Field Guide

How to Ship eBay Items Without Losing Money

By Finest Flips · The team behind 2,500 active eBay listings · Updated July 2026

Shipping is where beginners quietly bleed: overpaying for labels, under-packing fragile items, and letting "I'll ship it tomorrow" turn into a feedback problem. We've shipped thousands of packages out of one storage unit — CRT televisions, framed art, a 350-year-old Bible — and the system below is what stops the bleeding.

Never pay counter prices for a label

The single biggest beginner leak: walking into the post office and paying retail. Buy every label through eBay's own label flow — the commercial rates are far below counter prices for the exact same service. Same box, same speed, less money. There is no reason to ever buy postage at the counter again.

Charge calculated shipping, not "free" shipping

"Free shipping" doesn't mean free — it means you eat the postage out of your margin and hope you guessed right. We set every listing to calculated shipping: eBay charges the buyer the real cost based on their location. Weigh honestly, enter real dimensions, and you never quietly donate $8 to the postal service on a $40 sale. (This is also half of pricing correctly — see how to price items on eBay: fees and shipping are what eat the middle of a "good" flip.)

Weigh and measure before you list

A $15 kitchen scale pays for itself in the first week. Weigh and measure every item before listing, put the real numbers in, and label-time surprises disappear — no more discovering at the packing table that your "1 pound" estimate was actually three.

Which carrier wins

The shake test

Packing rule number one: nothing moves inside the box. Shake it — if you hear or feel the item, add material. Fragile pieces get wrapped, suspended in fill, in a box one size bigger than feels necessary. We shipped a 1998 CRT TV/VCR combo that sold for $335 — screen padded thick, suspended on all six sides — and it arrived like it left. One $30 "saving" on materials becomes a $335 refund the first time something arrives rattling.

Real examples from the log: framed art (like the $500 signed Fulton Sheen portrait) gets painter's tape across the glass and the glass sandwiched between rigid sheets — "FRAGILE" stickers are decoration, the sandwich is the protection. Rolled posters (the $760 bullfight poster) go in a rigid tube, never folded. Old paper never ships without a rigid mailer and a plastic sleeve.

Supplies are nearly free if you let them be

Protect the big sales

Once a sale gets serious, add signature confirmation and insurance — above eBay's ~$750 threshold a signature is required for seller protection, but adding it well before that is cheap armor. The $1,225 Slipknot mask shipped signed-for and insured. A few dollars to never have a four-figure problem is part of the profit.

Ship fast, on a rhythm

Everything ships within 48 hours of the sale — reliability is what feedback is actually made of. At volume, daily post office trips die; batching pack-and-ship into set days keeps every buyer inside their delivery window without shipping running your life. Set an honest handling time and never miss it.

The full shipping module is in the system

The complete carrier decision tree, the packing recipes for every fragile category, the supply plays, and the weekly operating rhythm that runs a 2,500-listing store — Module 8 of First 100 Flips, with the printable shipping cheat sheet in the field kit.

Get First 100 Flips — $198 →

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