phillybhatesme
Well-known member
Discogs has this down right. You can see the exact variant’s sold history over the course of several years. You can see the outliers on a chart and the actual value of whatever you’re shopping.
yeah but you have Jacinda Ardern.......Yep, I feel the pain man. But we don't have Alex Jones, so I think we're doing ok.
Yeah this is precisely my thinking on why this policy exists, soaring prices are awesome as far as they're concerned. At least with eBay, back in the day anyway, the sold price was accurate.The higher the sale price, the more commission Reverb gets.
She's close enough. They can keep her, you can keep Alex.yeah but you have Jacinda Ardern.......
Reverb have a transaction chart / graph (mentioned earlier in this thread) that is similar to what you're describing. This too shows the original asking price as far as I can tell though.
Are you referring to the Transaction History chart? I had to go and find this today - twas the first time I'm seeing and hearing of this. Do we know if these are the actual sold prices? Or just what Reverb lists as the sold prices?
Ok so this is interesting, maybe there's different rules or categories - it certainly seems inconsistent.Was just looking at transaction history and my last sale was correct on price.
Ok so this is interesting, maybe there's different rules or categories - it certainly seems inconsistent.
So to confirm, you listed an item, then took an offer, and the sold price reflects the offer on that chart? What if you just find the original item listing when searching for sold items?
Wow ok, weird that it's inconsistent. I'm not the only one to notice this, someone pointed it out to me a few years back.Correct. My listing was for 100 bucks more than it sold for. Did not include shipping in the price sold either.
I think they leave the listed price still on there and the sold price a separate page.Wow ok, weird that it's inconsistent. I'm not the only one to notice this, someone pointed it out to me a few years back.
Why type of item? I'm wondering if it depends on new vs used, what category, US or international sales etc. Strange stuff. Or maybe they just changed policies recently, my most recent example was Oct last year - a $1500 power amp I paid significantly less for and sold listing still says $1500.
When you view your original listing though, is the sold price the original or final price?I think they leave the listed price still on there and the sold price a separate page.
The listing still shows what I listed it as.When you view your original listing though, is the sold price the original or final price?
Amateurs...
Ok thanks, and therein lies the problem. It's ok if the two prices are close, but this trend of people listing their gear for ambitiously high prices and then taking a much lower offer really messes with the perceived value of a particular item.The listing still shows what I listed it as.
Just checked and the listings aren't showing in sold anymore. Maybe I bought them too long ago now.Actually man can you please check the sold prices on those and confirm they still indicate the original asking price? I've noticed it on all my purchases, but some random dude on FB (who claims to have worked at Reverb) says it's not the case, or not always the case. Surely he can be trusted, I mean he even said he's totally trustworthy.