AuctionIQ
Tool III
Max bid

Know your limit before the bidding starts.

Enter your expected sale price and the profit margin you need. The calculator works backward through fees, premiums, shipping, and tax to give you the hammer price you should never bid past.

§ A · Target
$
§ B · Acquisition fees
$
§ C · Resale fees
$
Maximum bid
$104.38

Bid more than this and you won’t hit your 40% ROI target.

Net sale (after resale fees)$205.50Max landed cost$146.79Profit at max bid$58.71
§ 02
Why a pre-set ceiling matters

Discipline beats emotion at auction.

The single biggest predictor of long-term profit at auction isn’t finding the best deals — it’s knowing when to stop bidding. Live auctions create emotional momentum. Online auctions have sniping bots and last-second panic. Without a pre-set ceiling, you overpay on roughly one in five lots and surrender your margin.

A calculated max bid solves this. You enter one before the sale. The bot bids for you up to that ceiling and stops. No emotional escalation, no paddle-raised-out-of-spite. Over 50 lots, this single discipline compounds into 20–40% more profit with the same inventory pipeline.

§ 03
Frequently asked

Questions, answered.

How do I calculate my maximum bid at auction?

Start from your expected sale price. Subtract resale platform fees and outbound shipping to get net proceeds. Divide by (1 + target ROI%) to get your maximum landed cost. Work backwards through buyer's premium and tax to find the hammer price ceiling. This calculator does all of that automatically.

What ROI should I target on auction resales?

Most serious resellers target 30–50% ROI on fast-moving inventory and 50–100%+ on slow-moving collectibles or antiques that may sit for months. Below 25% ROI, a single return or damage claim wipes out your margin. Adjust for how confident you are in the sale price estimate.

Why should I bid below the calculated max?

The max bid is your break-even at target ROI — there's no cushion for surprises. Experienced resellers bid 10–15% below the max to absorb returns, shipping damage, buyer disputes, or slower-than-expected sales. Bidding at the max means one bad outcome eats all your profit.

What's the difference between hammer price and max bid?

Hammer price is the winning bid amount. Max bid (or absentee bid) is the ceiling you tell the auction house or bidding platform — it will bid on your behalf up to that amount but stop there. Setting a calculated max bid is the single biggest discipline tool for profitable auction buying.

Does AuctionIQ automate this for every lot?

Yes. AuctionIQ pulls real sold comp data, estimates fair market value, and suggests a max bid based on your ROI target and each platform's fee structure. You can save max bids per lot and get alerts when the current bid approaches your ceiling.

Automate your max bids

A calculated ceiling, on every lot.

AuctionIQ calculates max bids for every lot in your watchlist automatically — using real sold comp data, not guesswork.

Try AuctionIQ free

Bid-ceiling alerts. No credit card.