eBay fees on Jewellery & Watches 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 Jewellery & Watches and a worked example so you know precisely what you keep.
eBay Jewellery & Watches fee breakdown
| Fee | Rate | Applied to |
|---|---|---|
| Final Value Fee | 14.9% | 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 Jewellery & Watches fees: UK vs US vs Europe compared
Fees vary significantly by region — here's what sellers pay on each marketplace for the same Jewellery & Watches sale.
| eBay UK 🇬🇧 | eBay US 🇺🇸 | eBay Germany/Europe 🇩🇪 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business seller FVF | 14.9% | 15% | 11% |
| 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 | Tiered rate: 14.9% on the first £1,000, then 4% on any amount above £1,000 | Tiered rate: 15% on the first $5,000, then 9% on the excess | Standard 11% rate; collector watches may attract a reduced rate in specific subcategories |
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 Jewellery & Watches sale actually nets you
Here's the maths on a realistic Jewellery & Watches transaction — a Casio G-Shock GA-110-1BER watch (black resin strap) sourced for £8.00 and sold for £42.00.
Casio G-Shock GA-110-1BER watch (black resin strap) — sold for £42.00
eBay took £8.48 in total fees on that transaction. That's the number to anchor your buy-price decisions to — not the headline 14.9%.
At 14.9%, Jewellery & Watches carries the highest FVF rate on eBay UK — but only on the first £1,000 of the transaction. For items that sell above £1,000, the rate on the excess drops to just 4%. A watch selling for £1,200 would attract 14.9% on the first £1,000 and 4% on the remaining £200.
Calculate your exact Jewellery & Watches 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.
Run the numbers on your next Jewellery & Watches buy.
Enter your sale price, postage, and buy cost. See your exact net profit in seconds.
Use the free profit calculator →eBay Jewellery & Watches fees — common questions
eBay charges a 14.9% Final Value Fee on Jewellery & Watches 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 Jewellery & Watches sale of £42.00 with £3.99 postage, eBay takes approximately £8.48 in combined fees — the 14.9% Final Value Fee (£6.85) plus payment processing (£1.63). After postage and your buy price, your net profit on that transaction is £21.53.
Take your sale price, subtract the 14.9% 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.
At 14.9%, Jewellery & Watches carries the highest FVF rate on eBay UK — but only on the first £1,000 of the transaction. For items that sell above £1,000, the rate on the excess drops to just 4%. A watch selling for £1,200 would attract 14.9% on the first £1,000 and 4% on the remaining £200. 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.