Can Audiogon compete with AudioMart (US and Canuck)


Can Audiogon compete?  AudioMart has way more postings (probably it is mostly free)?  But can Audiogon survive?

andy2

Audiogon "used" to be the best place to buy/sell equipment. Greed seems to have taken over. Now Audio Mart has filled that void.

ozzy

I have had great success selling things on USAM from expensive amps to cheap cables. No fees, no time limits, and the site is pretty easy to use. The platform looks a little dated, but so what, it is free.

There are both private sellers as well as dealers. I just checked and there are now 10,911 sales adds listed.

There are some great deals on demo Accuphase genuine US market 120V units.

Not too long ago, I had some cables for sale on USAM. I got a message one day that someone had left negative feedback... on a cable for which I hadn’t even received one offer, let alone sold!  I logged on and on the page with the feedback was an embedded link that would purportedly "fix" the negative feedback if I provided financial details. This was right on the site. Needless to say, I did not follow the link. I contacted their webmaster and they removed the content but this lax security led me to decide to steer clear of that site. Make what you will of this. I don’t have any agenda, here -- simply passing on what I experienced. 

Here ya go!

USAudioMart vs eBay vs Audiogon: Where Should You Sell Your Used Hi-Fi Gear?

If you sell enough used audio gear, you eventually end up asking the same question every time: where should I list this, and what’s the safest way to get paid without losing a chunk of the sale price to fees or getting dragged into a dispute?

This post compares three of the most common places audiophiles sell higher-end gear online: USAudioMart, eBay, and Audiogon. Each platform has a different audience, different fee structure, and very different levels of “protection” for buyers and sellers. The right answer depends on what you’re selling, how fast you want it gone, and how much risk you are willing to absorb.

Quick Takeaways

  • eBay: biggest audience, fastest sale potential, highest fees, strongest platform enforcement.
  • Audiogon: hi-fi focused buyers, generally more serious, moderate fees, some structure but still plenty of self-management.
  • USAudioMart: enthusiast marketplace, no selling fees, good value, but you are largely on your own beyond community feedback.

Comparison Table: Selling on USAudioMart vs eBay vs Audiogon

Category USAudioMart eBay Audiogon
Audience size Smaller but targeted audiophile community Massive, broad buyer pool Hi-fi focused buyers, generally serious
Typical sale speed Can be fast for in-demand gear, slower for niche items Often fastest due to sheer traffic Moderate, depends on brand and pricing
Selling fees No selling fees (platform fee-free model) High fees, can materially reduce net proceeds Fees apply (usually less painful than eBay but still meaningful)
Pricing reality Often the most price-sensitive, deal-oriented buyers Wide range, some overpaying, but buyers expect strong buyer protection Buyers understand hi-fi value, but will still negotiate
Buyer protection Limited platform involvement, relies heavily on reputation and payment method Highest, platform policies typically favor buyers Moderate, more structured than USAM, less forceful than eBay
Seller protection Low, you must manage risk yourself Mixed, strong processes but disputes can be painful Basic, some structure but you still need to document everything
Feedback system Primary “social enforcement” tool Important, but platform policy matters more than reputation Important, helps establish credibility with hi-fi buyers
Best for Higher-end enthusiast sales when you want to avoid platform fees Fastest exposure, smaller items, broader audience, “sell it now” urgency Hi-fi focused buyers for premium gear with a more specialized audience

Pros and Cons by Platform

USAudioMart

  • Pros: no selling fees, audiophile audience, direct buyer-to-seller communication, strong value retention if priced right.
  • Cons: you are largely on your own if something goes wrong, more tire-kickers and lowball offers, your payment method choice becomes the real “protection layer.”

eBay

  • Pros: huge audience, faster sell-through, strong buyer confidence, good for items with wide demand.
  • Cons: higher fees that can wipe out margin, greater risk of “not as described” disputes, packing and documentation must be disciplined because disputes often revolve around shipping condition and item description.

Audiogon

  • Pros: high-end buyer pool, more serious inquiries, better alignment with audiophile gear than general marketplaces, pricing often feels more “in the right ballpark.”
  • Cons: fees still apply, some friction compared to fee-free platforms, and disputes still require you to document and advocate for yourself.

Should You List the Same Item on All Three Platforms?

You can, and many sellers do, but it helps to approach it deliberately. Multi-platform listing increases exposure, but it also creates potential complications if two buyers commit at the same time or if one platform has stricter rules about “availability.”

A practical way to do it is to list on multiple platforms but clearly manage timing and communication. If you receive a firm commitment on one platform, pause or remove the other listings immediately.

Pricing Strategy When Listing on Multiple Platforms

This is where most people get it wrong. The goal is not to have three wildly different asking prices that make buyers feel they are being played. The goal is to have different net outcomes for you as the seller while still looking consistent and fair to buyers.

A simple approach is to use USAudioMart as your “fee-free baseline price,” then adjust pricing slightly higher on the platforms that charge fees, while keeping the differences reasonable.

  • USAudioMart: list at your target net price, because there is no platform fee.
  • Audiogon: consider listing slightly higher to absorb Audiogon’s fees, but keep the increase modest.
  • eBay: often requires the highest price because platform fees can be significant.

So yes, it can make sense to list at a lower price on USAudioMart and a higher price on Audiogon or eBay, because your net proceeds may end up roughly similar. The key is to avoid pricing so far apart that it becomes obvious and irritates buyers who cross-shop.

One clean method is to disclose your logic in a calm way if asked, for example: “I list slightly higher on fee-based platforms to cover selling fees. If you’re buying through a fee-free platform, the asking price is lower.” Most reasonable people understand that.

Protection and Risk: What’s Actually Protecting You?

It helps to be blunt about how “protection” works across these platforms.

  • eBay: generally offers the strongest buyer protection and the most structured dispute process. That tends to increase buyer confidence, but it can increase seller exposure if a buyer becomes difficult.
  • Audiogon: has some structure and community expectations, but many outcomes still come down to documentation, communication, and payment method.
  • USAudioMart: is largely reputation-driven. The feedback system is the primary form of enforcement, and beyond that, you are relying on your own screening, documentation, and payment choices.

In practice, this means a seller often has the least control on eBay, more control on Audiogon, and the most “freedom” on USAudioMart, but that freedom comes with responsibility. The platform isn’t going to step in and save you if you ignored obvious warning signs.

Which Platform Should You Choose?

If you only want one answer, it’s this:

  • Use USAudioMart when you want maximum net proceeds and you’re comfortable managing risk yourself.
  • Use Audiogon when you want a hi-fi focused audience and a bit more structure, while still avoiding the full eBay environment.
  • Use eBay when you want maximum exposure and faster sales, and you’re willing to accept higher fees and stricter buyer-friendly processes.

No matter where you list, the safest sellers win by doing the basics consistently: accurate descriptions, clear photos, realistic pricing, careful packing, and documented communication.