why EBay taking fees on postal charges which are not actually made due to combined postage deal

I sell individual Lego models at low prices and the majority of buyers tend to buy multiple items as I advertise combined postal charges.  As an example my postal charge is £1.15 per item, but often I can sell 6 to 8 cheaper items and put all into same envelope and still charge total of £1.15.   However as each item was sold separately 8 items would attract a total postal charge of £9.20.before I adjust via the invoice.  This is the amount E Bay levy their fees on,  so 92p.  However the customer pays just £1.15 in total so I am overcharged on fees week in and week out and I do sell a lot of combined items.   If this a fair and/or correct practice ?

 

   Thanks              Brian

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You're actually underpaying on fees, Brian, as you're illegally trading on a private account and therefore defrauding Ebay of listing fees. Anyone who makes, grows, refurbishes, or buys in (new or used) items to sell, is a business and must be registered as such. Not only an Ebay requirement, but the law. For confirmation, go to Ebay's Seller Centre (link at foot of any page). For full information, go to the government's website. And note that there is no such as a 'hobby seller' in this country, and how much or how little you sell or make is totally irrelevant.

 

Note too that consumer law states that a buyer can return an item to an illegally-trading seller for any reason at all, and in any condition at all, for a full refund of the whole of their original payement, for up to 1 full year and 30 days. And the trader has to pay their return costs too if they want the item back. The law doesn't reward those who break it.

 

You've been extremely fortunate not to have been caught by now, so I'd advise you to upgrade your account as a matter of urgency, before you find yourself in hot water with Ebay and Trading Standards.

 

@jasonsdad