12-24-2025 02:43 AM - edited 12-24-2025 02:44 AM
12-24-2025 04:11 AM - edited 12-24-2025 04:15 AM
Down approx 30 sales year to year. Substanially higher shipping costs (according to the comparisons). Majority of sales were US in 2024. In 2025 mostly Canadian because of limited access to US market from end of August. Intl sales were about the same from year to year. Very minimal compared to the distant past. Possibly very likely VAT collection related.
As a side observation as promoted suggested rates went up and I stayed firm the number of promoted sales dropped. Average transaction price has remained consistent year to year. Still baffling that tax and shipping are considered as part of the average....In comparing 2023 my numbers they were substantially higher. Approx. 20 % higher number of sales. and 45 % higher dollar total profit compared 2025. Not sure I was ready for that amount of difference. 🤢 Blame most of that to higher overall eBay fees including promoted fees.
1 other statistic that KEEPS dropping year to year to year is feedback received. That's been plummeting for the last 5 or so. (Receive for purchases...but not for sales.)
12-24-2025 12:05 PM - edited 12-24-2025 12:05 PM
Revenue is down about 66 percent. I do in 3 months less than what I previously did in a month. We're dealing with numbers in the 5 figure range.
I've had eIS for a bit under a month. Around 10 percent of orders are through eIS. So it's a welcomed boost.
I experimented this month by using eIS as my primary US shipping service. eIS doesn't work for the US market because of the sticker shock, even if the end price is the same as what I was charging with Tracked Packet+Zonos. Previously, I capped US shipping at $40 CAD and worked in the tariffs to the item total.
Or, they need a "free shipping model", where you can assign a different total price by country. For example, if I have an item that is $200+$20 to ship in Canada, I can price it at $220 in Canada. If that same item is $200+$100 to ship to the USA, I can price it at $300 in the USA.
The risk of this is that in the event of a return, you lose $100. But I would recommend adding $5-$10 in self-insurance to each USA order to cover this. As in, $10 per order gets you $100 for every 10 orders. If your return rates are less than 1 in 10, you're covered.
The psychology of free shipping is interesting, because it completely goes against basic economics. People shouldn't view an item that is $220+$80 shipping differently than an item that is $300 w/ free shipping, but in my experience, they do.
12-24-2025 01:54 PM
@ilikehockeyjerseys wrote:
The psychology of free shipping is interesting, because it completely goes against basic economics. People shouldn't view an item that is $220+$80 shipping differently than an item that is $300 w/ free shipping, but in my experience, they do.
It is interesting. In my media store I used to offer free (lettermail) shipping and it worked really well. People hate "paying" for shipping. The reason why I don't anymore is the nightmare it creates when you get a postal rate increase. If the shipping cost is baked into the price, you either have to eat the increase or you have to edit prices on all your items. The same would apply for changes in tariffs, which are even more likely.
As far as different prices for different regions, I THINK it's possible to do that with ebaymag. It doesn't really seem to be geared toward people with lots of one-off items, but it might work. Disclaimer: I've never tried using it.
12-24-2025 02:11 PM
I'm down 50% (compared to previous years). I was doing OK until Aug 29.
Now if I have some sales I get very excited, especially if it's a big sale. There have been a few of those happening which has kept me afloat and put food on the table.
C.
12-24-2025 03:22 PM
12-24-2025 04:15 PM
12-25-2025 08:03 AM
Most of my revenue on eBay is not from media right now. Aside from a few choice titles from a distributor, I haven't focused on relisting any media due to the reliance on Canada Post, the strike, and other products doing better. I'm sitting on thousands of piece of media that would have been listed over the past year if there wasn't a strike.
I've experimented with paid shipping for lettermail media, with the logic being that maybe I could push people to buying 2 or 3 titles at the same time to save on shipping. It doesn't work. People generally just want the one title they want.
Outside of rare titles, I think the easiest way to approach media is just to have a flat price for most of your stuff. The amount of time it takes to research each title and try to undercut the next guy isn't worth it. eBay also goes by 'Best Match', so buyers seem to rarely choose the "cheapest", they choose the best one that is pushed to their face the earliest. Of course, that doesn't mean a $13 DVD can be priced at $30, but if it is priced at $15, it probably will still sell. Pricing a bit higher also gives you runway to send offers to buyers, accept offers, etc.
We're approaching the rubicon where it doesn't make sense to sell lettermail based used-media anymore due to rising input costs, unless you have a fantastic source to get titles for pennies, like a retail storefront that accepts trade ins on collections.
I was doing something like 4000 lettermail packages at my peak volume, so I buy stamps in bulk and set in my price. This makes me a bit less prone to dealing with price increases. I still have thousands of P stamps on hand from my last bulk order because of the strike. But I absolutely would not advise anybody to get into selling used media, unless they already have the knowledge base and have a physical store front or source for extremely cheap inventory.
Boutique titles from distributors might be more prone to the tariffs, because even though they are duty free, the average buyer may not know this. Outside of rare titles, used media to the USA was never big business for me. It was like a bonus, almost like eIS is now.
12-25-2025 09:18 AM
My main beef this year is the deterioration of Canada Post reliability. I never had to refund this many 'unreceived' items in the last 10 years as a seller. Hundreds of dollars - almost $700 - of sales had to be refunded because they never reached the customer. And since I sell mostly cards it is not feasable for me to offer tracking on $10 sales. Postage would then be more expensive than the item. At first I thought it was due to the strike but the conflict has been over for many weeks and there is rarely a week that I don't have to deal with 'not received items' claims. Could it be that the USPS deliberately messes with Canadian parcels ? The same for International (Spain being the worst). And on all those items refunded because they were 'lost', I've never received any item back so someone somewhere got them. Even when I do buy tracking it is no guarantee that the customer will receive his item. A sale to Mexico in October never reached the customer and even with the most patient of client I did have to refund a sale of $245 in vintage magazines. And to this day the package has the mention 'OUT FOR DELIVERY'...I am losing merchandise and money. A bit discouraging frankly. This situation has never been as bad as this before
12-25-2025 10:42 AM
I guess my case is somehow an outlayer among all the bad peformances in 2025.
This year I have had a "record breaking" 24 sales (well, 21 and 3 cancellations). Much better than the previous years.
The items I deal with are not exactly easy to sell, as they are mostly collectible items from the 70s, 80s and 90s. So I know this is not a substantial income source for me. I am thinking about diversifying my listings, to see if this would make this hobby more profitable. But, TBH, I will probably go the path of looking for a part time job.
12-25-2025 04:31 PM
Sales in 2025 are down for me fairly substantially, especially to the US. Well, on eBay anyway. Orders, domestic and otherwise, have been plentiful on other online marketplaces. I'm well deep into wondering why I bother here at all.
As rdemaree said: "-Reword the tariff warning on listings that don’t use the EIS. 80% of my items are CUSMA compliant and go into the USA tariff free. Saying my customers have to pay additional import fees is a lie and causing me and many others to lose business in an already challenging time."
This idiocy is what I think is causing my US sales to tank. I think I only have two (non-media) items out of almost 3000 total that cannot be shipped tariff-free, yet that blue banner is on the top of all of my listings.
I will be watching my 2026 eBay numbers very closely, but it's high time that maybe I accept that the juice here just ain't worth the squeeze.
12-26-2025 03:11 AM
Just took a peek at my Payouts from the last 90 days.
There are three weeks (of 12) with less than $100 in payouts, but otherwise sales appear normal to good compared to last year Q4.
Next year will be easier to see when we have the 2025 income report (for Revenue Canada) to compare to the 2024 report.
In addition to the postal dispute, Trump Tariff, mentioned above by others, and my own confusion about how eIS would work , I also had a substantial part of my stock closed while DH went to the BNAPS show and bourse. I didn't get all of the unsolds from that relisted until December.
And the unclear situation about the PL Halo Effect changes led me to remove PL from all my listings after mid-November.
The other thing I did was to move all my new listings to dotCA rather than dotCOM as I have been doing for several years, so that I can use eIS.
In spite of those actions on my part, sales seem stable.
One big change is that I am seeing fewer US sales and more overseas sales. Domestic sales are about the same to slightly higher.
12-26-2025 03:25 AM - edited 12-26-2025 03:27 AM
I guess for me the hard part is most of my sales have always been from USA.
About 70% have traditionally been from USA with about 15% Canada and 15% international .
I want to make it more like 50% USA , 30% Canada, 20% international but it’s a challenge.
I also strictly ship parcels. I don’t sell stamps or trading cards or flat media. I sell things that require tracking and require being shipped inside a box and need 3rd party shippers to be CUSMA approved.
I’m getting hammered from all angles right now. Most garbage time to be in business right now and I will definitely be downscaling my business and getting a part time job next year unfortunately.
12-26-2025 03:34 AM
-EBay should once and for all separate USA from international for when setting shipping rates. ... It’s usually Canada (domestic), USA, International. 3 categories. ... USA should be its own category because it is always changing... Ideally I don’t want to have flat rates for ALL countries outside of Canada just because trump is insane.
It's my understanding that there are different charges for different countries.
USA does have its own rate.
And the overseas rates do differ since they are going to different countries with different import fees and delivery distances.
It's irrelevant though because
a.) we get charged based on the cost of delivery to Mississauga
b.) the buyer pays the shipping plus eIS handling plus import fees, not the seller
Please confirm this, in case I am wrong devon@ebay
So your customer in Australia will see a different delivery cost than your customer in Austria and both will be different than for the American customer.
We are in agreement about much of what you say.
12-26-2025 03:39 AM
But I absolutely would not advise anybody to get into selling used media, unless they already have the knowledge base and have a physical store front or source for extremely cheap inventory.
I was selling used paperbacks on another ID but stopped buying a couple of years ago. The big Times Colonist Book Sale is coming up in May and I am considering donating the last few hundred books, keeping only the best sellers, like Wyndham, Adams and (shudder) John Norman.
The philatelic literature I sell on this ID has a slow but consistent sales rate.
12-26-2025 10:59 AM
12-28-2025 10:52 PM
I learned a long time ago - NEVER SELL TO MEXICO! You've learned that lesson now yourself!
12-29-2025 03:21 AM
@rdemaree eBay won’t separate USA from international categories
Look more closely at the Shipping section of your Selling Form for "Destination"
You can choose "USA" or "North and South America".
Don't choose North and South America, it includes the USA but also more troubled destinations.
You can also choose, with another shipping cost, Europe , UK, France, Germany. Although the latter three are also included in Europe.
And, of course, you can pay a fee to appear on the UK site, but you also appear there by choosing UK as a destination at no charge.
12-29-2025 10:44 AM
Im currently down 7% for both $ value and number of sales from last year. I found that rather surprising as I normally sell a fair amount to the US especially $ wise. I was closed for part of September and most of October due to the postal strike and being busy with work. For the stuff I sell, September is the begining of the busy season. I didn't add many new listings this year either, just tried to keep the popular ones stocked. 20% of my orders have been shipped through eIS since it started. 2 to Europe and 18 to the US. So for me, Domestic sales really picked up and balanced out the lost US sales and being closed for over a month.
12-29-2025 01:37 PM