on 08-12-2014 03:33 PM
on 09-12-2014 12:26 PM
No, you are missing the point.....if the fees are due on say, the 15th of the month and the dispute has not been finalised, then you must pay the fees. When the dispute is closed you will get your fees credited to the next invoice. If you have sold anything else in the meantime you may find you do not owe anything on that invoice as you already have a credit from the failed sales.
09-12-2014 02:16 PM - edited 09-12-2014 02:20 PM
That $16 is credited to the seller (if they have followed procedures - unpaid item dispute), so seller isn't out of pocket.
The principle with paying bills due is, if you don't pay them on time you can be charged an overdue fee...or withdrawal of services. There is no point trying to make a stand by not paying a bill due.
What do you suggest eBay can do to be able to predict that a buyer isn't going to go through with a sale? They would need very special powers indeed to be able to predict that (for a first timer non payer).
on 09-12-2014 02:19 PM
Selling Fees should be charged upon payment by the buyer. And not before.
Otherwise eBay are effectivley using their sellers as a bank when it comes to fees charged and paid on items not paid for.
on 09-12-2014 02:22 PM
All sellers agree to eBay's terms and conditions when they list items for sale on this site. eBay's terms are to charge sellers accounts for FVF's etc when they are incurred (shortly after sale is made).
What if buyer pays by bank deposit and seller never marks the sale as paid?
on 09-12-2014 03:22 PM
on 09-12-2014 04:04 PM
I appreciate the terms and conditions are 'what they are'. My only suggestion was to how things should work in the interests of fairness! I would be interested to know how much money eBay collects in fees each month from sales that it subsequently hands back as a FVF credit for non paid. If its say 4% then that's a lot of money.