How to Sell Used Books Online

Can You Make Money Selling Your Used Books?

Fran Brockmyre
Selling your used books online is another way to earn some extra spending money. Granted you won't get rich doing it unless you have some rare, first edition personally-autographed-by the-long-deceased-author book. If you do possess one of those rare tomes, you'd be better off selling to a collector or bookstore owner rather than online. However, you can find out online if your old books are worth anything. http://www.fadedgiant.net/ is one website that will tell you if your books have any value. There are other sites that will also do so. This article, however, has suggestions for selling your recent hardcover and paperback books that may be gathering dust on your shelves.

A popular venue for both buying and selling used books is Amazon.com. The process is simple. There are detailed instructions on their website, http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=1161238. Here are the instructions in a nutshell. First you enter either the title of your book or the ISBN number usually found on the back cover. Amazon will find the book and tell you what it is currently selling for on Amazon.com. You will also be shown a box that lists how many copies of your book are currently being offered for sale by competing sellers and the prices of those copies. This can be instrumental in helping you set the price of your book. Next you will be asked to determine the condition of your book according to set guidelines. Once this is done you are ready to list your book. The shipping amount has been set at $3.99 by Amazon.com. That's all there is to it.

My first time selling on Amazon.com was a learning experience. The book I offered for sale was a current best seller in paperback. There were very few other copies being offered. I set the price at $5.00 as there was only one other copy being offered for less than that. It sold within a day. I even made some money on the preset shipping price of $3.99 because it didn't cost that much to send the book. The lesson I learned is that Amazon.com gets a commission of 15% of the sale price, a transaction fee of $.99 and a closing fee of $1.35. My profit wasn't as good as I thought it would be. This did not discourage me, however. I searched out a few more titles to sell. Much to my dismay, I discovered that most of them were being offered by booksellers who were offering the books for as little as $.01. I could not compete with them. Unless you have a book that is hot off the press or very rare, it is not easy to make money selling books on Amazon.com. On the other hand buying used books on Amazon.com is a good way to get good, used books cheaply.

Another website for selling used books is http://www.powells.com/. I had a little more success using this website. On this website you enter the ISBN number of the books you wish to sell. After doing so Powells will indicate which of the books they will buy and make an offer. Powell's will pay for the shipping if you are mailing within the United States. Once again I went through my books and chose 32 with which I was willing to part. Of the 32 books, Powells made me an offer of $6.00 for three of them. I accepted, printed out the shipping label and off they went.

Although it is a good way to make more room on your shelves for new books, selling books online is not a money making proposition. I am going to either donate the books to a worthy cause or wait until the next neighborhood garage sale. Oh well, you never know until you try.

Sources: http://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=1161238
http://www.powells.com/

Personal experience

Published by Fran Brockmyre

I am a retired teacher and live in Florida in the winter and in Upstate New York in the summer. I began writing books for my grandson 2 years ago and discovered how much I enjoy writing.  View profile

19 Comments

Post a Comment
  • Heather3/1/2011

    I sell on ebay myself, mostly older books, some new nonfiction, doll books, or something with a specific purpose. I've been selling since 2005 and I dont have a high feedback score, because I do it part time. I've had some really old rare books sell, AA Milne, Winnie the Pooh, Coleridge and many numbered prints. Very interesting and again i do it for pt money. I send everything media mail, and mail using recycled materials.
    i enjoy it. hey last year I made enough to pay for my health insurance each month. So, go for it. Yard sales you can get good books, check out the binding inside and outside, the pub date and where, and look at the topic. Research!
    good luck

  • Betty Asphy9/10/2010

    Thanks for this information.

  • Debra Gavazzi6/16/2010

    Great advice. Thanks for sharing.

  • Kristen Wilkerson5/30/2010

    I didn't know about some of these places. THanks!

  • Darren Koobs4/30/2010

    I've never thought of selling used books online. That's a really nice alternative to what I've been doing so far...letting them sit around until a reliative wants to read them. There's no money in that and books tend to collect over time.

  • Susan Jane4/20/2010

    Good tips. I am like Theresa - I buy books and can't part with them. I am also a hoarder and glad to know there is another one like me. I must do a cull and donate some to the Lifeline Bookfest (this is an Australian organization that helps people with problems via their phone support).

  • Susan Kaul4/16/2010

    There are drawbacks to Amazon and Ebay. But if you want to get rid of the books. It might be worth it. Great tips

  • Becca Greiner4/14/2010

    Good tips - especially about the drawbacks in using Amazon and how the costs outweigh the profits sometimes. Years ago, I sold a few college textbooks on there, but those are probably the most valuable books I'll ever own!

  • Theresa Wiza4/8/2010

    Books are my downfall. I don't buy clothes or jewelry, but I used to buy books (had to cut way down due to the economy), so I have lots of them. However, I'm also a hoarder, so I can't part with them either. Sounds like a lot of work to go through for Amazon, though I have purchased books from them (BIG savings). Maybe I'll donate mine - when I can release my hold on them, that is. Thanks for the information.

  • Sandy Rothra3/31/2010

    I found it easier to donate to the local library for their sale. Then I go to the sale and buy more than I donated. Losing proposition.

Displaying Comments
Next »

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.