Profit margin guide
eBay Profit Margin Guide for Card Sellers
Profit margin gives card sellers a clearer view of which sales are healthy, which offers are risky, and which inventory ties up too much cash.
Profit margin is not the same as profit
Profit is the estimated dollars left after costs. Profit margin compares that profit with seller revenue. A $10 profit can be excellent on a $25 card and weak on a $200 card depending on the cash, risk, and time involved.
For trading card sellers, margin matters because many small fees stack together: marketplace fees, postage, packaging, advertising, payment-related charges, and the original card cost.
Use the card seller margin formula
Profit margin = estimated net profit / seller revenue. Seller revenue is usually item price plus shipping charged. Net profit is what remains after eBay fees, ad fees, postage, supplies, card cost, and other order costs.
The VAULTED eBay card profit calculator does this math automatically and also shows ROI and break-even price.
Set minimum margins by inventory type
Not every card needs the same target. Low-value raw singles may need a higher margin percentage because postage and supplies take a bigger bite. Higher-value graded cards may have a lower percentage but still create enough dollar profit to justify the work.
Separate your inventory into groups such as low-value raw cards, mid-range singles, graded slabs, lots, and premium cards. Each group can have its own acceptable margin.
Use cash ROI when buying inventory
Cash ROI compares profit with the money tied up in the card and fulfillment. It helps answer a different question: was this a good use of capital?
A card that produces $8 profit on a $2 cost is very different from a card that produces $8 profit on a $90 cost. Both may be profitable, but they do not use cash equally.
Know your break-even price
The break-even price is the lowest sale price that covers your entered costs under the same assumptions. It is useful when repricing stale inventory or deciding whether to accept an offer.
If a buyer offer is close to break-even, ask whether moving the card quickly is worth the thin result. Sometimes clearing inventory is smart. Sometimes it trains you to accept poor pricing.
Review margin after the order closes
Estimated margin before listing is a planning tool. Real margin after the sale is the truth. Compare the estimate against the actual shipping label, ad fee, order total, and card cost.
When you review actual margin, your future pricing gets sharper. You start noticing which cards sell profitably, which categories are too thin, and which shipping habits quietly cost money.
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