Legal & compliance: buying used phones in the US

Buying used electronics from the public is a regulated activity in most US states. Secondhand-dealer licensing, ID verification, mandatory hold periods, and law-enforcement reporting all apply. This is the state-by-state map every reseller should read before their first buy.

The four common requirements

1. Secondhand dealer license

Most US states require a specific license to buy used electronics from the public. Common names: Secondhand Dealer License, Pawnbroker License (in a few states it's combined), Precious Metals & Secondhand Goods License. Issuing authority is usually the state Department of Licensing or the city / county in metro areas.

2. ID verification on every transaction

Most secondhand-dealer regulations require photographing the seller's government ID and recording: full name, address, ID number, the device's make / model / serial / IMEI, the date and price paid. Some jurisdictions require this data to be uploaded to a state-run reporting system (LeadsOnline is common — Illinois, Florida, Tennessee, Texas, parts of California).

3. Hold period before resale

Many states require a 14–30 day hold period between purchase and resale. The reasoning: stolen-property victims have time to file police reports and pull their phone back. Common hold periods:

4. Reporting to law enforcement

Some states require you to upload daily transaction data to a centralized reporting system (LeadsOnline, BWI, RAPID). Cost: usually $20–$60/month. Failure to report is a license-revocation offense.

State-by-state highlights

StateLicense requiredHoldReporting system
CaliforniaYes (statewide + county)14 daysLeadsOnline
FloridaYes (county-level)30 daysLeadsOnline
IllinoisYes21 daysLeadsOnline / RAPID
New YorkYes (state + city)14 daysNYC: BWI
TexasYes21 daysLeadsOnline
WashingtonYes30 daysState system
MassachusettsYes14 daysLocal PD
PennsylvaniaYes30 daysRAPID
ArizonaLocal onlyNone statewideVaries
GeorgiaLocal onlyNone statewideVaries

This is a starting point — local ordinances often add stricter requirements, especially in major metros (NYC, LA, Chicago, Houston, Atlanta).

Tax considerations

Insurance

Two policies most resellers carry:

Combined cost typically $40–$120/month for a small operation.

The single biggest mistake

Operating without the secondhand-dealer license is the most common new-reseller mistake. Penalties range from $500 fines (first offense, no prior record) to inventory seizure and license bar (repeat offenses, knowingly receiving stolen goods). Get the license before your first buy. The 8-week wait is annoying but the alternative is losing the business in month 6.

Related

Build your own buyback site in minutes

WerOrg gives small resellers a fully-branded buyback storefront — live pricing, automated shipping, IMEI checks. 14-day free trial.

Start free →