What To Buy

What Actually Sells from Estate Sales on eBay — With Real Numbers

By Finest Flips · 2,500 active listings · $350,000 in inventory · Updated June 2026

Plenty of articles list "things that sell on eBay." Almost none of them show receipts. So before we talk categories, here are ten of our actual flips — what we paid at the sale, what they sold for on our eBay store:

Slipknot clown mask: $25 → $1,225 1940s baseball photo archive: $10 → $1,105 45-star American flag: $150 → $1,799 1947 bullfight poster: $20 → $760 1890s tin advertising sign: $15 → $535 Signed Fulton Sheen portrait: $30 → $500 Nikon S2 rangefinder: $40 → $499 Stetson Open Road fedora: $12 → $400 9" CRT TV/VCR combo: $20 → $335 WWII M1 helmet: $30 → $304

Notice what's NOT on that list: clothing hauls, Funko Pops, kitchen gadgets. Estate sale money lives in old, rare, collector-driven categories — the things a lifetime accumulates and a weekend sale prices wrong.

The categories that print money

1. Old American flags

Count the stars. A 45-star flag dates to 1896–1908 and is a four-figure textile. 44, 46, 48-star flags all have collector markets. Most people see "old flag" and think decor; you should think dated historical artifact. Hand-sewn and large-format examples go higher.

2. Militaria

Helmets, uniforms, field gear, patches, medals, photos. WWII and earlier is strongest. A named piece (soldier's name written inside) is worth more, not less — collectors research the soldier. Our $30 M1 helmet with a name and division markings sold for $304, and that's a modest example of the category.

3. Antique advertising

Tin and metal signs, store displays, brand memorabilia. Pre-1950 beverage, tobacco, and gas/oil signs are blue-chip. The older and more local, the better — regional brands have devoted collectors. $15 → $535 is a normal outcome here, not a unicorn.

4. Vintage cameras

Film cameras are in a full renaissance. Rangefinders (Nikon, Leica, Canon), medium format, and quality lenses sell strong. One tip worth the price of this article: fire the shutter. If it snaps cleanly, the camera is probably healthy — and "Tested, Working" in an eBay title adds 30–50% to the sale price.

5. Paper & photo archives

Old photographs, postcards, documents, posters. NEVER assume paper is trash. A $10 box of family photos turned out to document 1940s women's professional baseball — $1,105. Original event posters (ours: a 1947 bullfighting poster, $760) have international collector markets.

6. Music & pop-culture artifacts

Band merchandise, concert items, signed pieces, and anything genuinely strange from a known maker. Our best flip ever — a $25 vintage clown mask that turned out to be the model worn by Slipknot's Shawn Crahan — sold for $1,225. The lesson: when something is old, well-made, and you've never seen anything like it, that feeling is a buy signal.

7. Vintage hats & quality menswear

Stetson, Borsalino, vintage western wear. A $12 fedora became $400. Check brands, sizes, and condition — hats are light to ship and collectors are picky but generous.

8. Retro electronics

Small CRT TVs (retro gaming crowd), Walkmans, vintage stereo gear, early consoles. Plug it in before you buy if you can; a working unit doubles the price. Our 9" CRT/VCR combo: $20 → $335.

The trap categories (skip these)

How the pros find these items before the sale

Every item in our top ten was either spotted in the sale's listing photos using AI tools before we attended, or dug out of boxes at "dirty" sales most buyers skip. Which sales to attend, what the photos reveal, and the exact research workflow — that's a system, and it's teachable.

Get the full system behind these numbers

First 100 Flips: sourcing, AI research, listing, storage, and shipping — a 90-day plan with daily checklists, taught by the seller behind the receipts above.

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