Amazon vs eBay: The Definitive Seller Comparison for 2026
The two largest marketplaces offer vastly different selling experiences. We compare fees, fulfillment, and buyer demographics.
Amazon
Best for: Sellers with high-volume commodity products who want 300M+ buyer access and FBA fulfillment convenience.
eBay
Best for: Sellers of unique, collectible, or niche products who value lower fees and flexible listing formats.
Which Should You Choose?
The right platform depends on your situation. Find your profile below.
If you prioritize low fees and flexible listing options for a small inventory
eBay's free basic accounts, 250 free monthly listings, lower referral fees starting at 3%, and no mandatory fulfillment costs make it far more affordable for sellers just getting started.
If you prioritize maximum traffic, Prime eligibility, and scalable fulfillment
Amazon's 300M+ buyers, FBA infrastructure, and mature advertising platform enable high-volume sellers to scale rapidly with outsourced logistics and Prime conversion benefits.
If you sell unique, vintage, or collector items and want listing flexibility
eBay's auction format, flexible condition grading, passionate collector communities, and no barcode requirements make it the natural home for unique and collectible inventory.
If you want maximum reach across buyer demographics and can invest in both channels
Amazon's unmatched buyer volume, FBA logistics, and advertising sophistication make it the primary revenue driver for enterprise sellers, with eBay as a valuable secondary channel for incremental sales.
Amazon vs eBay
Side-by-side feature comparison to help you understand both platforms.
Overview
Amazon and eBay are the most recognized online marketplaces but cater to sellers differently. Amazon emphasizes a product-centric catalog with Buy Box competition. eBay takes a seller-centric approach with unique storefronts and auction capabilities.
Amazon offers unparalleled traffic and FBA convenience. eBay counters with lower fees, more listing flexibility, and a passionate community of collectors and niche buyers.
Savvy multichannel sellers list on both to capture different buyer segments. Nventory manages both from a single dashboard, adjusting stock as orders come from either channel.
Amazon
Amazon is the world's largest marketplace with 300M+ active customer accounts. Its FBA program lets sellers outsource warehousing and shipping. The Buy Box algorithm makes it ideal for high-volume selling.
eBay
eBay connects 130M+ active buyers across 190 markets. Known for auctions, collectibles, and unique items, eBay also supports fixed-price listings. Lower fees make it attractive for higher-margin products.
Category-by-Category Breakdown
Click each category for detailed analysis and platform-specific insights.
Running both platforms? Nventory syncs Amazon and eBay automatically.
See integration detailsFrequently Asked Questions
eBay generally charges lower overall fees. Amazon's referral fees range from 8%-15% plus FBA fees. eBay's final value fees range from 3%-15% with no mandatory fulfillment charge.
Yes. The key challenge is inventory sync. Nventory handles this automatically by adjusting stock in real time as orders arrive from either marketplace.
FBA is valuable for high-volume sellers wanting Prime eligibility. However, FBA fees can eat into margins on low-priced items.
Nventory connects to both via API, providing a unified dashboard. When an item sells on Amazon, eBay stock is automatically decremented and vice versa.