Before you blow off the idea, I am sure many of you have occasionally received a gift card to a store that you hated. Well, instead of using it to buy something that adds to your clutter, why not get the cash instead? CardAvenue essentially allows you to list a gift card that you don’t want. Other members of the site then bid on
The site works in reverse too. If you are looking for a gift card, start you search there. The image on the right shows a small sample of what was recently listed.
Like eBay, there are fees to contend with. Buyers are not charged anything, however, the people selling the cards are charged 3.95% of the selling price + $.50 for the listing. This policy is similar to eBay’s although not as confusing. For comparison purposes, eBay’s fees are:
“5.25% of the initial $25.00 ($1.31), plus 3.00% of the remaining closing value balance ($25.01 to $1,000.00)”
So, let’s see who gives the better value because I am certain that eBay provides more eyeballs. Let’s say that I am selling a $250 gift card and that it sells for $200. Here are my fees from each of the auction sites:
eBay: [5.25% of the first $25.00 =] $1.31 + [3.00% of the remaining $175.00 =] $5.25 + [listing fee=] $3.60 = $10.61
CardAvenue: [3.95% of the selling price =] $7.90 + [listing fee=] $0.50 = $8.40
According to my math, CardAvenue is clearly cheaper. In my opinion it’s also worth a shot because although you may receive less hits on your auction, I contend that you will get a better targeted audience since the only reason people come to CardAvenue is to buy Gift Cards as opposed to the million other items on eBay.
– Mark
Site introduced to me by Free the Drones.