Buying A Used Guitar Online
By Mark Knowles
How To Buy A Used Guitar
Buying a used guitar online can help you save a lot of money if you approach with the right mindset. The whole process could frustrate you, and cost a lot of money if you aren’t careful. However, if you take your time while you’re shopping, and don’t rush into the first instrument you come across, or buy into over-hyped sales pitches, you will feel a lot better about the entire ordeal once it’s been finalized.
When you begin shopping, you’ll need to look for numerous sites to compare prices and models. Different vendors carry different lines of guitars, and charge different prices as well. Grab a notepad, and write down a few different websites that you want to look over. Take a couple of hours and browse through their selection.You will most likely end up back at Ebay unless you find something close to home.
As you first land on their site, they may have some good deals on the homepage, but the best buys are typically found deeper into the site. Write down the site, model, price, and page that you found the guitar on, adding it to the list of models you’ll check in on when you’re closer to buying.
Read all of the item descriptions carefully before you settle on any one guitar. When you are dealing with used instruments, you need to be certain of what you’re buying, and if you don’t take the time to read and understand what the seller is telling you about the guitar, you probably aren’t going to be completely happy with the purchase.
Some sellers will even hide small print describing different faults, or damage to the guitar. For this reason alone, don’t scan the descriptions, but actually read them and know some history about the guitar before you think about purchasing it. If you’ve finally selected one guitar from the list you built, you’ll need to learn some information on the person selling it.
Using online auction and classified sites, you can usually get a rating on the seller’s trustworthiness. However, as you get more personal in the deal, you have to rely more on what the seller is telling you, and comparing it to the advertisement, with what you personally know about the guitar. This is especially true when you’re purchasing collectors guitars, because the scams run rampant when higher demand and price tags are added in.
Take your time through the entire process, and you should be able to avoid most issues. Because problems do arise, though, make sure that you have some sort of return policy, or promise in place to ensure that you don’t get burned in the deal. This is where Ebay's buyer protection comes in useful.
dugger62 2 years ago
Thanks for the info- great Hub. That is where I bought mine. I had also bought an amp, but it was like a major toy. The company was a sweet heart and mailed the one that was suppose to be sent. Thanks for you Hub.