I have been thinking about selling tools on the side from my job. Do you make much from doing it and how much work does it take? Thanks alot!!![]()
I did that on a hobby level with Stereo equipment for much of the past 8-9 years. I can't say that I got rich off of it, but it allowed me to try a lot of interesting setups, cherry pick the beast, and outfit about 8-9 systems for me and my kids, and I'm a bit ahead, so I basically got to keep the cream of the crop for free. I still have maybe $1-2K to sell off, but now that I stay off of Eprey, its a lot slower going.
Oddball Ratchets, Snap On, Oddball Ratchets and Snap on are generally Easy Sellers.
I have been thinking about selling tools on the side from my job. Do you make much from doing it and how much work does it take? Thanks alot!!![]()

Thanks for all the input. I am really thinking about doing it on the side for fun as a hobby. I like to go to the flea markets in summer and they always have great deals on tools. I just wanted to know what sells the most.

One great way to research what sells (and for how much) is to look through Eprey completed listings. Keeping in mind, those are not necessarily a good price guide for selling at flea markets, yard sales, or CL; but generally, maybe 50-80% as a guide? Eprey has the advantage of having a national base at least, and the other venues are much smaller so finding someone willing to pay top $$ is harder. Can you get an Eprey price? yes, but not consistently, if you try, you are likely to sit on the product a long time.
You can do a similar thing by perusing the for sale section of GJ, but with the disadvantage of not actually knowing the final sales price, but you can tell how quickly an item moved.
Using CL as a guide is worse than useless for pricing, as too many people ask stupid prices and you never know if the item sold, or for how much, or if the seller just got discouraged and quit trying.
If you find something truly unique, sometimes you can offer it on a specialty collectors forum, (if they allow it) and get top dollar.
The key for top dollar is finding a person who "can't live without it" and has the $$. (lots want it but can't/won't part with the cash)
The key for making a consistent reasonable profit is buy low and move the merchandise at a reasonable price.
Knowing when to do which is a learning experience, and if you pay attention to the details you get better at it over time. And remember, markets, and "what's in" is a constantly changing variable. (But you work in retail so that should not be news...)
Good Luck!![]()
Thanks for all the input. I am really thinking about doing it on the side for fun as a hobby. I like to go to the flea markets in summer and they always have great deals on tools. I just wanted to know what sells the most.
buying tools is addictive, selling them is sometimes the hard part. you want ot keep so much for yourself.
Chad it a full time job for sure.
Its a full time job for me.![]()
6. Any pawn shop or professional picker knows the profit comes on the buy. Research and remember thousands of sales over several years. Pull the trigger when the price is right and walk away when it isn't.
Listen to Skyline, I think that is the model if you want to make something. He and his son seem to partner to do it very successfully.