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What Is Firm Price? How It Affects Your Reselling Profits

Shopfront Team

3 min read

Firm Price: The listed price is not negotiable. Sellers add 'FIRM' or 'price is firm' to listings to avoid lowball offers. Saves time but may reduce the number of offers you receive. That is the textbook version. What matters to you as a seller is how this concept affects your profits. For the quick definition, see our Firm Price glossary entry. This post covers the practical side.

What It Actually Means

Strip away the jargon and firm price comes down to one thing. The listed price is not negotiable. Sellers add 'FIRM' or 'price is firm' to listings to avoid lowball offers. Saves time but may reduce the number of offers you receive. In everyday selling, that looks like this: you list an item, a buyer searches for it, and whether they find yours depends partly on how well you understand firm price.

Most sellers encounter firm price without realising it. You have already dealt with it if you have ever wondered why one listing gets views and an identical one does not. The difference often traces back to this concept.

How It Affects Your Bottom Line

Understanding firm price directly affects how much you keep from each sale. Here are the numbers.

On eBay, where seller fees are 0% and payment processing adds Included in final value fee via eBay Managed Payments, your margin on a $50 item is already tight. If you do not account for firm price, you lose another chunk of that margin to slower sales, lower prices, or wasted listing time.

Sellers who understand this concept price more accurately, list more efficiently, and sell faster. That is not theory. It is the difference between $15 an hour and $30 an hour when you factor in your time.

The practical takeaway: learn this once, apply it to every listing. The compounding effect across hundreds of listings is significant.

Where This Applies

Firm Price plays out differently depending on the marketplace. Each platform has its own rules and buyer expectations.

eBay: With 12 million AU users (25–55, balanced), firm price matters here because highest volume, widest reach, established sellers. The 0% seller fee (see eBay fees) means understanding this concept directly protects your margin. Read more about eBay.

Facebook Marketplace: With 17.2 million AU users (25–50, balanced), firm price matters here because fast local sales, furniture, bulky items. The 0% seller fee (see Facebook Marketplace fees) means understanding this concept directly protects your margin. Read more about Facebook Marketplace.

Depop: With 800K AU users (16–26, 70% female), firm price matters here because trendy and vintage clothing, gen z market. The 10% seller fee (see Depop fees) means understanding this concept directly protects your margin. Read more about Depop.

Related Concepts

Firm Price does not exist in isolation. These related terms round out your understanding.

  • obo: Closely connected to firm price. Understanding both gives you a more complete picture of how marketplace selling works.
  • lowball: Closely connected to firm price. Understanding both gives you a more complete picture of how marketplace selling works.

Each of these concepts reinforces the others. Sellers who understand the full set make better decisions across pricing, listing, and sourcing.

Knowing firm price gives you an edge that compounds across every listing. Apply it consistently and your per-item profit goes up without working harder. If you are selling across multiple platforms, Try Shopfront free to manage everything from one dashboard.

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