I try to live an honest life. I’m the kind of person who lays awake at night at the thought that I might have made someone unhappy. I felt so bad that my diesel Volkswagen broke down on a buyer that I refunded him $500. But even I have my limits, and one of them is when you buy a car from me and then try to scam someone else with it. Twice this year I sold my cars to people who seemed enthusiastic, but they were just dishonest people trying to dump my horribly broken cars onto innocent unsuspecting people.
What you’re about to read are just a couple of examples of why Facebook Marketplace, or, just people, can suck so much. When Marketplace launched in 2016, it seemed to be a great idea. You could sell things without eBay’s fees and as a buyer, you were buying things from people with real Facebook profiles and real lives. They weren’t the shadowy people hiding behind emails like Craigslist. Facebook then became the go-to classifieds site in many markets, but even Facebook isn’t stopping bad actors.
Let’s start with the freshest experiences I’ve had.
Back in March, I took my 2005 Volkswagen Touareg VR6 on one final ride. I bought the SUV in May 2021 with the intention of using it to haul my Kei car imports home from Washington and Maryland, respectively. The SUV then sort of became my rock and my go-to vehicle for hauling and off-roading. It was great at the job, but the vehicle always had issues that would have cost more than the SUV’s worth to fix.
For example, the Touareg’s transmission valve body was shot, and that part alone would have cost about half of the SUV’s value just to buy. Then there were the gaping rust holes, the failing headliner, the failing suspension, and a bunch of other small things. It was like the SUV was dying by a thousand cuts. The tipping point for me was learning that the Touareg had a power steering leak from somewhere that wasn’t a line. If I just fixed the mechanical issues and did nothing with the cosmetics I would have spent enough money to buy a nice Touareg V8, so the VR6 stopped making sense to me.
I try to be outrageously detailed in every listing I make. Facebook Marketplace has a character limit, but I try to make sure the buyer has a good idea of what they’re getting into. Here was the ad for the Touareg mentioned as issues:
When the buyer contacted me, I told them there was a chance the steering rack would need to be replaced. I also told them about a gas leak that I couldn’t put in the listing because of the character limit. They said those issues weren’t going to be a problem. Great!
Red flags appeared the moment the buyer arrived. I told him that the valve body was worn and as a result, it sometimes slammed into third gear. You had to be easy on the throttle during shifts into third gear. I went as far as to say he should lift his foot off of the gas pedal just on that shift. If he didn’t, he ran the risk of redlining the engine and possibly damaging the transmission as the worn valve body just couldn’t handle shifting into third when you’re rushing the SUV.
He didn’t listen. He got in and floored it right there in my neighborhood, hitting at least 45 mph in a place where a kid could have popped out at any moment. That was screwed up enough, but I heard the engine bounce off of the rev limiter and a loud clunk as the SUV flared its shift into third. When he got back, I told him he better be giving me the money because he was ruining my transmission. Sure enough, he gave me my money, then drove out of the neighborhood, flooring it. I heard one last redline and monster transmission clunk as the taillights disappeared. I never met someone who literally floored it everywhere, but that guy did it.
Somehow, he managed to make it back to Milwaukee without grenading the transmission, and less than a day later he posted this listing:
Now, I have eyes, so I can tell he did nothing to my Touareg. He didn’t even remove the last stickers I was struggling to get off. The listing was also posted so close to the sale that it was almost impossible that he could have purchased a new valve body and installed it. There just wasn’t enough time to do really any of the necessary repairs. It was obvious it was a zero-effort flip and any problem was dismissed “O2 Sensor” problem. The reality is, my Touareg was not in daily driver condition.
Thankfully, it seemed he couldn’t find someone to take the bait as the SUV was up for sale for six months before the listing was taken down. Hopefully, it didn’t end up in the hands of someone who thought they were getting a good car.
Now we get to my Phaeton.
My second round of cheap Volkswagen Phaeton ownership was fun but also challenging. I bought this 253,000-mile Phaeton from a reader hoping to turn it into a cheap beater with a heater. Well, the car’s valve cover gaskets failed on the way home. On a later drive, the leak got so bad the car almost caught fire. Then, in true Phaeton fashion, it had to break in other ways.
The blower motor went, the passenger seat motor stopped working, and then the pump for the air suspension started getting weak. I fixed the seat and the air suspension pump, but then at some point in the recent past, some jackwagon did a hit-and-run on the Phaeton. None of my neighbors or my cameras caught it. The cop in my building also didn’t see or hear any reports.
The pieces you see below are sort of just placed there, the bumper was actually worse than it looks:
I was once again set backward. My Phaeton was painted in a rare blue color. We’re not talking about VW’s fantastic Waterworld here, but rare enough that I hadn’t found a single bumper in the correct color. My eyes also spotted additional damage under the bumper.
I’ve been on a bit of a selling spree this year. I sold the U-Haul camper, my wife’s BMW E39, my VW Passat TDI, my VW Jetta SportWagen TDI, and technically the Buell Blast. None other than Stephen Walter Gossin taught me that it’s just not worth keeping a bunch of beaters around unless they’re making me happy. Truth be told, I do need to cut my fleet down so I’m not as stressed as I am, so I added it to the sales pile. Here’s what that listing looked like:
I figured $1,000 was fair given the issues and the difficulty of finding a bumper. Even the bumpers I found that were the wrong color were $200 to $600 before shipping, so this could be a pricey repair, and that’s assuming you don’t replace the totally mangled parking sensors or anything else.
The messages came in at such a rapid pace that I couldn’t even respond to them fast enough. Once again, I probably priced this car too cheap. I paid $2,000 for it, so maybe I should have priced it at $1,500 or something. Oh well.
Here’s one of my least favorite parts about selling vehicles. In the past, I used to hold a vehicle for a supposedly interested buyer, but then they often had a habit of not showing up, making me lose out on a sale I could have had prior. So, now I just sell to the first person who shows up with cash.
Some people ask to come even when someone else is already on their way. I used to do that, but someone once threatened to kill me over something like that, so I don’t do that anymore, either. It’s one person at a time, take it or leave it.
I got tons of attention from the ad and honestly, I did turn down some people. One guy told me he was a fresh immigrant and needed a cheap reliable car to get around and for his contracting work. As much as I would have loved to see ladders and such on a Phaeton, I couldn’t do it. I told him bluntly: “This is the worst possible work vehicle money can buy. It gets terrible gas mileage, and requires premium fuel, and it’s not if it’ll break on you, but when. I’d recommend getting a beater Toyota or something.”
Again, I could have made an easy $1,000 off of the guy, but I don’t roll like that.
The first guy to show up was, as the kids say, pretty “sus.” First, he offered me $500 for the random old Hyundai Elantra parked next to my Phaeton. I didn’t even know who owned that car. Then he got into an argument with his girlfriend (I assume it was his girlfriend). They were arguing in Spanish, which I’m not fluent in. But, as I understood it, he was certain the car had four cylinders while she said it had eight. She then even took him to the back of the car and spelled out “P.H.A.E.T.O.N.” But she didn’t know what the car was either because she had to Google it.
All of it was bizarre, but look, I just wanted my money. First, he tried to offer me $500, citing the cracked windshield. I pointed out that the cracked windshield was in the ad, so I’m not sure why he was trying to use that for negotiation. He then offered me $600, stating that the car didn’t have brakes. I pointed out that the car stops and I watched him stop, so that’s not going to fly, either.
Then, he switched to Spanish, offering me $800. I said “Look, it’s a $1,000 car that runs and drives, it’s going to have lots of problems. If you have a problem with that, I have five other people who want to come right now.” Then we exchanged a bunch of “lo sientos” for a few minutes. He then offered me $900 before I told him I was firm at “mil” ($1,000) and not a dollar less.
That $1,000 materialized weirdly quickly. I passed him the title and he drove away. I hoped he was maybe going to fix it up or whatever, but it was just a few hours later when he published this listing:
The listing is still up, but I’m not going to link to it. Just know if you see this Phaeton, it’s being misrepresented. Note how the photos don’t show the rust or the big dent, but then he says there’s no rust, which just isn’t true. The pictures also conveniently fail to show the hit-and-run damage. Clever.
That’s twice in one year I’ve accidentally sold cars to flippers who are better described as scammers. Both of these cars had laundry lists of problems, but suddenly, after just a few hours after being sold, those issues were gone! Weird how that works.
This is just one huge reason you can’t really trust anyone on Facebook Marketplace. Or, I suppose if I’m really honest here, it’s why you have to be careful buying a vehicle from anyone anywhere. You have no idea who is just intentionally misrepresenting a car to get your money. Thankfully, both the Touareg and the Phaeton were so broken that you don’t need to be a car person to figure out something is wrong. I mean, the Phaeton begins visibly smoking within a couple of minutes of being started. But that still might be enough to catch someone who might not do a test drive, so someone can still get scammed by this.
Sadly, I wish this was it with the denizens Facebook Marketplace. I have purchased about 60 cars in my life thus far and over 30 motorcycles. Most of them came from Marketplace.
I’ve seen and experienced it all. Guys have actually threatened to kill me because I didn’t sell them a motorcycle for their low-ball offer. Other people fail to show up, harass you, never respond to messages, or are just straight-up bigots. We won’t even talk about how annoying it is to get a “Hi, is this available?” and respond to it just to get nothing back or an offer that’s 10 percent of your asking price. Then there were the guys who jumped my Honda Gold Wing’s title about four times, racking up a bunch of tickets in my name along the way.
Recently, I tried to buy a Ford E-350 Power Stroke from a contractor and when I arrived his first words were “where are the men?” Come on, man. I’m learning another lesson here. If I don’t want my cars being misrepresented by shady flippers, I should probably be a bit more selective with my buyers. I should have known something was up when the fella got into an argument about cylinder counts.
So, selling cars private party online continues to suck, which probably doesn’t surprise any of you. Still, I feel like this stuff needs to be pointed out. So, if you’re in the Chicago or Milwaukee area and see either of these vehicles for sale, report the ads and then run, not walk, far away.
(Images: Author)
I was going to suggest you prominently brand your vehicles so unsuspecting buyers get tipped off, but then I realized these both still had their VW logos on them.
bastard coated basters with a bastard filling
I don’t know what’s worse. Accidentally selling to these scammers or to a Whistling Diesel wannabe.
Ill add a story to the pile… was selling my Escape V6 from back when I had a Cobra and needed a 4×4. I get all negotiated and ready for my buyer to come.
I get the car out of the garage in the driveway and start removing the last few items and getting it ready to be sold.
My buyer shows up, no negotiating just loved it and offered cash right away. Drives off.
30 minutes later…. My buyer shows up. Its a different person. I tell him its sold already and gone. He gets all pissed.
Turns out the guy that came first just used the map pin for the ad and drove around the neighborhood until he found me then pretended to be my buyer and snaked it.
I felt so bad for the real guy. So now I literally check ID of the buyer because even without double-booking someone will just show up and pretend.
Got lucky the real buyer was only pissed and didnt threaten me.
that is so f’d up and super creepy!
this is why i would negotiate a deal in a public place or in front of a police station, and if possible change the listing location to not my house
You definitely asked far to little.
I actually didnt. It was for sale for a few weeks.
A friend sold a Honda Element cheap because it had a branded title, it popped up a month later for 2x the money with a clean title.
I have opinions of FB Marketplace, but I don’t think this lies at the feet of the platform. you could have sold them on Craigslist, Autotrader, Cars & Bids, or a classified ad in your local paper and the same thing could have happened. I mean, hell… we traded my wife’s beat up NC Miata to a dealer for I think $3k to get an ND, and within a couple days it was listed at a BHPH dealer nearby for over $10,000.
There are scumbags everywhere, especially where used cars are bought and sold.
I mean, this was happening with cheap cars long before FB Marketplace or even the internet. Hell, it predates cars! Plenty of jokes about giving a “run down old screw” a little dose of something to make them prance around before pawning them off on some unsuspecting dude.
A little dose of something if the horse is lucky. The practice of shoving a live eel up a horse’s asshole so it would act lively when the buyer showed up was called “feaguing”
I bet you’ve been waiting years to work that into a conversation…. well done!
It came up here – courtesy of Torch, of course – only a month ago. He couldn’t have been waiting that long!
Why not call it eeling?
You know, I tried to tell the Committee on Shoving an Eel up a Horse’s Asshole that, but they just wouldn’t listen!
That’d be funny if any of the flippers end up on oppo or autopian with a story about how they flipped a shitty VW LOL
If you were selling them, you should’ve had Tucker make them shitbox showdown articles 😛
If they were featured on shitbox showdown, then I missed it, oops
Is this still available?
COTD nominee
Really?
On a separate note, I have someone dropping off bunkbeds from marketplace this evening. Bunkbeds, which might be one of the most obvious buy used items ever. Hope this one goes well.
I never buy anything furniture with fabric or padding on FB. Bed bugs stank etc.
Me neither. Wood furniture yes. Upholstery no.
Nah… it’s fine. You just wash any removable fabrics and throw them in the dryer on high heat.
For frames and non-removable fabrics, you dust it with DE powder and leave it for a week in either a really hot or really cold environment. It will kill off any bed bugs.
“Where are the men?”
I know of a couple bars and apps if he’s desperate.
Now that is COTD material
Anymore, I just donate the vehicle to a charity or something. It’ll get auctioned off and go somewhere appropriate. It’s not worth the couple thousand bucks to deal with people.
Agreed. It’s worth getting ripped off on a trade-in to not deal with the general public.
My last couple of Civics I didn’t need anymore went to a friend of a friend for $120 and Pick and Pull respectively, not worth the hassle of trying to sell them on Craigslist, FB Marketplace or anything like that.
But salvage is like $300 no muss no fuss?
Actually, since it was running, ~ $430, so plenty fine by me. And yes, pretty easy to do. And Pick and Pull will sell running cars whole at least some of the time. CNG Civics are a niche product though.
But the charities are scams too. I could set that up give 10% to charity and make bank
It’s harder to have a conscience than it is to not. Keep up the good work, Mercedes!
Stop stressing, this is not on you. I hate to say it but at this price range, buyer beware.
I recently scored a 2009 Vibe for my daughter with absolutely roached paint, no rust and 263000 miles. I knew it needed a battery and gambled (based on my code scanner) that the misfire and CEL was just plugs and coils. A quick brake refresh (new front pads, grease all sliding pins and wire wheeling surface rust off all rotors) and it passed PA state inspection. I’m about $1500 bucks all in.
To be clear, I’m not punching myself here. This time I know I did nothing wrong. I posted this in the work Slack chat and everyone agreed that it’s worth pointing out how scummy people get on FB. 🙂
I understand and I’m sorry. You sell a car with best intentions and…
I’m enough of a mechanic not to get taken, but most people aren’t. Someone else could have bought the Vibe and spent easily double fixing it at a shop. Buying un-needed parts or just paying for labor.
I’ve been fixing cars since my teens – I did oil changes, brake jobs and more during college for cash (beer).
Yes some mechanics use the replacement parts until fixed. Very pricey
100%. I’ve never bought a car via social media, but I would be SO nervous to do so, especially if it was cheap.
I did buy my motorcycle 10 years ago listed on FB. Still love and ride that bike. That was a very successful purchase.
Here’s the link to the VW Phaeton:
https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/881866153904799/?ref=category_feed&referral_code=null&referral_story_type=post&tracking=browse_serp%3A7f715c94-e6c9-4fcd-9112-bbf8d50f18d0
“Listed 2 hours ago.”
LOL. Okay, so the original listing was for $3,500. Then it was deleted and re-listed for $2,500 this morning. Now it’s down to $2,000.
Guess they’re finding out that few people are dumb enough to take on a cheap Phaeton. I mean, I am, but…yeah.
Hey some people are just drawn to Piech era VWs like cartoon characters to cooling pies on a windowsill.
It’s too bad that cooling pie happens to be laced with ACME poison.
I feel seen. 🙂
I sold two VWs in less than 24 hours! I’m now down to just the V10 Touareg, which you’ll have to pry from my cold dead hands, and my 2012 Jetta SportWagen, which my wife really likes so it’ll stick around for longer.
I do want to replace the sold Jetta and Phaeton with just one car, and it’s not going to be a VW.
This is borderline reasonable. And those Sportwagens are good stuff as long as the sunroof isn’t leaking.
Id suggest avoiding BMW, Audi or Mercedes Benz products as potential heartache replacements.
I can’t believe I didn’t realize til now that Mercedes doesn’t have a …Mercedes! Or does she? Has she had one before? I don’t know why I just had this epiphany. I think it’d be cool if she got a VW Cabriolet like the one “Mercedes” had in License To Drive
The Smart car is technically sold by Mercedes.
Yeah, I thought someone would say that, I did know that, but it would be cool if she had an actual Mercedes
Even non-car people will take exception to showing up & finding a messed up bumper obviously hidden by the ad picture. That alone would make me just keep driving
A truly-committed low-end flipper would have shown it, as if you’re that person, you want people who aren’t discouraged by this sort of thing.
Same reason why Nigerian princes still use the worst possible grammar and spelling, as the people who will still engage are exactly whom they want.
Yeah, I get the grammar-filter thing, but obvious body damage… I guess shoppers in that range may accept it. Or, the guy is—or thinks he is—a good enough scam artist with a patter to carry it off
I just sent them a message in Spanish since that’s my native language, let’s see what they say lol
Oh good! Hopefully you let them know we are onto them!
I reported the ad for inaccurate description. I fully expect FB to do exactly nothing with my report which is why the scammers love FB.
Is floating the title legal in IL? If not, I wonder who you report them to?
You report them to the state, as I did with the guys who floated my Honda Gold Wing’s title 4 times. It’s unclear if the state actually enforces its title rules, but is an avenue!
At the very least, he didn’t get any license plates, whew!
I’ve never sold a vehicle on Facebook marketplace, but dealing with buyers on there is the worst.
No kidding. It’s people wanting to resell or lonely and want someone to talk to.
My experience is the same on CL, Autotrader, Kijiji and the old school newspaper. Haven’t tried FB yet, but am not looking forward to it.
The FB Marketplace of today will make the CL, Autotrader and Kijiji of today look great. But you’ll also get the most hits.
Haven’t used any of them in over a decade. My last experience was kijiji with variations of – still available, will you take, too expensive, I’ll be there soon for a set of new; less than 500 miles Bridgestone winter radials, x price, firm. I ended up taking down the ad and using them on my new car. They were plus 1 for winters….
Marketplace is highly variable. Sometimes it works great. Sometimes it’s trash.
Selling my SX4 and Elantra Touring went well enough. No major problems there.
Buying that same Elantra Touring I ended up basically getting scammed on. Guy clearly cleared a bunch of codes and must’ve had the tires pumped up within 10 minutes of when I picked it up. Because the next day:
The rear passenger tire was flat.
I had a check engine light on, EVAP leak. Ended up being the canister, which requires dropping the fuel tank. Fun.
The traction control light was on, code was for steering angle sensor. This would come on and off intermittently. Fixing this basically required taking the entire steering column apart. Quotes I got for this were insanely expensive so I opted to ignore it. But disclosed the issue when I sold it.
Something was wrong with one of the rear window seals, where water had been getting in and rotting the door from the inside out.
A week into ownership one of the rear calipers seized.
I wish him a lifetime of hemorrhoids.
Out of curiosity, was the seller a mechanic?
Not to my knowledge, no.
The Touareg’s flipper is pretty brazen with the “..open to trades” line in his ad. I wonder how fast or well a flipper can gauge the value of two disparate, likely broken in different ways vehicles? Or is he hoping someone will offer a Honda or whatever in good shape?
Maybe he’s hoping someone will trade for a piece of Hollywood memorabilia?
Yeah, he should have specified “interesting trades considered”.
Yeah, I automatically thought of “big, juicy van”
Maybe the guy who bought the Phaeton will offer that in trade in a kind of “Shitbox of the Magi” scenario.
I concur social media sucks especially dealing with people on Facebook. I haven’t sold a vehicle that cheap on Facebook but the idiots I had to deal with when selling a 90 K5 Jimmy and 73 Javelin was just ridiculous luckily those were all online interactions and not in person. When helping my dad sell a 97? CRV for like 3k grand one of the potential buyers complained about rust on a Midwestern (Chicagoland) owned vehicle like it is listed for 3k.
I sold my old motorhome there, it showed up about 3 weeks later with half the mileage and a lot of lies. Due to working a weird job that had me posting a lot of ads I have a ton of email and facebook profiles, so I had this guy meeting me all over town to pick up the ‘cash money’ I had for him and answering tons of questions and sending me photos of all sorts of parts. It did sell and I saw it for sale again later for about what I sold it for with ALL the faults listed
Usually the way to fight this on CL is to post a separate ad with the same headline but SCAM! in there somewhere. Then you put your story in the ad explaining why its a scam. Can’t you do the same with FM?
I suppose you could, but Marketplace’s algorithm is so poor that your scam warning ad could be totally invisible to someone living right next door to you, or be buried far down the page of results, below many unrelated listings, while the ad you’re warning about is up near the top of the results
Yet another reason I prefer CL.
I wanted to leave a comment, but I’m currently too stoned to think. So. No comment.
Like the typical responder to a sub-2,000 FB ad…
I know where you can a great deal on a Phaeton …
Dang. Not even 5:00 yet.
Was on-call for my first time this week. That ended at 3pm.
It’s not that I indulge every day—but, when you can’t, you really want to.
Freaking bastards. The guy I recently sold my Cruze to was mad because I wouldn’t sign the title unless he put his info on it first. I am not about to enable someone to title jump. He did it though, I fully expected him to walk over it but he didn’t.
I think this is less an indictment of FB Marketplace specifically as it is of playing in the $1-2000 range.
When I’ve sold stuff for $4-10K on FB, it’s mostly gone OK, just as it did on Craigslist before. Presumably it’s harder to quickly flip cars in that range, and the buyers are going to be discerning (and non-desperate) enough to actually notice flaws.
Yeah, most of my sales above $2,000 have gone well, too! So you might be onto something.
Still, no matter the price, this sort of behavior is just terrible. Both of these guys knew about the issues as I make sure every buyer knows what’s up. I showed the Phaeton buyer the smoke and everything. I mean, even tried to knock the price down because the tires were old…which yeah, I said that. So yeah, I guess he’s trying to flip it onto someone who wants to desperately own a cheap Phaeton.
…So he’s basically trying to sell it to me? lol
It doesn’t make the behavior of the buyers any better, we agree there. And people buying cheap stuff seem on average to be the worst.
The whole thing is similar to the idea that the real value of a Costco membership is being able to shop among only people who can afford one.
The biggest mistake somehow, is listing anything for free. The people who show up and the things that they expect for something, that is literally free. More information? More pictures? Delivery!?
I wised up and now put things on the curb. Our street is pretty busy, and anything I put out for free is usually gone within 10 minutes. I don’t know why it took me so long to start doing that.
Yes, this is ridiculous and absolutely correct.
Hey dude, can you deliver that free dresser to my apartment?
A few months ago or so I decided to get rid of some tires. They were good snows, but for a car I didn’t own anymore. At first I thought about putting them up for sale for $50. Instead, I put them outside next to the dumpster and posted an ad saying to get them for free before the garbage truck does. They were gone in a couple of hours. 🙂
Posting stuff for free is a great way to get rid of large crap you don’t want to move. I gave a away a couch to some folks that showed up with an Olds Alero. I told them I’d help get it out of the house but they were on their own from there.
I’ve had a couple in a Mini show up to take a couch. They balanced it on the roof and drove off without strapping it down, literally reaching out of the windows to hold it in place with their hands.
I’ve also had a woman show up with an ovals Taurus sedan to pick up a large dining room table. She, looking at the table in my driveway as I had already moved it out there in advance of her arrival, seriously asked me “Do you think we’ll be able to fit it into the backseat?” I was speechless.
You win!
Some places have Freecycle for a slightly more organized version of setting stuff on the curb to make it disappear.
Sure. Let me get the chainsaw!
My chainsaw is for leaden batteries only.
This is one of the areas of Facebook that is not a steaming sess pool, Buy Nothing Groups are awesome. There are ones for each neighborhood in manhattan, I’m assuming for cities and small towns too.
You can get rid of lots of stuff, and its much less “is this still available”
Yup, I always write “Not responding to additional requests. I put it at the curb and will take this post down when it’s gone.”
Ditto here. My wife and I have gotten rid of TONS of stuff that, sure, we probably could’ve made a little cash from if we’d wanted to put the effort in, but literally putting it on our curb, we can get rid of 80% of anything we put out within a couple days. And then someone else gets to enjoy it/it’s their problem!
In my parents’ suburban neighborhood half the obvious crap in poor condition that couldn’t be sold for a dime would be picked up before the next morning when bulk pickup was scheduled. And there and in my former neighborhood (little early postwar houses) the scavengers were always driving around at 2:00 am to catch anything with any resale or scrap value before the trucks rolled through. I’m in a college-adjacent neighborhood now which ordinarily would be good, but my street’s half a block long and dead-ends at a creek, so nobody drives by. Maybe I can take stuff to the corner and put it in front of the little insurance office that’s closed all weekend before posting an ad.
Not a bad idea.
The busy street I live on can make life a bit difficult when it comes to backing out of the driveway or dealing with loud vehicles at night. But it makes for super successful garage sales and the magic curb can make just about anything disappear.
I think this is less an indictment of FB Marketplace as it is of PEOPLE.
No… it’s also an indictment of FB because FB refuses to do anything about scammers or scam accounts.
It’s CraigsList with nicer pictures and easier access. Yes it sucks sometimes but it is a free service and you can use it or not. Complaining that it isn’t a free Bring-A-Trailer is not realistic. And FWIW, you can get scammed on BAT also.