Where to Sell MTG Cards for the Best Price in Australia

Comparing every platform for selling Magic: The Gathering cards in Australia — eBay, Facebook, buylists, and more. Find out where you'll actually get the most money.

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If you've got MTG cards you no longer need, knowing where to sell them makes the difference between getting fair value and leaving money on the table. The Australian market has more options than most players realise, and the best platform depends entirely on what you're selling and how much effort you're willing to put in.

This guide compares every real option available to Australian sellers right now — with honest numbers on fees, realistic return rates, and the situations where each platform wins.

Quick Answer:

eBay Australia returns the highest prices for individual singles worth AU$10 or more, but fees eat roughly 13–15% of each sale. Facebook Marketplace and local TCG groups are best for bulk lots and collections where you want zero fees. Local game store buylists are the fastest option but typically pay 30–50% of market value. Match your platform to your card value and how quickly you need the money.

eBay Australia: Highest Return for Singles, But Fees Add Up

eBay AU is the largest liquid marketplace for MTG singles in Australia. The buyer pool is bigger than any other local platform, which means better prices on cards that have real demand. For singles worth AU$10 and above, individual eBay listings almost always outperform any other selling method.

The fee structure is the main thing to understand before pricing. eBay charges a final value fee on the total sale amount including postage. For most TCG cards this sits around 13–15% all-in, including the payment processing cut. If you list a card at AU$20 and it sells with AU$4 postage, you're paying fees on AU$24, not just AU$20.

Where eBay wins:

Where eBay loses:

A good rule of thumb: if a card is worth less than AU$5, don't list it individually on eBay. Bundle it or sell it locally instead.

Facebook Marketplace and TCG Groups: Best for Bulk and Collections

Facebook has two distinct selling environments for MTG in Australia: Facebook Marketplace and dedicated TCG buying and selling groups like MTG Australia Buy/Sell/Trade and various state-based groups.

Facebook Marketplace suits larger lots and collections where you want to meet locally and avoid postage entirely. There are no fees. You negotiate a price, the buyer comes to you or you agree on a meeting point, and the transaction is done in cash or bank transfer. For a bulk collection of mixed cards, this is often the fastest way to convert it to cash without the overhead of listing, packing, and posting dozens of individual items.

The dedicated Facebook groups are better for individual cards and small lots where you want to reach buyers who actually know and want TCG cards. Pricing in these groups tends to be 10–20% below eBay sell prices, which is fair because the buyer is taking on postage risk and there's no platform protection. You post a clear photo, state your price, and deal direct.

Realistic return rates for Facebook:

Local Game Store Buylists: Speed Over Price

Every decent local game store in Australia with a singles section maintains a buylist — a list of cards they want to buy from the public, with prices they're willing to pay. This is the fastest way to convert cards to cash. You bring in your cards, they assess them, and you walk out with cash or store credit the same day.

The trade-off is price. Local game stores need to make a margin, so buylist prices are typically 30–50% of the card's current market value in cash, or slightly better in store credit. For common and uncommon cards they often won't buy at all.

When does the speed trade-off make sense? If you're clearing out a collection and the time and effort of listing, packing, and shipping 200 individual cards is worth more to you than the extra 50% you'd get on eBay, a buylist is a legitimate choice. For high-value singles specifically, it rarely makes financial sense.

TCG Buylist Aggregators: Comparing Offers Across Multiple Stores

A buylist aggregator lets you enter your card list once and see offers from multiple stores simultaneously. This removes the legwork of ringing around or visiting multiple shops. Several Australian and international platforms offer this, and the price differences between stores on the same card can be significant — sometimes 30–40% apart for the same card depending on current stock needs.

This approach is worth the extra step for any collection with more than 20–30 cards worth selling. Spending 20 minutes comparing buylist prices can return meaningfully more than accepting the first offer you receive.

We're building a dedicated buylist comparison tool at C3 specifically for Australian sellers. If you want early access, join the C3 buylist waitlist.

Selling in Australia: What Actually Affects Your Return

Platform choice is only part of the equation. These factors affect your actual return regardless of where you sell:

Card condition: Near Mint commands the full market price. Lightly Played typically sells for 80–90% of NM value. Moderately Played or worse drops to 50–70% at best. Be honest in your condition grading — disputes and returns cost more than the difference in price.

Current meta relevance: A card that's in every competitive deck right now sells quickly and close to ask price. A card that just rotated out of Standard or got banned is worth a fraction of its peak. Selling during peak demand, not after, is the single biggest factor in card-level return.

Set and print run: Cards from older sets with smaller print runs hold value better than recent reprints. Check whether a card has been reprinted recently before pricing — a reprint announcement can cut market value overnight.

Photos: On eBay and Facebook, clear photos of the actual card significantly increase buyer confidence and completed sale rate. Use natural light and show the card face and back.

Where to Sell MTG Cards in Australia: Quick Comparison

Platform Best For Fee Speed Return Rate
eBay AU Singles AU$10+ 13–15% 2–10 days Highest
Facebook Groups Singles, small lots None 1–5 days High (no fees)
Facebook Marketplace Bulk, collections None Same day possible Variable
Local LGS buylist Fast cash, convenience None (they take margin) Same day 30–50% of market
Buylist aggregator Multiple store comparison None 1–5 days Better than single-store buylist

Selling MTG singles? Browse the C3 eBay store — 23,000+ TCG listings with competitive pricing on singles across every major game.

Visit the C3 eBay Store

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best place to sell MTG cards in Australia? For individual singles worth AU$10 or more, eBay Australia returns the highest prices due to the large buyer pool. For bulk collections or fast cash, Facebook groups and local game store buylists are more practical. The right answer depends on card value and how much time you're willing to invest.

How much do game stores pay for MTG cards in Australia? Local game stores typically pay 30–50% of the current market value in cash, or slightly more in store credit. The exact amount varies by store and depends on whether they already have stock of that card. High-demand staples pay better than bulk rares.

Is it worth selling MTG cards individually or as a lot? Cards worth AU$10 or more are almost always worth listing individually on eBay — the price premium far exceeds the effort. Cards worth less than AU$5 are usually better sold as a bulk lot through Facebook or a local buyer, since the fees and postage on individual low-value sales make it uneconomical.

How long does it take to sell MTG cards on eBay Australia? Popular cards in current formats often sell within a few days. Niche or older cards can take weeks or months. Using auction format for high-demand cards can accelerate the process. eBay payout typically takes 2–4 business days after the sale clears.

Do I need to declare income from selling MTG cards in Australia? If you're selling cards from a personal collection at a loss or for what you paid, it's generally not assessable income. If you're buying and selling regularly for profit, the ATO may treat it as a business activity. Consult a tax professional if you're doing significant volume — this is general information only and not tax advice.

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