Unfortunately, this deal has expired 3 minutes ago.
*
1008°
Posted 6 days ago
£1 Max Final Value Fees - Select Accounts
Shared by
notoriouschucky
Joined in 2009
81
2,165
About this deal
This deal is expired. Here are some options that might interest you:
*Maximum fee per sold listing. Applies to final value fees on up to 100 listings. Item must sell within the first listing period. No insertion fees apply. Private sellers only. T&Cs apply.
Terms & Conditions
Specific information about this promotion
What's it all about?
Sounds good, where do I find the promotion and how do I sign up? You can take part in the promotion on eBay.co.uk. In the first instance, we'll send you an email with an RSVP link to the offer. You must opt in to the promotion by clicking on this link before any of your 100 listings start.
Anything else I need to know? You won't pay an insertion fee for each of the 100 listings. Listing upgrade fees will still apply and will be charged according to the eBay fees policy.
The number of listings eligible under this promotion may be less where seller restrictions apply. Click here to learn more about selling allowances.
Who can take part?
Terms & Conditions
Specific information about this promotion
What's it all about?
- Create up to 100 listings on eBay.co.uk in an eligible category
- Listings must start during the promotional period
- Listings can be auction-style or fixed price format
- Pay a maximum of £1 per listing in final value fees if the item sells.
- The promotion start and end dates are included in the email we send to invited sellers.
- Item must sell within the first listing period.
Sounds good, where do I find the promotion and how do I sign up? You can take part in the promotion on eBay.co.uk. In the first instance, we'll send you an email with an RSVP link to the offer. You must opt in to the promotion by clicking on this link before any of your 100 listings start.
Anything else I need to know? You won't pay an insertion fee for each of the 100 listings. Listing upgrade fees will still apply and will be charged according to the eBay fees policy.
The number of listings eligible under this promotion may be less where seller restrictions apply. Click here to learn more about selling allowances.
Who can take part?
- This promotion is open to all registered private sellers who have been invited to take part and have actively opted in. Participation is linked to the seller's account and is not transferable.
- Only sellers whose accounts meet eBay minimum seller performance standards are eligible. Please sign in to My eBay and view your seller standards dashboard to verify whether your account is currently meeting the standards. The seller standards dashboard is available to all sellers here.
- If you registered after 15 March 2011 or haven't listed any items for a while, you may have a listing allowance of 10 items per month or of £650 per month, whichever is reached first. You may be able to increase this allowance by providing additional verification.
- An eligible item previously scheduled to go live during the promotional period will qualify for the promotion only if you have opted in to the promotion before the listing starts.
- If an item that is eligible for the promotion had previously closed without a successful sale and is re-listed during the promotion period, it will form a part of the 100 listings limit of the promotion. You will not receive a refund of your original insertion fee if the item sells.
- Listings do not have to successfully sell during the promotional period to be eligible.
- If an item qualifies for the promotion and when the item sells, the invoice will indicate the fee including the discount. Please note: if the item does not sell the first time and if you relist it after the promotional period or if it is automatically relisted during the promotional period, standard final value fees will be charged according to the eBay fees policy when the relisted item sells.
- Items that are automatically relisted through the Automatic relist function or the Good 'Till Cancelled function will be charged.
- Only single quantity listings are eligible.
- For items listed in 2 or more categories, only the insertion fee for the first category is included. Standard insertion fees will be charged for listing the same item for each additional category, according to the eBay fees policy.
- Free listings in this promotion do not count towards your monthly 1000 free listings.
- Your first listing period may vary and is dependent on the listing format you choose (e.g. – auction-style vs buy-it-now), the duration of the listing you choose and the listing experience you use. The first listing period will be considered to have been ended when the listing you create first renews or relists.
- Business sellers
- Sellers who have been invited to participate, but have not actively opted in to the promotion via the RSVP link shown in the marketing communication.
- All items listed in the Cars, Motorcycles & Vehicles and Property categories. However items listed in the Vehicle Parts & Accessories category are included.
- Items listed in the Classified Ad format.
- Auction-style listings ended early.
- Identical listings that don't comply with our duplicate listings policy.
- Any item listed that doesn't comply with eBay listing policies or prohibited and restricted items policies.
- Any item listed during the promotional period but scheduled to start after the promotional period.
- Listings that are automatically relisted through the Automatic relist function or the Good 'Till Cancelled function during the promotional period.
- Listings that are listed during the promotional period but do not sell and are relisted outside of the promotional period.
- Multi-quantity listings.
- Listing upgrade fees apply and will be charged according to the eBay fees policy.
- PayPal and any other third-party fees still apply.
- Final value fees apply for Second Chance Offers.
- Any attempt to manipulate this promotion, or past promotions will lead to automatic exclusion from participation.
- eBay reserves the right to suspend, change or cancel the promotion at any time, in the event of circumstances arising which, in eBay's opinion, make it necessary for it to do so. eBay reserves the right to add additional terms and conditions for certain parts of this promotion.
- eBay also reserves the right to exclude users on the basis that their seller accounts have fallen below the minimum required seller performance standards. Sellers should confirm eligibility by checking their account status on My eBay.
- The decision of eBay regarding any aspect of this promotion is final and no correspondence will be entered into.
More details at
Community Updates
Edited by a community support team member, 6 days ago
171 Comments
sorted byAnything over £25 then yes it is better than 80%. Below it isn't.
I have put a picture of the chart up that someone once made on HUKDs (edited)
If all you're doing is selling goods online, firms will ONLY pass on data to HMRC automatically if you're selling 30 or more items a year OR have total earnings over the equivalent of €2,000 (currently around £1,700)
I sold a gaming laptop that was used and had no warranty for £700. Three weeks after purchasing it, the buyer messaged me to say that the trackpad keys were sticky and wanted to return it. Knowing how eBay works and that they will ALWAYS side with the buyer, I accepted it. Low and behold when the laptop got back to me, there wasn't an issue with the keys at all. He had basically made it up. So he got to use the laptop probably every day for 3 weeks or more and then had a change of heart about keeping it.
I also recently sold my work laptop, which again was used and out of warranty. The buyer received it and left me nice feedback a day later to say that the item was great and so was my service in general etc. Then two days after that he then suddenly opens up a return case and sends photo's showing the display having multiple lines in it, basically the type you normally see once a laptop has been dropped or bashed. Now, maybe the issue did suddenly occur randomly. It can happen. But isn't that the risk you take buying second hand items? If you want piece of mind of warranty and the seller makes it clear he offers none, go and buy brand new so you can take it up with the manufacturers. So again I'm going to be out of pocket. Regardless of what I say, eBay will force me to refund.
Unless you have money to burn, it's just not worth the hassle. You have to spend an entire 30 days hoping the buyer doesn't break or damage something expensive, in which he will pass the blame on to you and eBay will simply take their word as gospel, or hoping they don't use it for X amount of days and then decide to return it just because they can. (edited)
If you do make a profit on your old stuff then 1) it would be difficult to prove how much you originally paid for that item, making calculating the profit impossible and 2) if you make profit on something you've had for years, I think that would more likely come under Capital Gains Tax, for which there is a much higher threshold.
I believe they are specifically targeting people who buy to sell thus making an income, who then should be paying income tax.
It does however look like they want people who have Sales of more than £1k to do a self assessment regardless of if you are trading or just selling old stuff.
Can you imagine giving an auction house a Vintage Omega Seamaster watch to sell, for them to list it in the catalogue without even mentioning it's a Vintage Omega Seamaster?
(edited)
As a buyer, that is a different story. Probably about 1 in 30ish were people selling me duff stuff.
I thought I read on one of the news articles about this was that HMRC had a whole twenty odd staff set up to deal with this, can't see them making much progress with us ordinary folks. (edited)
"Unfortunately, this promotional offer is not available to you."
Unfortunately, then, eBay, I won't be selling with you until I am!
The rules for declaring to HMRC is you are trading & making a profit over £1k. Simple as that.
I get this for every single one of these 'limited to some account' eBay offers... any ideas why?
I don't get the £1 offer anymore at all after I sold a couple items last year, only 80% + 30p.
Check the 80/70% offers instead. (edited)
But now nothing in the last year.
I’m convinced they have my house bugged. (edited)
Really needed one as i wanted to sell my playstation 5. Anybody know how much they will roughly charge me for selling an item like this for around £400-450?
Thanks