by Flack » Thu Sep 05, 2019 5:57 am
Earlier this year I reconnected with an old friend who used to own a ton of CDs and DVDs. I was surprised to learn that since the last time I saw him, he sold his entire DVD collection. I was quite shocked, as this is someone who really enjoys movies and owned many, many DVDs. I relayed this story to several of my other friends and was even more surprised to learn that they too had got rid of their physical DVDs years ago. Of all my local friends, I think I am the only one who owns more than ten physical DVDs. Second place owns ten DVDs and first place (me) owns more than a thousand.
I ripped all of my DVDs to my media server years ago so I never actually play the physical discs anymore. At the last house they were hidden away on shelves in an upstairs closet. When I moved last year they were placed inside boxes that have never been unpacked. I realize it's too late to get top dollar for them at this point, but I guess I'll take anything I can get.
[RESEARCH]
According to Google, here are the best ways to sell DVDs: garage sale, Craigslist, eBay, and Decluttr.
Decluttr is an app that allows you to the scan bar codes on your DVDs (and CDs, and books, and...) and get an instant offer from the company. They even pay for shipping! All you have to do is scan your DVD, the app gives you a price, and when you're all done the company emails you a shipping label to print out. It's that easy!
I opened a box of DVDs and the first one I saw was Superman: The Movie (1978). I scanned the bar code with Declutter and in less than a second the company made me an offer -- 5 cents. Just to make sure it wasn't a fluke, I scanned several other DVDs and found a pretty even split between 5 cents and 22 cents. I guess if you want to sell your DVDs for 5 cents or 22 cents, Decluttr is an option for you.
Next, I checked eBay. The last several copies sold between $3 and $5 (including shipping). I decide to list it for $5 on eBay, and quickly did some math.
eBay: 10% of the final sale price (including shipping): $0.50
PayPal: 3% + $0.29 per transaction: $0.44
Media Mail + padded envelope: $2.50
That's $3.44 in fees, leaving me $1.56 profit on a $5 sale.
I listed five DVDs for sale on eBay two days ago, each for $5 buy-it-now and free shipping. After 48 hours I can report a total of 0 sales.
Finally, I checked Craigslist. Locally, it looks like DVDs sell for anywhere from $0.50 (if you're selling a LOT) to $2 each (usually people selling just a few discs individually) with lots of listings for $1/DVD.
[CURRENT STATUS]
I'm leaving the 5 DVDs on eBay for the time being. At $1.56 (profit), I think my best bet at this point may be to list them for $1.50/DVD on Craigslist with a "buy 5 for $5" offer and do it that way. Whatever doesn't sell after that will go to Goodwill I guess.
Earlier this year I reconnected with an old friend who used to own a ton of CDs and DVDs. I was surprised to learn that since the last time I saw him, he sold his entire DVD collection. I was quite shocked, as this is someone who really enjoys movies and owned many, many DVDs. I relayed this story to several of my other friends and was even more surprised to learn that they too had got rid of their physical DVDs years ago. Of all my local friends, I think I am the only one who owns more than ten physical DVDs. Second place owns ten DVDs and first place (me) owns more than a thousand.
I ripped all of my DVDs to my media server years ago so I never actually play the physical discs anymore. At the last house they were hidden away on shelves in an upstairs closet. When I moved last year they were placed inside boxes that have never been unpacked. I realize it's too late to get top dollar for them at this point, but I guess I'll take anything I can get.
[RESEARCH]
According to Google, here are the best ways to sell DVDs: garage sale, Craigslist, eBay, and Decluttr.
Decluttr is an app that allows you to the scan bar codes on your DVDs (and CDs, and books, and...) and get an instant offer from the company. They even pay for shipping! All you have to do is scan your DVD, the app gives you a price, and when you're all done the company emails you a shipping label to print out. It's that easy!
I opened a box of DVDs and the first one I saw was Superman: The Movie (1978). I scanned the bar code with Declutter and in less than a second the company made me an offer -- 5 cents. Just to make sure it wasn't a fluke, I scanned several other DVDs and found a pretty even split between 5 cents and 22 cents. I guess if you want to sell your DVDs for 5 cents or 22 cents, Decluttr is an option for you.
Next, I checked eBay. The last several copies sold between $3 and $5 (including shipping). I decide to list it for $5 on eBay, and quickly did some math.
eBay: 10% of the final sale price (including shipping): $0.50
PayPal: 3% + $0.29 per transaction: $0.44
Media Mail + padded envelope: $2.50
That's $3.44 in fees, leaving me $1.56 profit on a $5 sale.
I listed five DVDs for sale on eBay two days ago, each for $5 buy-it-now and free shipping. After 48 hours I can report a total of 0 sales.
Finally, I checked Craigslist. Locally, it looks like DVDs sell for anywhere from $0.50 (if you're selling a LOT) to $2 each (usually people selling just a few discs individually) with lots of listings for $1/DVD.
[CURRENT STATUS]
I'm leaving the 5 DVDs on eBay for the time being. At $1.56 (profit), I think my best bet at this point may be to list them for $1.50/DVD on Craigslist with a "buy 5 for $5" offer and do it that way. Whatever doesn't sell after that will go to Goodwill I guess.