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Cross-Platform Reseller Profit Analyzer

Compare your profit across every marketplace , after platform fees AND estimated tax. The profit calculator competitors don't have.

7Platforms compared
20-30%Lost to taxes you didn't plan for
20Items in batch mode

The problem: Every reseller profit calculator shows you what you made after platform fees. None show what you keep after taxes. A reseller who "made" $20,000 in profit on eBay last year actually kept ~$14,000 after self-employment tax and income tax, but no tool told them that. The IRS 1099-K threshold drops to $600 in 2026, meaning millions of casual sellers will owe taxes for the first time.

This tool gives you: true profit after platform fees AND taxes, across eBay, Poshmark, Mercari, FB Marketplace, Depop, Etsy, and Amazon, side by side. See which platform actually pays you the most per item. Batch mode handles up to 20 items with sortable results and aggregate tax estimates.

100% free forever No login required Tax layer included Single + batch mode
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Batch Mode (up to 20)
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Item Details
Enter your buy/sell prices and select platforms to compare
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🎯 Minimum sale prices
To make at least $10 profit on this item after fees and tax:
PlatformFee Structure
eBay13.25% final value fee + $0.40 per order
PoshmarkFlat $2.95 under $15, 20% over $15
Mercari10% selling fee
FB Marketplace5% (minimum $0.40)
Depop10% selling fee
Etsy6.5% transaction + $0.20 listing + 3% + $0.25 payment processing
Amazon (Individual)$0.99 per item + ~15% referral fee

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes only. It is not tax, legal, or financial advice. Platform fee calculations use simplified models and may not reflect all seller-level discounts, promotions, or category-specific rates. Tax estimates use marginal rate approximations. Actual liability may differ. Always consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation.

How This Calculator Works

This tool calculates your true profit on each sale by subtracting three layers of cost: platform fees, cost of goods sold (COGS) plus shipping, and estimated income tax on the resulting profit. Platform fees are modeled individually for seven marketplaces using their 2026 fee schedules: eBay charges 13.25% plus $0.40 per order, Poshmark takes a flat $2.95 on items under $15 or 20% over $15, Mercari charges 10%, and so on for FB Marketplace (5%), Depop (10%), Etsy (6.5% transaction plus payment processing), and Amazon Individual (15% referral plus $0.99 per item).

The tax layer uses marginal tax calculation: it computes your total tax at your stated annual income level, then computes the additional tax generated by each item's profit. This marginal approach is more accurate than applying a flat tax rate because it captures the actual bracket your reselling income falls into. The tax engine applies self-employment tax (15.3% on 92.35% of net profit per Schedule SE), federal income tax using 2026 brackets, and state income tax. The minimum sell price feature uses binary search to find the lowest sale price that yields your target profit after all fees and taxes.

Example Scenario

Tyler sources vintage Nike sneakers from thrift stores and resells them online. He buys a pair for $25 and lists it at $75. He ships for $8 and has about $20,000 in total annual resale income. Filing as single in Florida (no state income tax), he wants to know which platform gives him the best profit.

On eBay, the 13.25% fee plus $0.40 comes to $10.34, leaving $31.66 after fees and shipping. Estimated tax on that profit is about $8.70 (a blend of SE tax and federal income tax at his bracket), leaving a true net profit of $22.96. On Poshmark, the 20% fee takes $15.00, leaving $27.00 after fees and shipping, with $7.42 in tax for a true profit of $19.58. Mercari's 10% fee ($7.50) yields a true profit of $24.88. FB Marketplace's 5% fee ($3.75) produces the best result at $27.49 true profit. Without the tax layer, Tyler would have seen the fee difference but not the full picture: he keeps $27.49 on FB Marketplace versus $22.96 on eBay, a $4.53 per-item difference that adds up across hundreds of sales.

When to Use This Tool

Use this calculator before listing high-value items to determine which platform maximizes your profit after fees and taxes. It is particularly useful when you cross-list items on multiple platforms and need to decide where to accept an offer. The batch mode is designed for monthly or quarterly profit reviews: enter your last 20 sales to see aggregate revenue, total fees, estimated tax liability, and true profit. This data is essential for making accurate quarterly estimated tax payments and avoiding underpayment penalties. Run it before sourcing decisions too, since the minimum sell price feature tells you exactly what you need to sell an item for to hit your profit target on each platform.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I really owe taxes on my reselling income?

Yes. If you sell items for more than you paid for them, the profit is taxable income. Starting in 2026, the IRS 1099-K reporting threshold drops to $600, meaning platforms like eBay, Poshmark, and Mercari will report your gross sales to the IRS if you exceed that amount. You owe income tax and self-employment tax (15.3%) on your net profit after deducting COGS, fees, shipping, and other business expenses. Selling personal items at a loss is not taxable, but you need records to prove the loss.

Why are platform fees different for the same item?

Each marketplace has a different fee structure. eBay uses a percentage-based final value fee plus a fixed per-order charge. Poshmark uses a tiered system (flat fee under $15, percentage over $15). Mercari and Depop charge a flat 10%. Etsy combines a transaction fee, listing fee, and payment processing fee. Amazon charges a referral percentage plus a per-item fee for individual sellers. These differences mean the same $75 sale produces significantly different net amounts depending on where you list. That is exactly why comparing across platforms matters.

What counts as cost of goods sold (COGS) for resellers?

COGS includes the amount you paid to acquire the item you are reselling. This covers thrift store purchases, wholesale costs, retail arbitrage buys, garage sale finds, and any direct acquisition costs. Sales tax you paid on the original purchase is also part of COGS. However, overhead expenses like shipping supplies, storage fees, photography equipment, and mileage to sourcing locations are separate business expenses that you deduct on Schedule C. Both COGS and business expenses reduce your taxable profit.

How does batch mode work?

Batch mode lets you enter up to 20 items at once, each with its own buy price, sell price, platform, and shipping cost. The calculator processes all items simultaneously and produces a sortable results table showing per-item profit, fees, tax allocation, and ROI. Tax is calculated on your aggregate profit (not per-item) for accuracy, then proportionally allocated back to each item. The footer row shows totals for quick reference. You can sort by any column to find your most and least profitable items.

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