Teenagers can sell on eBay with a parent or guardian's help. Learn the age requirements, how to set up an account, what to sell, and how to handle taxes as a teen seller.
Bizee Editorial Staff
Editorial Team
Teenagers can sell on eBay, but eBay requires account holders to be at least 18. The practical workaround is straightforward: a parent or guardian opens the account, and the teen runs the selling side. This guide covers the age rules, how to get set up, what sells well, and what to know about taxes.
Yes, but with one condition. eBay's user agreement requires account holders to be 18 or older. A teenager can't open their own account, but a parent or guardian can open one and let the teen manage the listings, handle shipping, and keep the earnings. That arrangement is how most teen sellers get started.
The adult on the account is legally responsible for everything that happens — payments, disputes, and tax reporting. That's worth understanding before you dive in, because it means the adult needs to be genuinely involved, not just lending their name.
eBay gives teen sellers access to a global buyer base without needing a storefront, inventory system, or startup capital. You can list items you already own, source things from thrift stores, or flip products you find locally. The barrier to entry is low, and the feedback loop is fast — you learn what sells and what doesn't within days, not months.
Most people underestimate how much running a real eBay shop teaches. Pricing, customer communication, shipping logistics, and basic bookkeeping are all skills you pick up by doing. That's a better business education than most classrooms offer.
Electronics, collectibles, vintage clothing, and trading cards consistently rank among eBay's top-selling categories. If you already have a hobby or interest in any of those areas, you're starting with an advantage — you know what buyers want because you're one of them.
The process has a few moving parts, but none of them are complicated. Here's how to get from zero to your first sale.
A parent or guardian needs to create the eBay account using their name, email address, and payment information. eBay links payouts to a bank account or PayPal, so the adult's financial details go on file. Once the account is live, the teen can handle day-to-day selling under that account.
Start with what you already have. Old video games, sports equipment, books, clothes, and electronics are all solid starting points. Once you've sold a few things and understand how the platform works, you can look at sourcing — buying items at thrift stores, garage sales, or wholesale to resell at a profit.
Pick a category you know something about. If you collect sneakers, start there. Buyers can tell when a seller understands what they're selling, and that trust shows up in your feedback score.
A good listing has clear photos, an accurate description, and a competitive price. Take photos in natural light against a plain background. Describe the item's condition honestly — buyers leave negative feedback when the item doesn't match the listing, and your feedback score affects how often eBay shows your listings to buyers.
Check what similar items sold for before you set your price. eBay's sold listings filter shows you real transaction prices, not just asking prices. That's the number that matters.
Ship on time and pack items well. Late shipments and damaged goods are the two fastest ways to hurt your seller rating. USPS, UPS, and FedEx all offer discounted rates through eBay's shipping tools — use them. Print labels at home and drop packages off at the post office or a carrier location.
This is the part most teen sellers skip, and it's the part that matters most as the business grows. eBay reports seller earnings to the IRS when annual sales exceed $600. That means the adult on the account may need to report that income on their tax return. Keep a simple record of what you sold, what you paid for it, and what you made — that's the foundation of basic bookkeeping.
A tax professional can help figure out how to handle eBay income correctly, especially if sales start adding up. Getting this right early is a lot easier than sorting it out later.
If the eBay shop starts generating real income, it's worth thinking about forming a business entity. An LLC separates the business's finances from personal finances, which matters once money is moving regularly. The adult on the account would need to be the one to form the LLC, but the teen can be involved in running it.
Most teen sellers don't need an LLC right away. But knowing the option exists — and what it does — means you're ready to make that move when the time comes.
You need to be 18 to open an eBay account. eBay's user agreement sets 18 as the minimum age for account holders. Teenagers under 18 can sell on eBay if a parent or guardian opens the account and the teen operates under it. The adult is legally responsible for the account.
Yes, but not with your own account. eBay requires account holders to be 18 or older. If you're under 18, a parent or guardian needs to open the account. You can manage listings, communicate with buyers, and handle shipping — the adult just needs to be the account owner and take responsibility for payments and tax reporting.
Yes, to hold the account. eBay's terms require account holders to be at least 18. That said, a teenager can actively run a selling operation under a parent or guardian's account. The adult owns the account and is responsible for it — the teen handles the day-to-day selling work.
It depends on how much is earned and whose account it's under. eBay reports seller earnings to the IRS when annual sales exceed $600. Since the account belongs to the adult, that income flows to them for tax purposes. The adult may need to report it on their tax return. A tax professional can help figure out the right approach based on your specific situation.
Start with items you already own — old electronics, video games, books, clothes, or sports gear. Electronics, collectibles, vintage clothing, and trading cards are among eBay's consistently strong-selling categories. Once you understand how the platform works, you can expand into sourcing items from thrift stores or garage sales to resell at a profit.