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eBay Fee Calculator

Calculate eBay final value fees, per-order fees, and net seller payout for 2026 fee structure.

Net to seller

$139.57

After 13.8% in fees

Total fees

$22.43

All eBay charges combined

Gross sale

$162.00

Item + shipping

Fee breakdown

  • Final value fee (Standard (most categories))$22.03
  • Per-order fee (>$10)$0.40
  • Total fees$22.43

Rates from the 2026 eBay US fee schedule. Verify the latest schedule with eBay before relying on this estimate for a major sale.

$162.00 sale at Standard (most categories): fees $22.43 (13.8%), net to seller $139.57.

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How to use eBay Fee Calculator

What this calculator does

This calculator estimates the fees eBay charges sellers on a single sale, using the 2026 US seller fee schedule. Enter your sale price, shipping, category, optional Promoted Listings ad rate, and store subscription. The tool returns the final value fee, per-order fee, any Promoted Listings fee, total fees, net to seller, and fees as a percentage of the gross sale.

All math is plain arithmetic running locally on your device.

How eBay’s 2026 fees break down

Three components stack:

1. Final value fee. A percentage of the total sale amount (item

  • shipping). The rate depends on category and a tiered breakpoint:
  • Standard (most categories): 13.6% up to $7,500; 2.35% above
  • Books/DVDs/Music: 15.3% up to $7,500; 2.35% above
  • Coins & Paper Money / Trading Cards: 13.25% up to $7,500; 2.35% above
  • Jewelry & Watches: 15% up to $5,000; 9% above
  • Women’s Handbags: 15% up to $2,000; 9% above
  • Guitars & Basses: 6.7% up to $7,500; 2.35% above
  • Athletic Shoes ≥$150: 8% flat (no per-order fee)
  • Heavy Equipment: 3% up to $15,000; 0.5% above
  • NFTs: 5% flat

2. Per-order fee. A small fixed amount: $0.30 for orders of $10 or less, $0.40 for orders above $10. Waived for Athletic Shoes ≥$150.

3. Promoted Listings ad fee (optional). If you opt your item into the Promoted Listings program, you set an ad rate (typically 2-15%) that’s added to your fees when a buyer clicks your promoted listing and purchases within 30 days.

There’s no separate payment-processing fee anymore — payment processing was absorbed into the final value fee when eBay moved to Managed Payments in 2021.

Worked example

Selling a vintage clock for $150 with $12 shipping in the Standard category:

  • Gross sale: $162
  • Final value fee: 13.6% × $162 = $22.03
  • Per-order fee: $162 > $10, so $0.40
  • No Promoted Listings: $0
  • Total fees: $22.43
  • Net to seller: $139.57
  • Fees as % of gross: 13.8%

The same item sold in the Athletic Shoes ≥$150 category (if it were shoes) would pay 8% × $162 = $12.96, no per-order fee, $12.96 total fees — about $9.50 less.

Comparing eBay to alternatives

eBay’s 13.6% is roughly mid-range among general-purpose marketplaces:

  • Mercari: 10% selling fee + 2.9% payment processing = ~12.9%
  • Poshmark: 20% above $15, $2.95 flat below $15 (high but category-targeted at apparel)
  • Etsy: 6.5% transaction fee + 3% payment processing + $0.20 listing fee = ~10% effective on most items
  • Amazon (third-party seller): 8-15% referral fee depending on category + $0.99 per-item OR $39.99/mo for Pro Seller account
  • Facebook Marketplace: 5% selling fee (or $0.40 minimum), local pickup free

eBay’s edge is the audience size and category coverage. For high-volume sellers, the Store subscription tiers reduce insertion fees enough to matter; for one-off sales, the per-order fee on top of 13.6% is straightforward.

Strategic notes

Categories matter. If your item could plausibly fit two categories with different rates, choose the cheaper one — assuming eBay’s algorithm won’t flag it as miscategorized. A guitar accessory might fit “Musical Instruments” (13.6%) or “Guitars & Basses” (6.7%), but the latter is reserved for actual instruments.

Shipping is part of the sale. The final value fee applies to item

  • shipping, so charging $25 shipping on a $50 item costs you the same in fees as charging $75 for the item with free shipping. Many sellers prefer free shipping for the buyer-conversion benefit even though it’s the same fee math.

Promoted Listings ROI is the question. Adding a 5% Promoted Listings rate on a 13.6% category brings your total fee load to ~19%. That only makes sense if the boost in conversion or visibility more than offsets the additional fee — which is true for slow-moving inventory and competitive categories, but not for items that would sell at full price anyway.

Source and disclaimer

Fee data is from the 2026 eBay US seller fee schedule as documented in third-party summaries (Taxomate, ListingForge, EbayFeesCalculator.com) and confirmed against eBay’s official Seller Center pages as of mid-2026. eBay updates the fee schedule periodically. For high-value sales, verify the current schedule on eBay’s official seller-fees page before relying on this estimator.

Privacy

The calculator runs plain JavaScript arithmetic on your device. Sale prices, shipping, categories, your store subscription level — every value stays in your browser tab. No fetch calls, no analytics, no server-side logging.

Frequently asked questions

What is the current eBay final value fee?
As of the 2026 eBay US fee schedule, the standard final value fee is 13.6% on the total amount of the sale (item price + shipping), up to $7,500. Above $7,500, the rate drops to 2.35% on the portion above the threshold. Plus a per-order fee: $0.30 for orders of $10 or less, $0.40 for orders above $10. So a $150 sale with $12 shipping pays 13.6% × $162 = $22.03, plus $0.40 = $22.43 in fees (net to seller: $139.57). Some categories have different rates — see the category dropdown above for the current schedule.
Why are some categories cheaper or more expensive?
eBay differentiates rates by category to compete with category-specific marketplaces. Lower than standard: Guitars & Basses (6.7%, competing with Reverb), Athletic Shoes ≥$150 (8% with no per-order fee, competing with StockX and GOAT), Heavy Equipment (3%, competing with industrial auction sites), NFTs (5%). Higher than standard: Books/DVDs/Music (15.3% — historically high-volume low-value category that eBay subsidizes via fees), Jewelry & Watches (15% up to $5K, 9% above — premium category with authentication services), Women's Handbags (15% up to $2K, 9% above). The category-specific rate applies to both base item and shipping.
Do Store subscriptions actually save money?
Stores reduce insertion fees (the per-listing fee for new auctions/listings beyond the free monthly allotment) — not final value fees. Tiers: Starter ($4.95/mo) gives 250 free listings, Basic ($21.95) gives 1,000, Premium ($59.95) gives 10,000, Anchor ($299.95) gives 25,000. If you list fewer than 250 items per month, the free non-store allotment covers you and a Store subscription is unnecessary. If you list 500+ items per month, Basic typically pays for itself. Above 5,000 listings, Premium is the break-even. This calculator doesn't include the monthly subscription cost — factor it separately.
How do Promoted Listings work?
Promoted Listings boost your item's visibility in search results in exchange for an ad fee that you set yourself (typically 2-15% of sale price). The fee is only charged when a buyer clicks your promoted listing and purchases within 30 days. The calculator's Promoted Listings field is the ad-rate percentage you've chosen. Strategic use: low ad rates (2-5%) for high-margin items where additional exposure is gravy; high ad rates (10%+) for slow-moving inventory you want to clear or competitive categories where promoting is table stakes. ROI depends on conversion rate — a 10% ad fee that doubles your conversion rate is profit-positive; the same fee with flat conversion is pure margin erosion.
Is my sale data sent anywhere?
No. The calculator runs as JavaScript arithmetic on your device. Sale prices, categories, your Promoted Listings rate, store subscription — every value stays in your browser tab. No fetch calls, no analytics on your sales data, no server-side logging.

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