01-05-2023 09:16 AM
01-05-2023 02:25 PM
You do not have to accept a bid. You set the opening bid, so the high bidder who bids at least that amount is the winner.
Make sure to purchase signature confirmation on any shipment of $750 or more total price.
01-05-2023 06:10 PM
Too many people confuse "bid" and "Best Offer." Those are two entirely different things that the seller handles differently. People who come here and use the wrong term (what does the message or display ACTUALLY say you got?) often get the wrong answer (actually it's the right answer for the question asked but not what s/he needed to know).
A bid is part of an auction. Sellers don't "accept" them (eBay accepts them if they are valid bids: meet the minimum bid requirement as of the time they are received, received before the end of the last second of the auction, buyer is not prohibited from bidding on that auction because of a restriction by the seller or eBay). A seller can cancel any bid up until the auction ends (or eBay might if the buyer is suspended before the auction ends or the bidder might retract the bid for a very short very specific list of valid reasons) but otherwise the bid remains active until the auction ends, at which time a winner and price is set from the bids that were accepted by eBay and not cancelled/retracted before the end. The seller is obligated to sell for that price (if the buyer pays, provides valid address that seller agreed to ship to etc.) and the buyer is obligated to buy.
A Best Offer is simply an offer that the seller can take or leave. S/he can accept it, reject it, make a counteroffer (which acts as a rejection of the offer), or do nothing and the offer expires (at the duration the buyer chose when making it up to 48 hours, or earlier if there is a "bid" placed--Best Offer is no longer available after the first bid on the auction, or when the listing ends for whatever reason). The seller is under no obligation to accept any offer or respond in any way to a particular offer or any offer at all.
01-05-2023 06:40 PM
I’d like to add to what the others have said that I see you’re using a Reserve on your auction. Reserves carry a steep fee that’s due even if your item doesn’t sell. And . . . Buyers hate reserves, they don’t want to try bidding on an auction they probably can’t win. It’s best to just start the listing at the lowest price you’re willing to accept, without getting involved in reserves.
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