You've got books to sell. The internet makes it seem like you have infinite options — Amazon, eBay, Facebook Marketplace, BooksRun, BookScouter, Decluttr. Then there's the local route: bring them to a buyer and get cash today. Which is actually the best deal?
Selling Yourself (Amazon / eBay)
Pros: Highest possible price per book. You capture the full retail value minus platform fees.
Cons: It's a job. You need to list each book individually (photos, descriptions, condition notes), manage inventory, handle shipping, deal with returns, and wait for sales. A book listed today might sell in a week or sit for months. Platform fees run 15-20%. For one high-value book, this can make sense. For 200 books? It's weeks of work.
Best for: A single rare book worth $200+ where the effort-to-reward ratio makes sense.
Online Buyback Services (BooksRun, Decluttr, etc.)
Pros: Simple process — scan ISBNs, get quotes, ship.
Cons: Offers are typically 20-40% of what the book would sell for at retail. You pack and ship (sometimes at your cost). Payment takes 1-3 weeks. They reject books that don't meet their criteria, and you may have to pay return shipping.
Best for: Textbooks with known ISBNs that you want to get rid of without leaving the house.
Local Buyer (SellBooksABQ)
Pros: Cash today. No shipping, no listing, no waiting. We come to you for large collections. We handle everything, including donating what we don't buy. One visit, done.
Cons: We pay wholesale, not retail. A book that would sell for $30 on Amazon might earn you $8-15 from us. That's the trade-off for instant cash and zero effort.
Best for: Collections of any size, estates, people who value their time, anyone who wants cash now instead of dealing with the logistics of online selling.
The Hybrid Approach
Some people do both: bring us the bulk of their collection for a quick payout, then list the 3-4 most valuable items themselves on eBay for maximum return. We're happy to point out which books might be worth the effort of individual online sale — it's part of our evaluation.
The Hidden Costs of Selling Books Online
Online selling sounds great in theory. In practice, here's what most people don't account for:
- Time per listing — photographing, describing, pricing, and listing a single book takes 10-15 minutes. For 100 books, that's 25+ hours of work.
- Platform fees — eBay takes 13-15%, Amazon takes 15% + closing fees. PayPal/payment processing adds another 3%.
- Shipping costs and hassle — media mail is cheap ($3-5) but slow. Buyers expect fast shipping. Returns happen. Damage claims happen.
- Storage — books sitting unsold take up space. Average time-to-sell on Amazon for a used book is 3-6 months.
- The long tail — you'll sell the top 20% quickly. The remaining 80% will sit for months or years.
Selling locally means one trip, one evaluation, cash in hand, done. No shipping, no fees, no waiting. For most people with a collection to unload, local is the smarter play.
Ready for the easy route? Call or text 702-496-4214 or learn how it works.