Toys — especially vintage, discontinued, or LEGO sets — are some of the best flips on eBay. The challenge is identifying exactly what you have. FlipListr's AI reads the set name, year, and condition from a photo and flags whether you have a complete set or missing pieces, so your listing is honest and your price is right.
FlipListr handles the full range of toys on eBay — not just the common stuff.
Point your phone at the item. FlipListr works with any smartphone camera — no special lighting or setup needed.
FlipListr identifies your item, writes the eBay title and description, suggests a competitive price, and removes the photo background — automatically.
Review everything on screen, edit anything you want, then tap Post Live. Your listing goes straight to your eBay account via official API.
Toys — especially vintage, discontinued, or LEGO sets — are some of the best flips on eBay. The challenge is identifying exactly what you have. FlipListr's AI reads the set name, year, and condition from a photo and flags whether you have a complete set or missing pieces, so your listing is honest and your price is right.
Manually, listing toys on eBay takes 10–20 minutes — researching comps, writing the title and description, editing photos, and selecting item specifics. Using FlipListr, the same listing takes under 60 seconds because AI handles everything from your photo.
Price toys based on recently sold (completed) eBay listings for similar items in similar condition — not active listings, which show what sellers are asking, not what buyers paid. FlipListr's AI does this research automatically and suggests a competitive price when it generates your listing.
"Complete in box" LEGO sets sell for 3x the price of loose pieces. FlipListr catches completeness signals from your photo so you price right. FlipListr is free to start — 10 AI listing scans per month, no credit card required.
Mistakes that cost sellers money — and how to avoid them.
"Complete in box" LEGO sets sell for 2–5x the price of the same set with loose bricks and no box. Always note in your listing: box (with original flaps?), instructions (present?), and parts count. A $2 LEGO set from a thrift store bin can be worth $40 CIB and $80 if it's a retired Star Wars set.
LEGO buyers search by set number (e.g., "LEGO 75192 Millennium Falcon"). The set number is on the box side panel or the instruction booklet front cover. Without it, your listing misses every buyer searching that specific set. FlipListr can read LEGO set numbers from photos of the box or instructions.
A LEGO set missing its minifigures loses 40–60% of its value. A board game missing one card is incomplete and should say so. Buyers who discover undisclosed missing pieces file "item not as described" cases that cost you the sale price, return shipping, and a defect on your account. Disclose everything; price accordingly.
A vintage Hot Wheels car "near mint, never played with" sells for 5–20x a played-with example. Original paint intact, wheels roll freely, no rust on axles. Vintage action figures with all accessories in the original card/box are the pinnacle — an original Star Wars figure on card can be worth 100x the same loose figure.
Based on recent sold listings. Actual prices vary by condition, completeness, and timing.
| Item | Typical Sold Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| LEGO Star Wars Millennium Falcon (set #75192) | $450–$600 used CIB | Instructions and minifigs required; missing fig drops value significantly |
| Vintage Hot Wheels (pre-1980, red line) | $15–$80 each | Condition is everything; mint examples 5–20x played-with |
| LEGO Creator/City Set (retired, CIB) | $40–$200 | Retirement date + sealed box adds large premium |
| Funko Pop Lot (10+ mixed) | $35–$80/lot | Include character names in title; vaulted figures boost lot value |
| Nintendo Game & Watch (original) | $30–$150 | Working condition critical; original box multiplies value 3x+ |
FlipListr works across every major eBay category.