OFFLOADIT connects real contractors and tradespeople. The vast majority of transactions are honest and straightforward. A few common-sense habits protect you every time.
Use OFFLOADIT's in-app messaging for all communication before the deal closes. If something goes wrong, those messages are your record. Sellers or buyers who push you off-platform before any agreement is in place are a yellow flag.
Ask questions in-app: confirm the quantity, condition, and that the item is still available before you drive to inspect it. A quick message saves a wasted trip.
Check their profile: how long have they been on OFFLOADIT, do they have reviews or completed transactions? A new account with no history isn't automatically a problem — but it's worth a few extra questions.
Price, payment method, pickup window, and who's responsible for loading — settle these before the meeting. A clear agreement in your message thread protects both sides.
For smaller items, a public or semi-public location — a parking lot, a supply house, a yard — is fine. For large equipment or materials you're inspecting on-site, bring someone with you if you don't know the seller.
Never hand over payment before you've seen and checked the item. For equipment, run it. For materials, count it and check the condition. See our full Inspect Before You Buy checklist for what to look for.
Cash is fine for small deals. For anything over a few hundred dollars, use a payment method that leaves a record — bank transfer, check, or a payment app with transaction history. Avoid wire transfers to unknown parties.
If a seller asks for full payment before you can inspect or take possession — especially for high-value equipment — slow down. A deposit is reasonable; full payment upfront before you've seen the item is not standard practice.
Reviews help every user on the platform. If the transaction was smooth, say so. If there was a problem, document it. Honest reviews protect the next buyer or seller.
Hold onto your payment confirmation, any messages about the deal, and photos of the item at pickup. For titled equipment, keep the signed title transfer. If a dispute comes up, you'll have what you need.
You don't need to share your home address, personal bank account details, or government ID to transact on OFFLOADIT. If someone asks for information that seems unnecessary, that's a red flag.
These specific situations should make you stop and verify before proceeding:
A buyer or seller who insists on a wire transfer — especially to an account outside your normal banking — is using a payment method that is difficult or impossible to reverse. This is the most common vector for fraud on peer-to-peer platforms. Use bank transfers or traceable payment apps instead.
A buyer sends a check or payment for more than the agreed price, then asks you to refund the difference. The original payment bounces or reverses after you've sent the "refund." Never return a partial payment before the original has fully cleared.
Someone asks you to move the conversation to personal email, text, or another app before the deal is agreed. This removes your transaction history and, with it, your ability to report the interaction. Decline and keep it in OFFLOADIT.
An item listed well below market for its condition that a seller is eager to close quickly — especially if they can't answer basic questions about it — warrants extra scrutiny. Ask for more photos, a serial number, or a video of it running before you commit.
For titled equipment (excavators, trucks, trailers), confirm the seller can produce the title before you go see it. If they're evasive about ownership documentation, that's a problem before it becomes your problem.
If a transaction goes sideways — fraud, a significant misrepresentation, a safety concern — report it through our support team. We take reports seriously and will follow up.
What to include in your report:
For emergencies or immediate personal safety concerns, contact local law enforcement first. OFFLOADIT support handles platform disputes — we are not a substitute for emergency services.