I’ve recently gotten a lot of my childhood Lego from parents place to mine and am looking for a good way to sell them.
What I have is just a lot of smaller/medium sized sets from the 80s or 90s. I think most of them should be complete but I need to dig through bags and put them together, so it will take a bit of time to know.
With complete I mean having all parts, nothing broken or missing, including instructions. I only have a few original boxes left though, so its mostly bricks and instructions.
I am not in a hurry to sell, but I’d like to get back my storage space that this is occupying. One note is that I live in Northern Europe, shipping cost in my country is pretty high, especially for tracked packages, not sure this could be a factor to reduce my chances of selling stuff at decent price.
Any input/suggestions for this would be appreciated!
Bricklink
BrickLink is most people’s go-to for online buying/selling for Lego; this website will also help you to identify and price your sets. If you don’t want to ship them, there may be a brick and mortar store similar to Bricks & Minifigs in your area, or there are secondhand stores specializing in Lego in Denmark if you can travel there. Alternatively, you could try selling them locally through Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, and the like.
Actually a good point checking for stores buying stuff in the area, haven’t checked but sounds worthwhile too, thanks!
Bricklink I had a look but it looks to me to be “too big” to be able to sell sets where 10 other sellers are already looking to sell. Meaning, its not listing anything chronologically and offers don’t expire or fall off the list? But maybe I didn’t notice those things at first glance.
I’ve only been a buyer, but I think sellers just keep their products posted for sale until they sell (or the seller decides to do something else with them). I’ve also seen sellers put certain things on discount relative to their previous price point.
You might not sell things right away, but you might appeal to a certain buyer’s criteria and preferences when they decide to look for the particular products.
Keep em. Trust me, you’ll miss em later.
They’ve been in my parents attic for more than a decade, then for 4+ years in my cellar. Nope, pretty sure about it.