Definitive guide
The definitive guide to eBay sold listings
eBay sold listings are completed eBay listings that ended with a buyer purchasing the item. They are different from active listings, watch-count screenshots, promoted listings, and optimistic asking prices. When a reseller says they are checking "comps," they usually mean they are looking at sold listings to understand what buyers have recently paid for the same or similar item.
The direct eBay sold-listing search URL uses the same search surface as ordinary eBay search, plus the completed and sold filters. In URL terms, the important parameters are LH_Sold=1 and LH_Complete=1. A search for a Sony WH-1000XM5 headset, for example, becomes an eBay search URL with your keyword in _nkw and those two sold filters added. That is the simplest way to separate actual market-clearing prices from active inventory.
For sellers, sold data matters because resale pricing is an execution problem, not a wish list. The fastest way to lose time is to anchor on one active listing with a high price, list your item too high, then wait. Sold listings show the range buyers have accepted, the conditions that earned premiums, and the recency of demand. They also reveal when a category is liquid enough to tolerate a higher price and when you need to price aggressively.
What the current data says
In the latest dataset covering Last 30 days, the leading revenue categories were Collectible Card Games ($138,284,549), Watches, Parts & Accessories ($106,989,464), and Men ($100,398,072), while the deepest sold-volume pools were Men (1,870,965 sold), Sports Trading Cards (1,771,454 sold), and Women (1,697,035 sold). That split matters: high revenue can come from expensive but slower markets, while high volume can support faster inventory turns.
Brand demand was led by Topps ($92,603,256), Pokemon ($84,799,576), and Apple ($31,180,259). Top-selling item demand was led by Apple Mac Studio M3 Ultra (191 sold), Apple Iphone 17 Pro Max (848 sold), and Reserved (105 sold), which is a useful reminder that product-level revenue can be narrower than the broad category leaders.
Use the sortable tables above as a sourcing filter: revenue surfaces where dollars are clearing, sold volume surfaces liquidity, median price helps set a realistic floor, and velocity shows where buyer attention is accelerating right now.
How to find sold listings on eBay
- Search the item name. Start with brand, model, style name, size, and any important material or color terms. Avoid filler words like "rare" unless they are part of the real product name.
- Open the filter panel. On desktop, use the left filter column. On mobile, open the filter sheet near the top of eBay search results.
- Choose Sold Items. eBay automatically enables completed listings too. In the URL, this is represented by
LH_Sold=1&LH_Complete=1. - Sort by ended recently. Recent comps usually matter more than old comps, especially for electronics, sneakers, trading cards, and trend-driven clothing.
- Compare like with like. Match condition, size, color, included accessories, authentication status, and shipping terms before you set your price.
Why sold beats active listings for pricing decisions
Active listings tell you what sellers want. Sold listings tell you what buyers accepted. That difference is the core reason sellers should price from sold comps first. Active inventory can be stale, duplicated, promoted, or anchored to an unrealistic high number. A sold listing has cleared the market. It still needs interpretation, but it starts from a real transaction.
The best pricing workflow is to use active listings only after you understand the sold range. If sold comps cluster between $70 and $90 and current active inventory starts at $120, that gap is information. It may mean the active sellers are overpriced, or it may mean inventory is temporarily thin and you can test the upper end. Without sold comps, you cannot tell the difference.
How to read sold comps
Start with the median, not the highest sale. The median is the middle of the market, so one unusual outlier does not drag your price target up or down. The mean can still help, but it is more sensitive to damaged lots, rare variants, multi-item bundles, and accepted offers that were inflated by shipping. Resellbot shows the interquartile range because the middle 50 percent of comps is often the most useful pricing band.
Recency matters next. A sale from yesterday should carry more weight than a sale from three months ago when the product category moves quickly. Electronics depreciate, sneakers and cards can spike or fade, and seasonal clothing changes with weather. For evergreen goods, older comps may be fine, but you should still check whether the most recent sales are moving up or down.
Condition is the third filter. A new sealed item, an open-box item, and a fair-condition item can all share the same title but clear at very different prices. Look for photos, missing accessories, storage wear, odors, authentication tags, battery health, and any seller notes that would explain the price. If you cannot match condition, use the lower side of the comp range.
Shipping can change the true sold price. A $70 sale with free shipping may net similarly to a $58 sale with $12 shipping. For eBay comps, Resellbot adds detected shipping into the displayed comp price when the data is available, because buyers experience total price, not item price alone. When shipping is missing or unclear, validate on eBay before making a high-stakes buy.
Finally, remove outliers. A single unusually high sale may be a rare color, international buyer, bundle, promoted auction result, or seller-specific anomaly. A single unusually low sale may be damaged, poorly photographed, miscategorized, or missing a key accessory. Good comp work is pattern recognition, not cherry-picking.
eBay sold listings vs. Terapeak
eBay's public sold listings are fastest for everyday pricing. They are simple, available to anyone, and give you a concrete set of recent transactions. Terapeak is better when you need broader research, category-level seasonality, longer history, or seller-performance context inside an eBay seller workflow. Many professional sellers use both: public sold listings for quick pricing and Terapeak for deeper sourcing decisions.
Resellbot fits between those two workflows. It keeps the speed of a normal sold search, adds cross-marketplace comps, and summarizes the pricing distribution. That makes it useful at the thrift store, in a warehouse intake flow, or while drafting listings at a desk. You can still click through to eBay when you need native validation.
Common reseller categories
Sneakers
For sneakers, size, condition, box, colorway, and authenticity matter. Sold listings help you avoid pricing from a deadstock comp when you have a worn pair. Check whether the most recent sales are clustered by size; uncommon sizes can behave differently.
Vintage clothing
Vintage clothing comps are messier because titles vary. Search brand, era, graphic keywords, measurements, and material. A median gives you a starting point, but photos and condition usually decide the final listing price.
Electronics
Electronics need model precision. One letter in a model number can change value. Include storage capacity, carrier lock status, battery health, included accessories, and whether the item is tested.
Trading cards
Cards depend on set, number, condition, grading company, and grade. Raw and graded comps should be separated. Recent velocity is especially important when a card is moving because of a release, tournament, or media cycle.
Designer bags
Designer bag comps require authentication status, style name, size, material, color, and flaw disclosure. A low sold price may reflect missing authenticity support or significant wear, not the true market for a clean example.
Limitations of eBay sold data
Public eBay sold data is not perfect. The visible sold window is limited, commonly around 90 days on public search surfaces. Regional demand can differ, especially for bulky items and categories where shipping cost changes buyer behavior. Condition is self-reported by sellers, so two listings with the same condition label may not be equal. Accepted offers and promoted listings can also make exact price interpretation more complicated.
Those limits do not make sold listings less useful; they just mean comps should be read as evidence. Use the full pattern: median, range, recency, condition, category, and marketplace context. When the stakes are high, click through to the original marketplace and inspect the listing details.
How Resellbot extends eBay sold listings
Resellbot starts with eBay sold listings but adds the context sellers ask for while sourcing and pricing. The tool compares eBay, Poshmark, and Mercari in one result set, summarizes median sold price and interquartile range, estimates demand level and velocity, breaks comps down by condition, and lets you search from a product photo when you do not know the exact title.
The market snapshots above turn sold listings into quick sourcing signals: what is moving now, which categories are clearing the most volume, which brands are leading in 30-day revenue, and which items are accelerating week over week. Use them to spot demand before tying up cash in inventory.