with Royal Mail. I'm not 100% sure but with Royal Mail do you not need proof of how much it was worth so the chances of a private seller being able to give a receipt for an old book (looking at the sellers items) I'd imagine is pretty hard as who keeps receipts for a book they just wanted to read/collect and not to sell on kind of thing. Both have risks, lets just hope the seller has no issues and its delivered and the buyer enjoys it.
14-10-2025 11:59 AM
16-10-2025 12:15 AM
@pegr-834437 wrote:I know its pointless telling you but eBay covers you upto £750 so buying a special delivery is a waste of money, but you do you though.
Would you trust that eBay would actually pay up on a lost item? I certainly wouldn't, and even more so if the item arrived damaged and the buyer opened INAD instead of Arrived Damaged (first one is seller's fault, second one is covered under SD). Would the buyer know which case to open? Probably not!
It would be better to just charge the buyer (or pay up yourself) Special Delivery via Custom Postage and then make a claim yourself to Royal Mail in the event of loss or damage...if Custom delivery was even a thing nowadays.
16-10-2025 12:18 AM
@pegr-834437 wrote:Yeah I agree with you its a risk, customer services are probably a bit (a lot) better with Royal Mail. I'm not 100% sure but with Royal Mail do you not need proof of how much it was worth so the chances of a private seller being able to give a receipt for an old book (looking at the sellers items) I'd imagine is pretty hard as who keeps receipts for a book they just wanted to read/collect and not to sell on kind of thing. Both have risks, lets just hope the seller has no issues and its delivered and the buyer enjoys it.
To show how much the item was worth you would take a screenshot of the order details page on eBay - that is proof of what the item was valued at when it was shipped out.
When I had to claim off Royal Mail a while ago (as in a few years ago) they took the order details page for the item as the value of it.
Fort an expensive item I'd rather have the protection of extra insurance, compared to just hoping for the best and then having inadequate cover if something did go wrong (or no cover at all if it arrives damaged and the buyer just opens INAD or Defective instead of Damaged).