rig-flip3 min read

Best Platforms to Sell Flipped PCs in 2026: Where to List for Maximum Profit

Best Platforms to Sell Flipped PCs in 2026: Where to List for Maximum Profit

You've sourced the parts, built the rig, and priced it right. Now comes the part that actually puts money in your pocket: selling it.

Choosing the wrong platform can cost you hundreds in fees, wasted time, or lowball offers. Choosing the right one means faster sales, better margins, and repeat buyers.

Here's every major platform ranked for PC flippers — with real pros, cons, and tips for each.

Facebook Marketplace: The King for Local Sales

For most flippers, Facebook Marketplace is where the majority of sales happen.

Why it works:

  • Zero selling fees (for local pickup)
  • Massive audience — nearly everyone has Facebook
  • Great for mid-range builds ($300–$800)

Tips for flippers:

  • Use high-quality photos with RGB lighting on
  • List during evenings and weekends for maximum visibility
  • Price 10–15% above your target to leave room for negotiation
  • Always meet in a public place or install a doorbell camera for pickups

Best for: Budget and mid-range builds, local sales, avoiding shipping hassles.

eBay: Best for High-End and Niche Builds

eBay charges fees (~13% after payment processing), but it gives you access to a national or international buyer pool.

Why it works:

  • Buyers actively search for specific specs
  • Auction format can drive prices above market for rare builds
  • Buyer protection means people spend more confidently
  • Great for niche builds (SFF, themed, workstation)

Watch out for:

  • 13% in fees eats into margins significantly
  • Shipping a full PC is risky and expensive ($40–$80+)
  • Scam buyers who claim "item not as described"
  • Returns can wreck your profit on a single build

Tips for flippers:

  • Ship GPUs separately with insurance
  • Use "Buy It Now" with best offer for faster sales
  • Photograph every angle and include benchmarks
  • Require signature confirmation for items over $750

Best for: Premium builds ($800+), rare components, nationwide reach.

Craigslist and Local Classifieds

Old school, but still works in many markets.

Why it works:

  • No fees at all
  • Direct communication, no platform middleman
  • Works well in tech-heavy cities

Downsides:

  • Smaller audience than Facebook Marketplace
  • More tire-kickers and no-shows
  • No built-in payment processing

Best for: Secondary listing channel alongside Facebook Marketplace.

r/hardwareswap (Reddit)

The PC enthusiast's marketplace. If you're selling to people who actually understand specs, this is your spot.

Why it works:

  • Knowledgeable buyers who know fair prices
  • Community-driven trust system (confirmed trades flair)
  • No fees (PayPal Goods & Services for protection)
  • Great for individual components and part-outs

Watch out for:

  • Strict posting rules — read them before listing
  • Prices tend to be lower (savvy buyers)
  • You need Reddit karma to post

Best for: Part-outs, components, selling to enthusiasts.

OfferUp and Mercari

Mobile-first marketplaces that work similarly to Facebook Marketplace.

Why they work:

  • Built-in shipping labels (Mercari)
  • Younger audience comfortable buying online
  • Clean interface for listing

Downsides:

  • Mercari takes ~13% in fees for shipped items
  • Smaller audience than Facebook for PCs specifically
  • OfferUp has a scam problem in some areas

Best for: Secondary channel, especially if Facebook isn't working in your area.

Your Own Website or Social Media

Some flippers build a brand and sell direct.

Why it works:

  • Zero platform fees
  • Build a reputation and repeat customer base
  • Full control over pricing and presentation

What you need:

  • An Instagram or TikTok showing your builds
  • A simple website or Shopify store
  • Patience — this takes months to build

Best for: High-volume flippers ready to build a brand.

Platform Comparison at a Glance

Here's the quick breakdown:

Facebook Marketplace — Fees: 0% local | Audience: Huge | Best for: Budget and mid builds

eBay — Fees: ~13% | Audience: National | Best for: Premium and niche builds

Craigslist — Fees: 0% | Audience: Small to medium | Best for: Secondary channel

r/hardwareswap — Fees: 0% | Audience: Enthusiasts | Best for: Part-outs

OfferUp/Mercari — Fees: 0-13% | Audience: Medium | Best for: Backup channel

Direct/Social — Fees: 0% | Audience: Build it yourself | Best for: Brand builders

How to Track What Sells Where

Once you're listing across multiple platforms, you need a system to track which builds sell where, how fast, and at what margin.

Spreadsheets work, but they get messy fast. Dedicated tools like Rig Flip let you track every build from sourcing through sale — including which platform you sold on and your actual profit after fees.

Knowing your numbers per platform helps you double down on what works and drop what doesn't.

The Multi-Platform Strategy

The most profitable flippers don't pick one platform — they use a combination:

  1. List on Facebook Marketplace first (free, fast, local)
  2. Cross-post to Craigslist and OfferUp (takes 5 minutes)
  3. If it doesn't sell in 2 weeks, list on eBay with shipping
  4. Part out if needed on r/hardwareswap or eBay

This approach maximizes exposure while keeping fees low.

Bottom Line

Where you sell matters almost as much as what you sell. Start with Facebook Marketplace for its zero fees and massive audience, then expand to eBay for premium builds and r/hardwareswap for components.

Track everything, learn which platforms work best for your build types, and adjust your strategy quarterly. The flippers making real money aren't just good at building — they're good at selling.

Track every flip. Know your real profit.

Stop calculating fees in your head. Rig Flip tracks your inventory, costs, and profit automatically.

Free forever. No credit card required.

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