
eBay will shorten the claims window for items sold “as is” from 30 days to 3 days, and it will institute much stricter verification of auction bidders and buyers of high-value items. Those are just two of the new seller-protection policies it announced during last week’s eBay Open seller conference.
eBay explained the changes it’s making in October to items sold “as is” as follows:
“No Returns Accepted” enforcement
Beginning in October, buyers of “as-is” listings will see clear, prominent messaging of “For Parts or Not Working” and “No Returns Accepted” at every stage — from the item page through checkout to post-purchase — to help ensure buyers understand they are purchasing an as-is, for parts item.
For these items, returns based on remorse will be completely blocked and not-as-described claims will face stricter requirements.
The claim window will also be shortened from 30 to 3 days on these listings.
eBay explained the changes it’s making to buyer verification as follows:
Verifying Buyers
Verified bidding now requires a phone number for all bidders. And for high-value items, we’re requiring government ID and selfie verification.
For categories like trading cards, we’re testing holding funds during bidding or capturing partial payment immediately after close to ensure buyer intent.
For international buyers, we’re applying the same strict verification — no exceptions.
eBay is also making changes to Unpaid Items (when buyers don’t pay for their purchases). In the following description of the UPI policy changes, eBay mentions “autopay”; sellers have already reported having seen it in action and have had questions and concerns about it:
Unpaid Items
Buy It Now transactions now require immediate payment. Currently, 99.9% of these transactions are paid.
For Best Offers, buyers must have a payment method on file — and 99% are paid automatically when accepted.
We’ve launched autopay for Auction wins, including for sellers who offer combined shipping. (Buyers can either have their payment processed automatically one hour after winning an auction or choose “Shop more, ship together” to get up to seven days to shop other items, with automatic payment.)
Last week we wrote about two other seller-protection policies eBay announced at eBay Open: Item Not Received (INR) protections, and automatic positive feedback for eligible sellers — as well as other changes including AI Assistant for Messaging; Offers in Messaging; “Track Your Costs”; and Inventory Mapping API (for high-volume sellers).
Two additional changes that don’t fall under the “seller protection” category that eBay announced on Thursday include the following:
eBay Advertising AI Advancements
eBay launched a new Ads Destination within eBay Mobile, allowing sellers to promote on the go.
eBay Advertising is leveraging AI to deliver suggested campaigns that are custom-built, ready-to-launch, and fully optimized based on historical data and best practices.
We’ve also been focused on using AI to automatically optimize your listings, including images and titles, for improved performance on external channels.
Payments & Capital Access
Debuting at eBay Open, sellers who attend can sign up to test eBay’s new Finances CoPilot.
eBay is now offering Klarna and Venmo as buyer payment methods, attracting younger buyers and increasing per-order spend.
eBay announced the integration of Open Banking into its Seller Capital program, unlocking a faster, smarter, and more holistic way for sellers to access the capital they need to grow.
Comments about these changes are welcome below.
“We’ve also been focused on using AI to automatically optimize your listings, including images and titles, for improved performance on external channels.”
Voluntary or involuntary?
Totally meaningless! Buyers (i.e., scammers) can file a claim with their credit card company, bank or payment processor. If they used a credit card issued by a bank through through PayPal they can file a claim with all these parties.
These 3rd parties will decide the outcome of the outcome of the case and NOT eBay. The case will consist of these third parties automatically approving the claim in 99.99% of cases. There is no actual investigation since any hands-on investigation is impracticable.
The last time I checked this could 180 days after the transaction for PayPal.
Totally meaningless with international buyers as eBay is REFUSING to block them from interfering with listings. eBay allows them to use freight forwarding addresses in the U.S. to bypass shipping restrictions on their location.
eBay is refusing to block international buyers as they wish to deceive sellers as to the actual location of the buyer. A lot of newb sellers see the U.S. shipping address and just ship the item out without researching the shipping address to see if its a freight forwarding company.
Further more eBay refuses to block buying agents. Intercommerce America, Inc. is a buying agent for people in South Korea, with items being shipped to freight forwarders in the U.S. and then reshipped to South Korea. eBay has allowed this company to use hundreds, if not thousands of eBay accounts to buy tens of thousands of items on eBay resulting in thousands of eBay sellers being ripped off by false claims. This company has been buying items on eBay since 2009 and eBay does nothing about it as eBay is only concerned with making its commission off the sales and not the welfare of the sellers. There are multiple complaints on multiple websites about this company.
International buyers were so bad in two categories I ended up dumping the goods rather than wasting further time. eBay cost me a lot of wasted time and money on these goods!
Same old b.s. from eBay! Never believe anything they say.