The MLP Arena

TCB => Trader & Shipping Support => Topic started by: LadyMoondancer on March 01, 2019, 06:11:57 AM

Title: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: LadyMoondancer on March 01, 2019, 06:11:57 AM
There are other changes too, like "edit more easily through the Seller Hub!" etc, but I felt this was by far the most impactful change:

Quote
The listing duration for all fixed price listings will be Good 'Til Cancelled

Starting in mid-March 2019, the listing duration for all new fixed price listings on eBay will be Good 'Til Cancelled. Existing fixed price listings that are not Good 'Til Cancelled will continue until they sell or end at their specified duration. If a short-duration fixed price item is relisted, the duration will be set to Good 'Til Cancelled upon relist.

Good 'Til Cancelled listings renew automatically every 30 days unless your item sells before that timeframe. We charge an insertion fee every 30-day period. Good 'Til Cancelled listings count toward your monthly zero insertion fee listings. Fee amounts are based on the terms in effect when the listing goes live and when it renews.

So to sum up:  When your Buy It Now listing hits it's 30 day limit, eBay will automatically renew it and will charge you an insertion fee.  (Unless you only list 50 things, in which case it will count towards one of your free 50 monthly listings.)  This is already an option, but it's not mandatory or the default.

If you, like me, do everything humanly possible to avoid getting charged eBay's $0.35 insertion fee . . . if you patiently wait until eBay tosses a "List 100 items for FREE, no insertion fees!" email your way . . . this is bad news.  Because now you will have to be vigilant and manually go in to cancel unsold BINs before they automatically renew. 

(Unless you don't mind paying the insertion fee over and over and over . . . But you can see how quickly it would make a dent in your profits if you're listing, like, a pony comb for $2.)
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 01, 2019, 07:11:28 AM
I saw that.

Ok help me out. Every month we have like ~50 free insertions. If we list 5 things as a BIN, and they don't sell, and they renew... do we get charged? Or will it be a part of that free insertion.

(I'm guessing we get charged).

A lot of my stuff sells within 1-2 months, but I have a pair of japanese shoes that just aren't budging *sigh*

But what I also noticed was something about there's going to be state tax involved in the future. (Right now I think there's ~3 states). And ebay will take it from you at the time of the sale, and give it to the state.

:/ Which irritates me to no end, because my state says if you are selling used stuff that you purchased and owned... then you don't get taxed on it. Which is pretty much 99% of my stuff.

(If you are flipping for profit, that's another thing).
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: LadyMoondancer on March 01, 2019, 07:47:39 AM
If you have 5 BINs and nothing else, they will be auto-relisted for free.  And in addition you will be able to list 45 other free things.

So if you only have 50 items listed or less, it's not a problem.*

The problem is if you use eBay's promotional "extra free listings!" that they sometimes offer.  Let's say they offer an additional 30 free listings in addition to your normal 50 . . . You list 80 items for free.  The next month eBay auto-relists 50 of those items for free . . . and charges you $0.35 x 30 insertion fee on the other 30 items.

I wouldn't be so salty about this but it's really hard for a MLP item to get attention / an audience on eBay these days.  Like, in the 90s I paid their listing fee and didn't even care because I knew every auction would sell.  These days, their services are not really worth $0.35 a pop IMO.


*  Sidenote, this is all within the context of eBay users who don't have eBay stores.  I don't know how stores work.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: Taffeta on March 02, 2019, 01:31:18 PM


:/ Which irritates me to no end, because my state says if you are selling used stuff that you purchased and owned... then you don't get taxed on it. Which is pretty much 99% of my stuff.


This is a bit like what they do to international buyers with GSP and import duty. They charge a fee up front, and then on top of that a processing fee for the trouble, but the actual custom charge is also higher than the govt would charge (at least here in the UK it often is). I don't know but I feel like they chose one country and then built the system off their charges, rather than actually adjusting to the real charges. I've seen auctions where the charge is 3x what the UK HMRC would expect and it's not as if it improves any part of the service, having it paid up front.

Basically Ebay are just looking for more ways to make money from their sellers. And if you had a business you probably wouldn't care too much about this as it is a convenient renewal and saves you time. But it's again adding issues and cost to private sellers and making it a more hostile place to sell anything.

Thanks for the heads up LM. I haven't listed on ebay in a long while but I do have ponies and stuff to sell. I am hoping to do some at easter although it depends a little on what Brexit does to the postal process (if anything, maybe not, fingers crossed). I had thought to put some on ebay, but it is not the service it used to be :( for buyers or for sellers.

(Plus I have been charged fees on the so called free listings before now on renewal, when within my quota. And you complain to ebay, and they just ignore it. So yeah.)
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 02, 2019, 02:44:47 PM


:/ Which irritates me to no end, because my state says if you are selling used stuff that you purchased and owned... then you don't get taxed on it. Which is pretty much 99% of my stuff.


This is a bit like what they do to international buyers with GSP and import duty. They charge a fee up front, and then on top of that a processing fee for the trouble, but the actual custom charge is also higher than the govt would charge (at least here in the UK it often is).
I'm not sure it's like GSP, as I feel like a lot of that is fees for using a middle man service.

There's obviously going to be a convenience fee, and I think semi-fair if given the option to opt out (being the understanding that those who are actually selling for profit PAY the taxes they are supposed to).

But what I'm whining about is the potential of paying a tax on me selling personal items-- which are not subjected to being taxed within my state. So it wouldn't even be the potential "convenience fee" I'd be upset about, I'm ok to an extent with those for using a service (tho I wish some were lower *sigh*) -- it's about the potential of getting taxed on items that shouldn't be taxed.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: Taffeta on March 02, 2019, 03:30:49 PM


But what I'm whining about is the potential of paying a tax on me selling personal items-- which are not subjected to being taxed within my state. So it wouldn't even be the potential "convenience fee" I'd be upset about, I'm ok to an extent with those for using a service (tho I wish some were lower *sigh*) -- it's about the potential of getting taxed on items that shouldn't be taxed.

The only difference is whether the fee is on the seller or the buyer. With GSP, the fees for the middleman are separate and additional to the custom fee. They appear separately on the invoice. And the custom fees (and others from countries where this is an issue can testify on this too), are often higher than the tariff would be in the actual country. It becomes prohibitive because an item that might incur a £35 charge in real life is sometimes calculated by ebay as being an import charge of £100+ (and then middleman fees on top of this). That makes it impossible to buy the item. This is one reason I still don't have baby sugarcake xD.

A US user doesn't pay custom fees so would probably, if buying through GSP, only see the fees for the GSP rather than the import duty as well. Those of us who live in other countries where customs is charged at borders have a different experience.

So it's like your state tax issue in the sense it's an unjustified extra charge that our own govt wouldn't levy if the same item was sent through the regular post. But the difference is that it sounds like it's on the seller, whereas GSP is on the buyer.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 02, 2019, 04:52:13 PM
Eh. Except as far as I understand, EVERY package (that was a purchase) is subjected to tax coming into your country. They just don't always charge the custom fee, right? That's not an ebay issue to me. (I'm not stating you are incorrect by being annoyed with the charges).

I'm not opposed to convenience charges. I'm not opposed on people getting taxed for something that is their main income, or a supplemental income (ie, like over $1000).

The buyer will be charged for the state sales tax. I'm not clear on how that works though. It's something in the plan, and I'm pretty sure the seller will get charged a convenience fee for ebay handing money to the state. But if my state has a thing where personal items do not have to be taxed-- then they shouldn't be taxed. And that was my point.

(And I don't know if it they will, but my general gut feeling from reading the changes that's going to happen in the future).
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: LadyMoondancer on March 03, 2019, 07:39:35 AM
I kind of get eBay blanket-collecting the tax on everyone because otherwise there'd be a lot of big sellers spreading their business over ten accounts or something, to avoid paying the tax.  It does suck though and I wonder if it's even legal.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 03, 2019, 08:15:43 AM
I kind of get eBay blanket-collecting the tax on everyone because otherwise there'd be a lot of big sellers spreading their business over ten accounts or something, to avoid paying the tax.  It does suck though and I wonder if it's even legal.

I don't.

eBay keeps tracks of sales and numbers, and they report to the IRS people who make $10,000 or 200 sales. And they've been doing that for at least 5 years if not more...
(Learned that after selling our old laptops and Leica cameras)
(ETA O_o; some states might be lower..)

So I feel like it's not like they haven't been keeping track of people who sell. So I think people should be able to opt out of they are more a garage sale/casual seller (if their state allows such) and their numbers reflect it.

Although your location says you are in Seattle, so you should probably know more what ebay is doing since Washington state started in January. Do you keep your receipts for items you sell?

Meh. The more I read about this it's just inevitable and legal I guess bc of S.Dakota vs Wayfair. -__-
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: LadyMoondancer on March 04, 2019, 03:10:24 PM
Basically eBay collects the tax for Washington state and pays it.  I don't have to manually do anything, it's all on eBay's end.  The sellers who previously remitted sales tax themselves no longer have to.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 04, 2019, 04:32:13 PM
Yeah but there's more to then that, because ebay is treating it as a business. I'm not a business person, but obviously I'm going to have to learn... :) I have a few questions, but if this is me asking too much, you don't have to answer.

Is is fully transparent on what they are charging the buyer? Is it shown on each sale, and is it shown for the month?

Does the tax reflect your county sale tax? Will you have to make any adjustments at the end of the year if it doesn't?

How are you keeping track of your cost of goods?
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: LadyMoondancer on March 04, 2019, 07:02:44 PM
As a Washington state buyer I see the tax on items I buy, but as a Washington state seller I don't see it on items I sell.

I would post a screenshot but Flickr has that picture limit now and I think I'm maxed out.  But basically, when I buy something it will list it out like so:

Subtotal:  $10.50  <---- This is just the regular item cost.
Shipping: $8.60
Tax: $1.93
Total: $21.03

This jives perfectly with Seattle's sales tax (10.1%.)

Whereas this is what I have in my sales records for an item I sold to another Washingtonian:

Subtotal: $8.00
Shipping: $5.96
Refund: -$1.07  <---  The item weighed less than I expected so I did a partial refund.
Total:  $12.89

That transaction was on 1/30/19, I think the policy was already in place by then.  If not then . . . I don't have anything else I can check, that was my most recent sale to someone also in Washington state.

But basically, as a seller you don't have to collect receipts or whatnot.  It's all automated.  eBay automatically calculates the tax and collects it.  You, as the seller, never have to pay the state yourself.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 05, 2019, 06:43:14 AM
Thanks for all that :)

I don't like it. They need to be transparent about the taxes. If (general) you are paying taxes, then that's an income, and needs to be reported at the end of the year. And to report true profit then they need to know the difference between what your sale was, and what the item cost.

I'm not a business person at all, but ignorance is going through cause people to lose money.


Wait!!
Are you paying sales tax on shipping?
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: LadyMoondancer on March 05, 2019, 01:26:57 PM
Yes, in the majority of states, including Washington, shipping and handling is taxable.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 05, 2019, 01:40:52 PM
I see... I'm too used to "free" shipping
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: Loreofyore on March 06, 2019, 03:03:21 PM
 :huh:
Um afraid US state sales tax automation may depend upon whether or not you've actually enabled eBay to collect local state sales tax itself from your in-state bidders when you've set up your seller account. If you had hurray, they should break it down and give you evidence somewhere you just need a bit of help from ebay to find. If you don't see the tax money leaving it simply may not be paid invisibly from out of your other fees. For example, I say this because I intentionally didn't enable that ebay option when I set up my sellers account, I pay Connecticut directly. Also separately had to pay ebay it's own various fees for strictly it's own benefit.

Why would ebay do that??? Well ebay anticipates that fictionalebayseller01 user who hawks ribbons online may also operate an actual hair salon on the side for a day job and not want to pay taxes again separately for the same time period so at least when I sold on ebay, ebay allowed you not to enable the tax-collection function and to instead worry about city and state taxes yourself as a seller not to mention on your federal too. As I also did some yardsales for instance, easier for me to only pay once the sales taxes directly than pay ebay to pay CT all over again. You see it makes even more sense than 'free shipping' that taxes are inevitable for seller at least when you consider that officially eBay has no power to make rules of state taxation so payments ebay made on behalf  of your business to your state should be traceable as in they owe yourself proof of.

Enforcement is historically lax however. In-state sales taxes plus any local or cross town sales tax used to be as complicated as it could get for virtual business but it gets moreso lately.

Aside from the in-state tax sales tax collection responsibilities the business world had until last year gotten used to... there was a ruling last June by the Supreme Court of the United States against online retail giant Wayfair that has made chaos even for the professionals concerning taxes online from get this OTHER states... just a heads up the tax laws are really changing  so that as of last June even if your presence is all virtual it's suddenly very up in the air about what the impact will be upon for example some online activity with over 200 transactions (I really want to know if that includes intangible downloaded products because that's make or break ) per this or that state?

https://www.digitalcommerce360.com/2018/10/18/the-wayfair-ruling-evolving-sales-tax-laws-and-sleeper-states/

 I know groan... I think most small business don't like tax surprises though they can be worse than the taxes themselves... unfortunately it's apparently uncharted waters for now. I wouldn't trust eBay is ever as invested in the welfare of my business as I am so.

I got frustrated with frequent ebay-driven changes on ebay and have chose not to sell on last year, so can't tell people here if the taxes some are complaining are what strange?/new? are due to Wayfair vs SD or due to something else entirely but from what I'm reading not sure anyone is caught up to Wayfair vs SD as individual states have a lot of power to negotiate their own tax and licensing requirements which historically is slow and mutable. It may be like jaywalking for instance and maybe Colorado requires a license https://www.colorado.gov/pacific/sites/default/files/NewsRelease_Taxation_OutOfStateRetailers_9.11.18.pdf
  to sell 201 digital downloads of a pattern to people in Denver that they may or may not ever enforce... for new things... its like time will tell y'know to whom such vague-worded instruction will in practice apply. So luck to all us involved in our self employment adventures. :read:
Ok well, Colorado at least thankfully does not require for intangibles, still, wonder may be more trouble than it's worth if you are selling postcards?That's self-employment for you once you  :read:  you still have some more to  :read: . I so do not want to read tutorial programs from all fifty states... so I'm hoping it becomes easier in time.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: Beth3346 on March 10, 2019, 02:05:24 PM
are there any good alternatives to ebay? i feel like sales on the arena have slowed and i would prefer not to sell on facebook.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 15, 2019, 03:16:44 AM
I don't think there is when it comes to traffic and searchability. Instagram is an option for those who have following.

I was going to try mercari one of these days..
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: Taffeta on March 16, 2019, 08:25:39 AM
Eh. Except as far as I understand, EVERY package (that was a purchase) is subjected to tax coming into your country. They just don't always charge the custom fee, right? That's not an ebay issue to me. (I'm not stating you are incorrect by being annoyed with the charges).



No. It's not as simple as that. We have 2 types of charge. Tax and customs. And no, we don't pay tax on everything coming in. We pay nothing (at present, wait till the end of March or whenever for an update on that) for items from the EU/Norway/Switzerland, tax or customs. We pay VAT on items valued over £15 (or £18, I've read both accounts) from countries outside the EU. Under that there is no charge. The threshold is higher if a gift, which is why there's so much controversy. I think then it's £35.

The customs charge is a separate thing. Most charges you hear people grumbling about on here are not customs duties as such but VAT and handling charges. You have to have quite a high value item for a real custom charge which I think is 20% or something of the value.

And even then you see a difference in valuing because of the handling aspect. If something that's valued at about £20 comes through Royal Mail you might pay £8-13. If it comes through parcelforce you'll get a £21 charge.

And when it comes through our domestic customs, the people there also can manually judge if it's really worth charging or not. I have had some old stuff come through which should have been charged and which were checked at customs but decided to be not worth charging I guess, as I had no charge on them.

Ebay's GSP bypasses all of those steps. You get a charge, no matter what. It's an inflated one. It does somewhat respect the threshold but at the lowest possible conversion from the sale currency so you hit the threshold probably quicker. So it's an ebay issue bypassing the nuances of the system and how charges actually work at HMRC, in a similar way to your flat charge of tax fees issue.

So in short summary answer to you question  -no. It's not that simple.

BUT that's just the UK. Other countries may have different rules.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: banditpony on March 16, 2019, 08:35:59 AM
Eh. Except as far as I understand, EVERY package (that was a purchase) is subjected to tax coming into your country. They just don't always charge the custom fee, right? That's not an ebay issue to me. (I'm not stating you are incorrect by being annoyed with the charges).



No. It's not as simple as that. We have 2 types of charge. Tax and customs. And no, we don't pay tax on everything coming in. We pay nothing (at present, wait till the end of March or whenever for an update on that) for items from the EU/Norway/Switzerland, tax or customs. We pay VAT on items valued over £15 (or £18, I've read both accounts) from countries outside the EU. Under that there is no charge. The threshold is higher if a gift, which is why there's so much controversy. I think then it's £35.

I guess I over simplified it, but what you said was what I had in mind.

I did mean from US > UK (and I knew there was nothing from EU, and obviously that was subject to change).

I did use the word "tax" loosely, because I just see anything that gets a fee charged as a "tax".

And I knew about the certain threshold because that's why some people ask for packages to be marked down.

-_- I really worded my post badly.
Title: Re: eBay changes coming: all BINs "Good Till Canceled"
Post by: Taffeta on March 17, 2019, 05:14:19 PM


-_- I really worded my post badly.

*gives cookies*
SimplePortal 2.3.5 © 2008-2012, SimplePortal