Free eBay price checker
eBay Price Checker for Used Items and Resale Comps
Upload a photo to estimate what an item could sell for on eBay. Compare recent sold listings, check items value, and turn the range into a practical resale price before you list, negotiate, or buy.
eBay sold comps • Resale value estimate • Used item price range
Clear, well-lit, full item in frame works best.
Price from sold comps, not seller hopes
The strongest price check starts with completed eBay sales, then adjusts for the exact item in front of you.
Sold listings first
Active listings show asking prices. Sold listings show what someone actually paid, which is the better baseline for an eBay price checker.
Match the exact version
Model number, size, generation, edition, color, storage, and included accessories can move value even when two items look similar in a photo.
Turn value into a price
Use the sold range as the item value, then account for fees, shipping, returns, condition, and how quickly you want the item to sell.
How to find the worth of an item before selling it
If you are asking for the worth of an item if it is to be sold to someone else, the number you need is resale value, not original retail price. Start with recent eBay sold listings for the same item and ignore prices from listings that never sold.
When the question is "how much are these worth?", check whether the items are one matching lot or several separate items. A complete set can sell for more than the pieces alone, but a mixed box often sells for less than the total single-item price because buyers are taking on sorting, testing, and resale work.
If condition is the main issue, use how much is it worth used to think through used-value adjustments. If you want the broader item lookup, use the item price checker for non-eBay selling paths too.
A practical eBay price-check workflow
Step 1
Identify the item before comparing
Pull every detail that can change price: brand, model, age, size, edition, material, capacity, serial number, and included accessories.
Step 2
Compare completed eBay sales
Use sold listings and photo-based comps to find what buyers recently paid for the same item or the closest available substitute.
Step 3
Remove weak matches
Throw out comps with different versions, missing parts, damaged condition, fake bundles, odd auctions, or shipping terms that do not match your item.
Step 4
Choose a price range
Use a lower price for speed, the middle of the range for fair market value, and the high end only when your item is clearly better than the comps.
Convert item value into the right sale price
The same resale value estimate can lead to different asking prices depending on the sale, risk, and buyer pool.
Normal eBay listing
Price near the middle of the closest sold comps, then adjust for shipping, fees, returns, promoted listing costs, and whether your photos show better condition.
Fast sale or local sale
Use the lower end when speed matters, when local buyers expect a discount, or when shipping a bulky item would erase the margin.
High-confidence collectible
Use the upper range only when authenticity, condition, grading, completeness, or timing makes your item better than the recent average.
Mixed lot or bundle
Add up the strongest individual comps, then discount the lot when the buyer must sort, test, clean, or resell the items one at a time.
More ways to check the value of this item
eBay Sold Listings
Use this when you want to understand completed listings and sold-price filters in more detail.
Resale Value Estimator
Best for deciding whether an item is worth listing, flipping, bundling, or selling locally.
How Much Is This Item Worth?
Use this for a broader sold-price workflow when the item is not necessarily headed to eBay.