Why Musical Instruments Sells on Facebook Marketplace (and How to Price It Right)
Shopfront Team
Facebook Marketplace is where Australian buyers go when they want musical instruments. With 17.2 million estimated AU users, most of them 25–50 and skewing balanced, the demand is real. Broadest reach in Australia. 75.6% of eligible Australians (13+) actively use Facebook.. For a full walkthrough on listing and pricing, see our guide to selling musical instruments on Facebook Marketplace.
Who's Buying Musical Instruments on Facebook Marketplace?
Facebook Marketplace attracts 25–50 buyers who are balanced. Broadest reach in Australia. 75.6% of eligible Australians (13+) actively use Facebook.. That audience lines up with musical instruments because fast local sales, furniture, bulky items. Buyers here are not bargain hunting at random. They search with intent, and musical instruments is one of the categories they come back for.
The platform's strongest categories include Furniture, Homewares, Electronics, Baby & Kids Items. Musical Instruments fits that mix, which means your listings appear alongside related items buyers are already browsing. That built-in traffic matters more than any promotion.
What Facebook Marketplace Buyers Pay for Musical Instruments
Fender and Gibson hold value; most other brands depreciate 50%+ from new. Acoustic guitars ship easier than electrics with amps. Japanese vintage guitars (Tokai, Greco, Fernandes) are the current hot market. Factor in shipping. instruments need proper cases and careful packaging. Factor in Facebook Marketplace's seller fee of 0% before setting your price. Use the Facebook Marketplace calculator to see exactly what you keep after fees and shipping.
Buyers on Facebook Marketplace expect prices to reflect the platform's positioning. Australia's largest local selling platform with 17.2 million Australian Facebook users. Best for local pickup, furniture, and bulky items with no fees for cash sales. Price too low and buyers question authenticity. Price too high and they scroll past. Check sold listings to find the sweet spot for musical instruments in your condition range.
The Sourcing Edge
Good sourcing is what separates profitable sellers from busy ones. Garage sales and deceased estates surface instruments. Facebook Marketplace is full of abandoned hobby instruments at bargain prices. School instrument hire returns sometimes end up at op shops. Japanese-made guitars from the 70s-80s (Tokai, Greco) have shot up in value.
Study what sells at full price versus what sits. That pattern recognition is what turns sourcing from guesswork into a repeatable system.
Photos That Convert on Facebook Marketplace
Your first photo is your ad. Buyers decide whether to tap within two seconds. Photograph the body, neck, headstock, fretboard, bridge, and any hardware. Show fret wear and any dings or cracks. For guitars, include the serial number. Video of the instrument being played adds huge buyer confidence.
On Facebook Marketplace specifically, broadest reach in australia. 75.6% of eligible australians (13+) actively use facebook.. Match the visual style they expect. Clean backgrounds work for most musical instruments, but lifestyle shots can outperform flat lays when the item benefits from context.
Fee Reality Check
Facebook Marketplace charges 0% in seller fees. 0% for local pickup (cash or direct bank transfer). 10% fee applies when using Facebook's checkout for shipped items.. Payment processing adds Varies. cash, bank transfer, or Meta Pay (for shipped items). Listing fees: free. Most AU sellers do local pickup with cash or bank transfer, avoiding all fees entirely.
Store subscriptions cost None. Whether that's worth it depends on your volume. For a full breakdown, see Facebook Marketplace fees.
Quick Wins
- Use all available photo slots. Listings with more photos get more views on Facebook Marketplace.
- Include measurements and condition details upfront. Fewer questions means faster sales.
- Ship within 24 hours. Primarily local pickup. Sellers arrange their own shipping for non-local sales. No integrated shipping solution. Cash on pickup is the norm. request bank transfer for safety over unknown amounts.
- Price musical instruments based on sold data, not active listings. Active listings are just asking prices.
- Cross-list to maximise exposure. Musical Instruments also does well on ebay.
Selling musical instruments on Facebook Marketplace works when you understand the buyers already there. Price with the data, source with an edge, and let your photos do the convincing. If you're listing across multiple platforms, Try Shopfront free to manage everything from one dashboard.
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