Question:
eBay QUESTION Can I bid HIGH without fear of pay the BID PRICE?
lollol
2007-07-11 19:54:40 UTC
Example :

I want a camcorder (in general cost around 300$)

The actual bid is 200$
If I bid like 1000$
1) Do the bid will jump to 1000$ ?

or

2) It will just be a little bit higher (like 220$) and will block other bidder since they don't pass 1000$ ??

it's the answer (1) or (2)??
Five answers:
5skp
2007-07-11 20:25:24 UTC
It will always take you just a little higher than the last highest bid up to the amount that you bid. Be warned, though, that the present bid that's showing may not be the highest bid. For example:



The item begins at $200.

Bidder A bids $550.

Ebay accepts that bid and shows the bid as $200 because that's the current "price".

Now Bidder B bids $220. The "price" is now around $230 and Bidder A is still in control because his original bid is still higher than Bidder B's top bid.

Next, You come into the picture. You are Bidder C and you bid $1000 just to be sure that you beat everyone else. The bid jumps up to $560 because it always beats the highest bid that's been made.

Now you'd better hope that no Bidder D comes along and bids $999, or you'll end up paying $1000 for that camera (unless someone else comes along and bids higher than your $1000.) It's called Automatic Bidding. I know it's kind of confusing. It might be helpful to go to Ebay's Help page and click on "Bidding" (under the heading "Buying"). Good luck! I'm selling a mini-DVD camcorder. I'd be happy to sell it to you for a bid of $1000! :o)
asniceasicanbe
2007-07-11 20:29:00 UTC
As said before it will depend on what high bid the other placed. Weird but in the EBAY world its best not to bid early it often drives the price up. Bid in the last minutes or better yet seconds...gives the other bidders less time to up their bids. But EBAY is not the place it used to be! Often if you search a little on on-line wholesalers sites you will find it cheaper without playing the bid game.
anonymous
2016-10-21 02:31:29 UTC
particular! some situations friends or relative help one yet another out. some situations they help themselves out. even nevertheless it truly is against EBay's policies it does happen. some human beings set up replace money owed with Ebay and Pay chum making use of a PO field as an handle. they sometimes bid on an merchandise to maintain it from merchandising below they prefer. One reason they try this is as a results of fact they are assessed a %fee via EBAY for the quantity they checklist an merchandise for. The extra they start up bidding for the extra they pay, the less the lesser they are assessed. on no account click on "watch merchandise". the vendor knows what share bidders are observing. it truly is ultimate to bookmark the object and bid minutes in the past the bid ends. usually they'll bid on there merchandise with the alias and set an motor vehicle bid to pass it as much as their extra favorable fee.
'too
2007-07-12 15:49:28 UTC
ONLY BID WHAT YOU ARE WILLING TO PAY! There's no limit on what that bidding can go to, and what if someone else is thinking like you and bids $300.00 and it goes there, and someone put in $325, somone 340., etc and it just keeps automatically climbing? Your bid will keep getting inserted AUTOMATICALLY, just over the person's bid who is BOUND to be thinking like you, and you two will just go back and forth AUTOMATICALLY until you reach your HIGHEST bid.



And sellers are aware of this and will give you a strike in a heartbeat if you screw up their auction. And no offense, but they should! They pay fees to list out the yingyang and if buyers cost the seller money, they'll more than likely be pursued.



Just bid what you're willing to pay. Why would you want to offer more? I had an auction I was bidding on go from $8, to $39, to $119, to $156 in just THREE MINUTES. Sniping. IT CAN HAPPEN- watch out! And good luck.
Bob Little
2007-07-11 20:01:27 UTC
The new actual bid will be only slightly higher than the 2nd-highest person's maximum bid. But their maximum bid might be a lot higher than the current bid. So yes...if you bid $1,000 it might really go to $1,000. They might have a $995 maximum entered in theirs. There is no way to block a bidder.

.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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