02-15-2025 11:55 AM
Have a few Beanie Babies for sale I have them listed on eBay for sale need to sell asap
02-15-2025 12:35 PM
I'm going to be pretty blunt here: I don't see that happening as your listings currently stand.
- Some of those beanies are in rough condition. Even brand new with tags and no flaws people have trouble giving these things away, let alone selling them. There's very little demand in an over-saturated market.
- There are a bunch of peoples' feet in your photos.
- Prices are not realistic.
- Some titles are misspelled. Almost none of them include the name of the character.
If by some miracle any of those do sell, as a new seller you'll be subject to lengthy payment holds. eBay is not the place for "quick" cash.
02-15-2025 12:43 PM
So, do a quick search on google and look for information on the false sales of beanie babies online. Most beanie babies are lucky to be worth $3 these days. High priced "sales" on eBay are NOT for beanie babies. What are they for? Don't know what, but sure it is something not too good
02-15-2025 12:48 PM
Sorry, but you're not going to get those kind of prices.
If you bundle them all together for $15 and free shipping, you might be able to sell them.
02-15-2025 02:39 PM - edited 02-15-2025 02:40 PM
And don't expect quick cash. New sellers have an up to 30 day wait for payouts.
Are you signed up for Managed Pay with an approved checking account?
Have you taken time to read about selling and shipping on eBay?
Do you understand the fee structure?
THIS is not the place to list, maybe sell and expect quick cash.
Those photos and titles are not helping you, no one would be able to find them with those titles. There are currently 560,000+ listings with "Ty beanie babies" in the title with 38,000 (I am surprised!) sold in the past 90 days. All of those have the name of the figure in the title unless sold as a bundle.
Best of luck!
02-15-2025 03:55 PM
As others have said, your prices are not realistic at all. You have misspelled Beanie more than once. Your title MUST have more information. Ans there are no quick sales on Ebay. The market for beanies is OVER.
02-15-2025 04:05 PM - edited 02-15-2025 04:06 PM
Beanie Babies are like baseball cards from the 1980's: massively overproduced and not worth a thing. Maybe they'll be worth something in a hundred years or so after most of them have been destroyed or sent to the landfill.
02-15-2025 08:38 PM
First of all, you cannot use the eBay Community Boards to advertise your items.
Secondly, Beanie Babies were deliberately promoted as "instant collectibles" by Ty Warner, as a means to con gullible and unsuspecting buyers into believing that his cheaply-made stuffed toys would have investment value.
Big reveal: Beanie Babies have NO value, because TOO MANY were manufactured.
He made millions of dollars hoodwinking his customers, and became one of the richest individuals in the United States.
The "rare" Beanie Babies were actually oversold inventory which retailers no longer wanted on their shelves; so Ty Warner came up with the marketing campaign that those particular Beanie Babies were going to be "retired."
Result? Beanie "investors" rushed to gobble up all those "retired" stuffed toys, under the mistaken belief that anything being "retired" must eventually mean "rare."
No -- it simply meant that Ty Warner didn't have to pay retailers for returned merchandise -- the Beanie "investors" paid the retailers, and Ty Warner never had to pay a cent in return fees.
Printing "errors" are apparently quite common in Beanie Baby production, resulting from sloppy proof-reading at the time that the labels were originally mass-produced in a Third World country. Instead of correcting these "errors" before or during the printing process, and correcting the error, the Third World printing companies just decided to cut the cost of correction, and permit the "errors" to run through.
Resulting in hundreds of thousands of "rare" Beanie Baby "errors."
However -- items which were manufactured in amounts over 100,000 will never be considered "rare", until over 99.99% them have been destroyed.
Don't believe me? Check out this article from the History Channel --
https://www.history.com/news/how-the-beanie-baby-craze-came-to-a-crashing-end