Pricing strategy for resellers

Pricing is the single most important lever in a buyback business. Set the payout ratio too high and your margin disappears; too low and your sellers walk to the next shop. Most resellers sit between 65–72% — but the right number depends on your channel, region, and overhead. Here's the framework.

The payout-ratio formula

Your payout to the seller is a percentage of current resale market value:

Buy price = (Resale market value × Payout ratio) − (Condition adjustments) − (Carrier-lock penalty) − (Risk discount)

Most operators publish their payout ratio as the headline number on their site (e.g. "We pay 70% of market"). It's the cleanest signal to compare across competitors.

Picking your starting payout ratio

Operator profileRecommended ratioLogic
New reseller, no other sourcing68–72%Higher ratio attracts more sellers while you're building flow
Established reseller, mixed sourcing65–70%You have wholesale fill-in, can afford to walk away from low-margin trades
High-cost-region (NYC / SF / Boston)62–68%Higher overhead, but you can charge slightly lower because seller demand is concentrated
Low-cost-region (Midwest / South small metro)70–75%Less competition; ratio is your differentiator

Per-category overrides

A flat payout ratio is the right starting point but rarely optimal long-term. Most established operators override per category:

Per-condition adjustments

On top of the headline ratio, the condition adjustments from our pricing calculator apply:

The "competitor-anchored" floor

Run a monthly check on what 3–5 competitors in your region are paying for the same model. If you're 8%+ below the median competitor, you're losing sellers without realizing it. If you're 3%+ above the median, you're leaving margin on the table.

Most successful operators sit ±2% of the regional median, with category overrides creating differentiation in specific segments.

Refresh frequency

Wholesale prices move weekly. If your buy prices don't update at least weekly, you're consistently mis-paying. Either:

Margin sanity check — what makes a buyback business healthy

Healthy unit economics for a small operator look like this:

If any of these drift below the lower band for 2+ months, the price strategy needs tightening — usually by lowering the ratio 1–2% or pulling carrier-locked stock out of the buy mix.

Related

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