At the moment I have a high value item on 'the bay'; we're talking c. £1500. The two main bidders for this product are both located in China :-( I tried to putting them off with the mention of two hundred quid shipping but it hasn't discouraged them. Am I on my own in being a bit buttock twitchy about this? I mean complaints of not arriving or arriving damaged or not as described and then a paypal charge back. So what's the concerted opinion? A safe sale or...??
Last edited by solwisesteve; 10th December 2019 at 13:38.
Nope..nope...nope....
Walk away.
They could both be 100% kosher....but I wouldn't be risking it for £1500.
Ebay will nearly ALWAYS take the side of the buyer.
You'd be unwise to send it to them; it's asking for trouble to send an item as valuable as that out of the UK.
make the buyer responsible for shipping, effectively collection.
I never offer international shipping on eBay anymore. Too much hassle. Just tick the box 'No International Shipping' when you edit your ad.
I have sent a few things abroad using Ebays Global Shipping Programme. Nothing to China but, Germany, US, Canada, Italy and France. All arrived without issue withe the exception of the US parcel that was lost.
Ebay subsequently covered the loss and reimbursed the buyer. Liability for the the shipment ends when you deliver the package to the UK distribution centre. Just as well really as the items are often opened and repacked to minimize weights and parcel sizes.
Best check qualifying countries for the GSP but assume China will be included.
Any doubts, walk away. Just not worth the stress and I would never ship directly without the piece of mind offered by the GS programme.
I've sold to as far as Australia via the GSP and it was a doddle. Commodore Amiga pack which sold for £400. Just make sure to use registered delivery on the UK side to the Central hub in Derby and you're covered. Note - eBay and customs will open the package to inspect it so do expect your box/packaging to arrive not as you sent it.
I had one buyer say their package had not been received in Portugal but it later popped up once I'd contacted eBay to register the complaint.
https://sellercentre.ebay.co.uk/priv...ping-programme
The buyer/seller even get shipping updates once it hits their respective country delivery hub.
That said selling an item to someone in China would make me uneasy. Still feels like the wild west out there and I'd hate to go through a returns process.
I have now revised the listing showing the message in bold text that I can't do international shipping.
tbh both bidders look kosher but it's too much of a risk.
I suppose I could insist on payment using TT but it's starting to be too much hassle :-(
As has been said already, you are only responsible for the delivery of the item to the GSP depot via ebay, send it to them tracked and signed for and let them take the hit should it go astray from there on.
I had one item actually come back to the shipping centre as they couldn't find the address, Germany I think, no hassle, they just sent it back again and searched until they did find the buyer.
As soon as it gets there, ( GSP depot ), it's no longer down to you, regardless whether paypal used.
I get that re physical delivery of the/'a' parcel, but just say the buyer receives the parcel but then submits a paypal claim saying that the item wasn't as described or is incorrect? I don't know, say a vintage Sub is sent out, and buyer whips the fat font insert off and replaces with a service insert then snaps a pic of the 'incorrect' watch in the box/packaging it was sent in, surely ebay/paypal will look into it and potentially a PP charge-back may result? GSP isn't going to help with that (from buyers POV), or is it? I don't know, maybe it would, but I wouldn't fancy taking the risk.
Think I would walk away from that sale.
Only sell abroad via the GSP, as others have said, as far as delivery goes once its reached Staffordshire or wherever you are covered from item not delivered or item missing claims. Still doesn't protect you from the buyer saying the item isn't as described or is fake though. If in doubt, which I would be and you obviously are, cancel their bids and block their usernames. Better to lose the sale than the potential alternative.
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Don’t do it, remove the bids. Not worth risk or the worry.
I can’t be bothered with selling on ebay thesedays, the Datejust I listed on here that (surprisingly) didn’t sell went to a trade buyer for £150 less than I wanted to take, no doubt it would’ve sold far better on ebay but I didn’t want the hassle. I think my limit for ebay selling would be £300-£400.
Thank fully it has just sold (and been paid for) to a UK buyer.
Second time this year I've listed something on ebay and it's sold by bids for more than the buy-it-now price I had on at the start!
Good result!
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Of interest, I sold a much in demand Naim hifi amp. to China a few years ago without any problems and the buyer paid a lot more than I was expecting.
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That is not what I sold, you must be confusing me with someone else
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ALindsay, I think what solwisesteve was saying is, he sold said item.