Person to person
Facebook Marketplace
You deal with the seller directly. The venue mostly steps back.
Our take · You're on your own
The typical Marketplace deal (local pickup, cash or Zelle) carries zero platform protection. Every safeguard is one you bring yourself.
An informed opinion from the policies below, not a verdict.
The receipts
No authentication program.
No authentication program exists for Marketplace listings.
No standard returns. Whatever you agree with the seller is the policy.
Only transactions completed with onsite checkout are eligible for Purchase Protection.
No venue-level remedy. Your payment rail is your only recourse.
Purchase Protection covers onsite-checkout shipped orders ONLY. Local pickup and Messenger deals are explicitly excluded.
Purchases made through third-party sites, local pickups, or Messenger transactions don't qualify for Purchase Protection.
Buying here anyway?
Fair. Here's how to cover the gaps yourself.
No one is checking the bag, so you check it
- Paid photo-review services authenticate from your photos, typically $10 to $50. Make the deal contingent on the result.
- Ask the seller for a photo of the bag with a handwritten note and today's date in frame. Stolen listing photos can't produce one.
- Reverse-image-search the listing photos. If they appear on other sites, walk.
- Pull up the markers for this exact style before you pay, not after.
The payment rail is the protection
- PayPal Goods and Services carries documented dispute rights. A credit card carries chargeback rights.
- Zelle, Venmo friends-and-family, wire, and gift cards carry nothing. A seller who insists on one is telling you something.
- Meeting in person? Inspect before money moves, in a public place.
No return window, so build your own paper trail
- Get condition and the return terms in writing before paying. The message thread is your record.
- Ask for photos against a checklist: corners, straps, hardware, interior, date code.
- Film the unboxing. A not-as-described dispute with video is a different conversation.
Vet the seller like it's your job
- Search the seller's name plus reviews, and check the Better Business Bureau if they operate as a business.
- Look for a track record on other platforms; sellers with history protect it.
- Ask for a live video walkthrough of the bag. Two minutes on camera filters out most bad actors.
Check the going rate before you commit
- Look up the bag's current resale median for its size and material. Our estimate, updated from recorded market prices.
- A price far below the going rate is not proof of anything, but it is the single strongest marker to slow down on.
Facts above come from Facebook Marketplace's own published policies on the dates shown, and we re-verify monthly. Policies change; the linked source is always the current word.