
No mate, after the item is delivered.Or is delivery confirmation when the seller marks the item as posted??
It's much, much worse than just that. After removing selling fees late last year (on the face of it a great thing for sellers), eBay have announced that from February they will be adding a mandatory sales tax to every single item bought on eBay. They don't call it that of course, but that's exactly what it is. So instead of charging sellers a commission on what they sell (which is actually a perfectly fair and reasonable thing to do), those evil b*stards will now add a fee to every single sale and charge it to the buyer! The fees will be added at source and hence cannot be avoided, so if you list an item for sale at £20, eBay will list it at £21.55, or however much their rip-off buyer's tax adds on (I believe it's up to 4% plus 75p, albeit capped at some point on higher priced items).
I for one will be buying as much as possible elsewhere, since eBay clearly don't want my custom any longer.
Jeremy

The info was in an email I received on the 3rd of January. eBay are clearly trying to fleece their customers and since they have more buyers than sellers and since they’re thoroughly disguising their new fees (because they won’t be visible), they obviously think they can get away with this with literally every purchase made gaining them a fee.Thanks for info, do you have a link about it?.
I always wondered what the big plan was when they decided to stop selling fees although if its worldwide via global shipping program you get charged still, found that out not so long ago when something I sold had a fee charge
Seems to me that if its true about the charges they have just copied many Facebook group rules with G&S payments on top.
Looks like to me they are trying all ways to make people talk about eBay to get more people to sell on there and trying to manipulate people in thinking the changes are better but in fact its just a way to still get their cut from either the sellers or buyers. I understand they are a business and making money is the aim but come on manipulate people with big signs of improvements is just not the right way about it, I always knew its too good to be true and thought what's the marketing strat they would come up with.
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The info was in an email I received on the 3rd of January. eBay are clearly trying to fleece their customers and since they have more buyers than sellers and since they're thoroughly disguising their new fees (because they won't be visible), they obviously think they can get away with this with literally every purchase made gaining them a fee.
Here's the email I received:
More protection for your buyers
What's great about Buyer Protection
How the Buyer Protection fee works
How we're improving things for private sellers
My personal experience of eBay and this particular situation at present (i.e. as a seller you send an item via a tracked postage service, but the tracking never completes/shows the item as having been delivered), then as long as the buyer doesn't report the item as not having arrived, then after a certain period of time (the typical length of time it takes for that service to complete. So in other words, not an unreasonable length of time) eBay releases the payment to the seller.As a buyer and seller I've often had things successfully delivered but the tracking hasn't been updated. Particularly international deliveries. So in these cases the seller loses the payout?
And I presume it's no longer possible to send low value stuff by standard untracked delivery?
Doesn't sound like a safe system for sellers.
So according to ebay, if you send an item untracked or if you send it tracked but the tracking info doesn't update once delivered, they will hold onto your payment for 14 days before releasing it, instead of the 2 days if sent tracked and confirmed delivered.As a buyer and seller I've often had things successfully delivered but the tracking hasn't been updated. Particularly international deliveries. So in these cases the seller loses the payout?
And I presume it's no longer possible to send low value stuff by standard untracked delivery?
Doesn't sound like a safe system for sellers.
That said, taxing 100% of purchases by making all buyers pay an unwarranted surcharge
is so unfair that as more and more people become aware of it, I hope eBay will be flooded with complaints and lost custom.
I think they already are doing that - so many saved searches of mine are producing more and more random crap. Not yet to Amazon levels of shite, but heading that waymake it hard to find stuff unless you paid for sponsored or promoted listings.
