Best way to sell a ...
 

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Best way to sell a banger?

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 gray
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Autotrader? eBay? STW classifieds?

2005 Audi A4 estate, mechanically sound except that it needs a new A/C compressor and the rear windscreen washer doesn't work. Has some scrapes, and quite a bit of moss / algae on the outside, also pretty darn scruffy on the inside. I mean, I could wash it and try to make it look decent, but I'm not sure it'd fool anyone anyway.

Has done 180-something thousand miles, will quite possibly do another 100k. Where do people go to buy such things? Do I need to join Facebook and deal with idiots?

I assume that part-ex or WBAC would offer me about £50 so would rather get a little more and also talk to the person that's going to own it next!


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 11:08 am
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Sell it to a STWer!

https://singletrackmag.com/forum/topic/buying-vehicle-for-3-months-advice-sought/


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 11:12 am
Simon and Simon reacted
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If nobody on here wants it, Gumtree is the place.

Free ads and functionality similar to Autotrader. Much less of a horror show than Facebook.

Used it myself for a spares/repair car - only got serious enquiries.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 11:33 am
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I’d open a butchers if I were you


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 11:34 am
slowol, gray, james-rennie and 3 people reacted
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Wait till just before 5/11.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 11:57 am
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I'd go with Gumtree too. It will attract idiots and scammers, so make sure you ignore anyone who you have any concerns about.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 11:59 am
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Wedged firmly between two slices of bread and topped with crispy onions

But remember, hot dogs die in hot cars


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:01 pm
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Ebay, honest description, low reserve and prepare yourself for a flurry of "what'll you take for it?" emails from morons who don't understand what an auction is.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:03 pm
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Give it a good clean inside & out, then stick an honest review listing all the good points and bad on eBay with a 99p starting price.

I did that with my old Ibiza which was 12 years old with 276k miles on it and it sold for £400.

At the time, wbac offered £140, so was pleased with £400!


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:09 pm
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Where in the UK are you? I have a son looking for a new whip for 6 months...


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:21 pm
 gray
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(Oxford based)

Not keen on cleaning it (haven't washed it once in the 10+ years that I've had it!) but I guess I could...


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:22 pm
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I used Facebook Marketplace and sold my old and very knackered car very quickly (listed at 6pm on Saturday, collected at 10am Sunday). I know it can be a shit-show but it does work sometimes.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:33 pm
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Not keen on cleaning it (haven’t washed it once in the 10+ years that I’ve had it!) but I guess I could…

I've always wondered why some cars look like they get parked in a pond, with all that green stuff on them.

I only wash mine a handful of times a year, but I'd have a word with myself if it started looking like Swamp Thing.

Do you get it serviced at all?


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:52 pm
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Give it a good clean inside & out, then stick an honest review listing all the good points and bad on eBay with a 99p starting price.

This is what I did with a 12 year old Fiat 500 with a knackered clutch. Got £1800 for it, which frankly astounds me, this was only a couple of months ago so not an ancient experience. Make sure you put a clear warning that you don't have a buy it now price and you won't respond to any enquiries for one. I made that mistake, got probably a hundred message asking.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:56 pm
 poly
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I assume that part-ex or WBAC would offer me about £50 so would rather get a little more and also talk to the person that’s going to own it next!

try them - you might be surprised… because:

Not keen on cleaning it (haven’t washed it once in the 10+ years that I’ve had it!) but I guess I could…

Suggests you want the path of least resistance rather than maximum cash.

fwiw I went with British motor auctions equivalent of WBAC - they collect from you so have slightly less room to negotiate if the turn up and try to say your description is not right.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 12:57 pm
 5lab
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you don't need to wash it yourself, just drive it to the local scratch n shine, and spend a fiver.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 1:02 pm
 gray
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Do you get it serviced at all?

Heh. Yep, serviced once per year whether it needs it or not! I care that it works, but not that it looks clean. My wife used it to ferry forest school stuff around for a couple of years, and my two kids have grown up in it so I gave up any idea of keeping it cosmetically nice immediately.

It's overdue a cambelt change because we've been kind of assuming that something else would go pop for a couple of years, but aside from that we've always done whatever the garage suggested.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 2:01 pm
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Give it to Charity

They will come and take it away for you


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 2:02 pm
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Yep local car wash spend a fiver will make a huge difference. Clear out the crap from the interior and spend 10 minutes with a vacuum.

Then you'll realise that actually it's an ok vehicle and decide to keep it. Or if you don't then go the eBay route.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 2:03 pm
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We just sold a tatty but well serviced VW Passat estate 1.9tdi with a crunchy 2nd gear on Facebook for £500.

We gave it a good clean and a very honest description, made it plain we weren't in a rush to the potential buyers. We were polite to the 'swappers', firm with the messers and just plain ignored some of them. Gone in 6 days.

The scrap value according to the trade in garage was £214 so there's always that choice.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 2:28 pm
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Just read your cambelt comment. Ours had that done last year.


 
Posted : 24/05/2024 2:29 pm

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