Has buying and/or selling audio gear changed?


Hi Everyone, I've been a longtime observer on Audiogon but this is my first post.  I recently ran into a situation that was new to me as I've recently sold some of my gear and I'm in the process of replacing it.  I've used the normal websites (Audiogon, US Audiomart, TMR, etc) and those transactions have been smooth without any issues.  I normally use PP Goods and Services as well as insurance with shipping.  However, I recently was on a website of a well-known individual in the industry who has a piece of equipment that was reasonable priced.  No, it wasn't a "too good to be true" price but was in the ballpark of what one would expect.  As we were ready to finalize the sale, he informed me that he only does PayPal F&F and he won't insure the product for shipping stating this is now the industry standard and it was non-negotiable.  Is this the new standard and all my other recent transactions were non-typical because I used PP Goods & Services and made sure the shipping had insurance to try and provide some protection?  I don't live close enough to buy the gear in person and I've bought and sold across the US and never had a problem but always used Goods and Services for peace of mind for the unexpected issue or problem.  For the record, I'm only interested in conversation that is related to what the industry standard is, not the individual involved here.  Let me know your thoughts.      

128x128listenup23

I buy and sell a lot on all the "usual suspect" websites. And I definitely noticed many sellers going to this stance of "Paypal Friends & Family only will be accepted" thing.

I know they have their reasons. Most simply don’t understand that the IRS’ regulation of Paypal has been repeatedly delayed and at this point won’t take effect until 2025--if at all. Most also don’t realize that most sellers actually lose money on the items they sell and thus wouldn’t be on the hook for taxes. I also think a number of sellers just jumped on the F&F bandwagon for no particular reason other than it reduces their accountability to buyers. A small but very real % of these sellers are dishonest and welcome the F&F thing because they never plan to deliver what the buyer paid for, or deliver junk that is not at all what the buyer thought he/she was buying.

I’ve had many discussions w/these sellers. I usually start out by politely trying to inform them of the things they don’t know or understand. But it always ends the same way, by me saying: "I don’t know you and you don’t know me. So I’m not about to simply hand you $1000s of dollars without some recourse. Either that’s Goods and Services; or, if you’re a business, give me a quote and I’ll pay with a credit card. Otherwise, it’s not going to happen."

When I sell I accept Good & Services routinely. I face zero risk from the IRL no matter how often I sell (I’d never get near that annual threshold if/when they actually enact it), plus I simply can’t expect strangers to trust me so readily that they’ll send money w/no recourse.

Unless you can physically pick something up I would not buy used audio gear from anybody. Stretch and buy it new.

I don't see very many good things on used anyway and you have no idea what the history is. It's no longer under warranty and God help you if you need to get it repaired.

Audio cables sure why not. 
 

buy From a place called ‘stereo buyers’ which handles used equipment and that's probably a better idea or sky audio in New Jersey. Or buy used equipment from an audio dealer that you know and have experience with.

 

 

I use US Audiomart and Audiogon for nearly all my sales with PP G&S payment preferred.  Ebay used to be my go to but at 12.5% transaction fee, forget it.