Practical pricing tips for contractors listing surplus materials and equipment.
A listing that sits for three months isn't an asset — it's just clutter with a price tag. The contractors who sell fastest on OFFLOADIT aren't necessarily pricing lowest. They're pricing honestly, showing what they have clearly, and making it easy for a buyer to say yes. Here's how to do that.
Search OFFLOADIT for the same or similar items before you set your price. If three other sellers have 2x4 studs at $0.40 each and yours are the same grade and condition, pricing at $0.75 won't get you a sale — it'll get you ignored. Comparable listings are your fastest market research.
"Good condition" means different things to different people. Call out the actual state: weathered but structurally sound, surface rust only, one cracked pallet, missing the original box. Buyers who know exactly what they're getting bid faster and ghost less. Surprises at pickup kill deals and damage your seller reputation.
Start where you'd comfortably settle, not at your dream number. A buyer's first offer is almost always below asking — if your ask is already at your floor, the negotiation has nowhere to go. Give yourself 10–15% of room without going so high that buyers scroll past.
A half-pallet of tile on its own might sit. A half-pallet of tile with matching grout and backer board is a complete bathroom floor project — and worth more to the right buyer. Grouping related surplus into a single listing often gets you a faster sale at a better total price than listing each piece separately.
If the buyer has to rent a truck, hire labor, or drive two hours, that cost comes off what they're willing to pay you. Price with realistic pickup friction in mind — or specify that you'll load it for them, which is a genuine selling point. Listings that include "will assist with loading" consistently move faster.
If a listing hasn't had a serious inquiry in two weeks, the price is probably the problem. Drop it 10–15%, refresh the photos if you can, and repost. Materials and equipment lose real value over time — a motivated sale today beats a desperate sale in six months.
For used items in good condition, most sellers land somewhere between 40–60% of the current new price. Beat-up but functional? 20–35%. Like new, minimal use, original packaging? You can push closer to 70%. These aren't rules — they're starting points. The final price is whatever a buyer will actually pay today.
Two identical pallets of flooring priced the same will not perform the same if one has four clear photos and an honest description and the other has one blurry shot and "misc tile." Buyers on OFFLOADIT are buying remotely and making decisions based on what they can see. Shoot in daylight, show multiple angles, include a measurement reference. A well-photographed listing at a slightly higher price will outsell a vague listing at a lower one. New to selling? Read up on seller protection before you post.
You've got the price. Now put it in front of buyers.
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