eBay fees on Gaming sales are straightforward on paper — but sellers consistently miscalculate their real margin because they only account for the headline Final Value Fee and forget payment processing. The combined bite is closer to 15–16% than the 12.9% most sellers quote. This page gives you the exact numbers for Gaming and a worked example so you know precisely what you keep.

eBay Gaming fee breakdown

Fee Rate Applied to
Final Value Fee 9.9% Total transaction (item price + postage)
Payment Processing 2.9% + £0.30 Per order
Combined total ~15–16% + £0.30 Approximate — varies with transaction value

There are no listing fees for private sellers within the 1,000 free listing allowance per month. If you use Promoted Listings, add the additional ad rate (typically 2–15%) on top of the above.

eBay Gaming fees: UK vs US vs Europe compared

Fees vary significantly by region — here's what sellers pay on each marketplace for the same Gaming sale.

eBay UK 🇬🇧 eBay US 🇺🇸 eBay Germany/Europe 🇩🇪
Business seller FVF 9.9% 13.6% 12%
Per-order fixed fee £0.40 over £10 · £0.30 under £10 $0.40 over $10 · $0.30 under $10 €0.45 over €10 · €0.05 under €10
Private seller FVF 0% (fee-free since Oct 2024) Standard rates apply 0% (fee-free for EEA residents)
Currency GBP £ USD $ EUR €
Notable exception Console hardware uses a tiered rate: 6.9% up to £400, then 2% above — applies to PS5, Xbox, Switch hardware Console hardware at standard 13.6%; game discs may fall in the higher Books/Media bucket PC & Video Games increased from 11% to 12% in Feb 2026; console hardware may use electronics rate
Private seller note

Private sellers on eBay UK and eBay Germany (for EEA residents) currently pay 0% final value fees on most categories. These pages show business seller rates — the fees that apply to anyone selling regularly or running a reselling operation.

What a real Gaming sale actually nets you

Here's the maths on a realistic Gaming transaction — a Pokémon Scarlet (Nintendo Switch, factory sealed) sourced for £5.00 and sold for £35.00.

Worked Example

Pokémon Scarlet (Nintendo Switch, factory sealed) — sold for £35.00

Sale price£35.00
Postage charged to buyer£3.99
Total transaction£35.00 + £3.99
Final Value Fee (9.9% of total)−£3.86
Payment processing (2.9% + £0.30)−£1.43
Total eBay fees−£5.29
Your postage cost−£3.99
Buy price−£5.00
Net profit£20.72

eBay took £5.29 in total fees on that transaction. That's the number to anchor your buy-price decisions to — not the headline 9.9%.

Gaming — what to know about fees

The general Video Games & Consoles category sits at 9.9%, but console hardware has its own tiered rate: 6.9% on the first £400 of the transaction, then 2% above. A PS5 at £350 would attract 6.9% on the full amount — worth factoring in when pricing console flips.

Calculate your exact Gaming profit

Put your actual numbers in below. The calculator accounts for the Final Value Fee, payment processing, your postage cost, and buy price — the same formula used in the worked example above.

Free tool

Run the numbers on your next Gaming buy.

Enter your sale price, postage, and buy cost. See your exact net profit in seconds.

Use the free profit calculator →

eBay Gaming fees — common questions

eBay charges a 9.9% Final Value Fee on Gaming sales in the UK, applied to the total transaction including postage. You also pay 2.9% + £0.30 per order for payment processing. Combined, you're typically paying around 15–16% of the total transaction value plus £0.30.

On a typical UK Gaming sale of £35.00 with £3.99 postage, eBay takes approximately £5.29 in combined fees — the 9.9% Final Value Fee (£3.86) plus payment processing (£1.43). After postage and your buy price, your net profit on that transaction is £20.72.

Take your sale price, subtract the 9.9% Final Value Fee (applied to sale price + postage), subtract 2.9% + £0.30 for payment processing, subtract your actual postage cost, and subtract your buy price. The result is your net profit. Use our free profit calculator to do this automatically — or install the Privy Chrome extension to see it on every listing without entering anything.

The general Video Games & Consoles category sits at 9.9%, but console hardware has its own tiered rate: 6.9% on the first £400 of the transaction, then 2% above. A PS5 at £350 would attract 6.9% on the full amount — worth factoring in when pricing console flips. Most eBay categories in the UK use a 12.9% Final Value Fee, but rates do vary by category. Always confirm the current rate in eBay's seller fee schedule before making a sourcing decision.

For a complete breakdown of every fee eBay charges across all categories — including listing fees, promoted listings, and the full payment processing structure — see our full eBay fees breakdown.