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StockX Sports Memorabilia Fee Calculator 2026

Last verified: May 2026 from official StockX seller fee pages

Direct answer: At a $200.00 sale price, StockX charges $24.00 in Sports Memorabilia fees (12.0% effective rate). You keep $176.00 before item costs and shipping.

eBay's 13.25% collectibles rate applies -- authentication and insurance costs on signed items can add 5-10% to total expenses.

Single-marketplace view

Price the listing before it goes live

Use the exact marketplace, category, shipping setup, and cost of goods you expect to list with. That gives you a real payout baseline instead of a fee estimate from memory.

Use Level 1 if you are not sure. This only changes StockX calculations.

StockX fees use sale price only; enter the seller shipping cost you expect to pay.

Fee breakdown

StockX fees at a glance

Sale PriceFeesYou KeepEffective Rate
$25.00$5.75$19.2523.0%
$70.00$8.40$61.6012.0%
$200.00$24.00$176.0012.0%
$500.00$60.00$440.0012.0%
Platform comparison

How Sports Memorabilia fees compare across platforms

PlatformFeesYou KeepEffective Ratevs Cheapest
Depop$7.31$200.693.5%Lowest
Etsy$20.21$187.799.7%+$12.90 more
Mercari$20.80$187.2010.0%+$13.49 more
Facebook Marketplace$20.80$187.2010.0%+$13.49 more
Whatnot$22.33$185.6710.7%+$15.02 more
Grailed$26.47$181.5312.7%+$19.16 more
eBay$28.69$179.3113.8%+$21.38 more
Amazon$31.20$176.8015.0%+$23.89 more
StockX$24.00$176.0012.0%+$16.69 more
Poshmark$40.00$168.0019.2%+$32.69 more
Category guidance

How the Sports Memorabilia assumptions work

This Sports Memorabilia page is built around a modeled sale range of $25.00 to $500.00, a typical shipping cost of $8.00, and a typical item cost of $12.00. Those numbers matter because sports memorabilia margin usually depends on more than the marketplace percentage. A small shipping miss or a weak sourcing price can erase the difference between two platforms before the item ever sells.

StockX uses its core fee stack for this category, so the useful differences come from sale price, shipping pressure, buyer fit, and the profit floor you need. At the middle modeled sale price of $200.00, StockX charges $24.00 in fees, or 12.0% effective. That leaves $176.00 before costs and roughly $156.00 after subtracting the modeled shipping cost and item cost. Use that number as the first pass, then replace the assumptions with your actual listing costs.

Why StockX may or may not fit this category

StockX reaches buyers searching for authenticated sneakers, streetwear, collectibles, trading cards, electronics, and high-demand accessories. For sports memorabilia, that audience fit matters because the lowest-fee platform is only better if the item can still sell at the same price. If StockX's buyers are more likely to understand the category, tolerate the shipping cost, or pay for condition and brand details, a higher fee can still produce a better outcome than a cheaper marketplace.

The main watchout on StockX is that your seller level and the US seller shipping cost can change payout before item cost is considered. Pair that with this category note: eBay's 13.25% collectibles rate applies -- authentication and insurance costs on signed items can add 5-10% to total expenses. Read the calculator result as a pricing checkpoint, not a final promise. If the expected sale price depends on condition, authenticity, seasonality, or bundles, rerun the calculator with a conservative price before listing.

Worked Sports Memorabilia pricing example

A practical sports memorabilia check starts with the middle row because it is close to the expected sale price for this category. At $200.00, the model assumes the buyer covers $8.00 in shipping and your item cost is $12.00. With those inputs, the StockX fee estimate is $24.00, and the pre-cost payout is $176.00.

If your real listing needs a lower sale price, compare it with the low row at $25.00, where the fee is $5.75 and the effective rate is 23.0%. If you expect a premium sale, compare the high row at $500.00, where the fee is $60.00. This prevents one optimistic price from hiding how fragile the margin really is.

Shipping and sourcing guardrails

Sports Memorabilia listings should be tested with the shipping method you actually plan to use. The default model treats buyer-paid shipping and your shipping cost as the same $8.00 amount, which is useful for a clean fee comparison. If you offer free shipping, absorb a discount, or upgrade packaging, enter that cost directly because it comes out of profit even when the marketplace fee looks unchanged.

Sourcing discipline matters just as much. The modeled item cost is $12.00, but a higher buy cost quickly changes the decision. Before buying more sports memorabilia inventory, set a minimum profit floor, subtract realistic shipping materials, and test the sale price you would accept after negotiation. A listing that only works at the best-case price is not stable enough for repeat sourcing.

How StockX compares with other platforms

StockX ranks 9 of the tested platforms by fee cost, charging $16.69 more than Depop at the modeled price. The table is not saying the cheapest platform is always the best place to list. It is showing the fee spread under identical assumptions so you can decide whether StockX's audience, workflow, and sale-price potential are worth the difference.

Amazon is the next cheaper platform in the table, so use it as the first sanity check before accepting StockX's fee tradeoff. Poshmark is the next more expensive platform at the modeled price, which gives you a practical ceiling for how much audience fit needs to be worth. If the spread is only a few dollars, sell-through rate and audience quality may matter more than the fee. If the spread is large, require a concrete reason before choosing the pricier channel: a higher expected sale price, stronger buyer intent, lower return risk, or faster inventory turnover.

Listing details that matter for Sports Memorabilia

Sports Memorabilia listings need enough detail to protect the price you enter in the calculator. Condition notes, measurements, material details, model numbers, edition names, defects, and included accessories can all decide whether the buyer treats the item as premium or generic. The calculator can show the fee impact, but the listing has to justify the sale price that makes the fee math worth doing.

For StockX, this is especially important because authentication, price transparency, and product-page demand can support stronger resale prices. If that advantage applies to your item, write the listing around the proof a buyer needs before paying the modeled price. If it does not apply, use the comparison table as a warning sign and test whether a cheaper platform can reach the same net payout with less pricing pressure.

Offer and markdown planning

Do not price sports memorabilia inventory from the best-case row only. The low row at $25.00 is your stress test for offers, stale inventory, or a listing that has to move quickly. If the profit after fees, shipping, and item cost disappears at that lower price, build a wider asking-price cushion before publishing or wait for a better sourcing cost.

The high row at $500.00 is useful for premium-condition or high-demand inventory, but it should not become the default assumption. A seller who buys every item as if it will hit the high row can end up overpaying. Treat the middle row as the operating case, the low row as the markdown case, and the high row as upside that needs proof from sold comps.

Promotion, labor, and repeatability

StockX's fee model is seller-level transaction fees from 9% down to 7%, plus 3% payment processing. That tells only part of the story because promotion, listing labor, packing time, returns, and relisting time can all change the practical margin. For sports memorabilia, enter any promotion cost you expect to use and compare the result with an unpromoted case before deciding that paid visibility is worth it.

Repeatability is the real test. One successful Sports Memorabilia listing can be luck; a repeatable sourcing rule needs the calculator to keep working across normal prices, normal shipping costs, and normal offers. If the model only works when every assumption is favorable, the category may be better as an occasional opportunistic buy than a regular inventory lane.

Use related pages as a second opinion

After checking StockX, compare the same sports memorabilia assumptions against the category ranking and the head-to-head comparison pages. The purpose is not to chase every small fee gap. It is to identify whether the fee difference is large enough to change the listing plan or small enough that buyer fit, speed, and workflow should drive the decision.

set the correct seller level and enter the shipping cost you expect to pay before comparing StockX to open marketplaces. If another platform looks cheaper, ask whether it can realistically match the same sale price. If StockX looks pricier, ask whether it can justify the gap with better demand, easier trust signals, or faster turnover. That second pass keeps the page from becoming isolated fee math and turns it into a selling decision.

When to rerun this calculator before listing

Rerun the StockX sports memorabilia calculator whenever one of the assumptions changes: sale price, shipping charge, shipping cost, item cost, promotion, or category selection. Those fields interact, so a small change in more than one place can move the final margin more than sellers expect. This is especially true when the item sits near a platform fee threshold or when shipping is a large share of the sale price.

The safest workflow is to test three cases: the price you hope to get, the price you would accept after an offer, and the lowest price that still clears your profit floor. If StockX works in all three cases, the listing is resilient. If it only works in the optimistic case, compare another platform or wait for a better sourcing cost before listing the item.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does StockX charge for Sports Memorabilia?
At a $200.00 sale price, StockX charges $24.00 in total fees (12.0% effective rate). You keep $176.00 before item costs and shipping.
Which platform has the lowest fees for Sports Memorabilia?
Depop has the lowest fees at $7.31 (3.5%), while Poshmark charges the most at $40.00 -- a $32.69 difference per sale.
What are StockX fees on a $500.00 Sports Memorabilia item?
On a $500.00 sale, StockX charges $60.00 in fees (12.0%). You keep $440.00 before deducting your costs.

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Category decision hub

See how all supported platforms rank for Sports Memorabilia before testing each one individually.

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