Selling via auction vs fixed price
When an auction outperforms a fixed-price listing, when it doesn't, and how to read the trade-offs before you choose.
Both are valid ways to sell on Haubot. The choice is not "which is better" — it's "which fits this asset and this market window." Here's how to decide.
When an auction usually wins
Auctions outperform fixed-price listings when:
- There's real competition. Multiple qualified buyers are likely to bid. Cross-border assets where 4-5 markets pay attention is the classic case.
- Market price is uncertain. New category, atypical configuration, asset just came up — you genuinely don't know what it's worth and want the market to tell you.
- You need a hard close date. Auctions end on a fixed timestamp. Useful when you have a deadline (fleet rotation, end-of-lease, project deadline).
- The asset is desirable enough to draw a crowd. Auctions that get one or two bids underperform fixed-price listings. Auctions with 8+ qualified bidders almost always beat the asking price.
When fixed-price usually wins
Fixed-price listings outperform auctions when:
- The asset is niche. Specialist parts, obscure brand, narrow buyer pool. Most fixed-price listings sell to one or two qualified buyers anyway — an auction wouldn't have more participants.
- Buyers need time to inspect and finance. Auctions reward fast bidders. If your typical buyer wants to send an inspector, get financing approved, and consult a board — a 7-day auction window is too short.
- You have a firm minimum you won't go below. You can set a reserve price in an auction, but reserves discourage bidders ("why bid if I don't know what's needed?"). A fixed-price listing with the same minimum as the asking price is cleaner.
- You don't want the urgency optics. Some buyers read auctions as "must sell, distressed" — which can pull the final price down rather than up.
The trade-offs at a glance
| Auction | Fixed price | |
|---|---|---|
| Hard close date | Yes | No |
| Price discovery | High | None |
| Best with many bidders | Required | Not required |
| Reserve possible | Yes (hidden or visible) | n/a — price is the price |
| Buyer can negotiate | No (bid is bid) | Yes (via Messenger) |
| Time to close | Fixed (auction length) | Variable |
| Effort for seller | Higher (auction setup, dispute handling if needed) | Lower |
Hybrid: fixed-price with auction conversion
You can list at a fixed price and convert to an auction later if you're getting interest but no closer. The reverse (auction → fixed price) doesn't work mid-auction — bids are binding.
Auction modes — Seller Managed vs Haubot Managed
If you choose auction, you also choose who runs it:
- Seller Managed Auction — you set the rules, you handle bidder qualification, you handle the dispute process if it comes up.
- Haubot Managed Auction — Haubot runs the auction, manages bidder access and deposits, and steps into disputes between buyer and seller.
See Auction modes for the full comparison and Deposits and fees for what each costs.
Quick decision rule
If you can answer "yes" to all three — there will be real competition, you need a hard close date, and the asset is desirable enough to draw a crowd — auction. Otherwise fixed-price is usually the lower-effort, more predictable choice.


