Every listing on Disc.Market — fixed-price or auction — is backed by your word that it's genuine and accurately described. These are the terms you agree to each time you publish.
When you list
Before a listing goes live you check a box confirming it's genuine and accurately described. That checkbox is a binding statement. By publishing, you affirm:
Misrepresenting an item — wrong condition, fake signature, stock photos, or a counterfeit — is a violation of these terms and can lead to refunds, listing removal, and loss of selling privileges.
You are the seller of record and are solely responsible for the legality, authenticity, condition accuracy, and safety of every item you list. You agree to reimburse Disc.Market for any refund, chargeback, or claim arising from a misrepresented, counterfeit, or not-as-described item, and to indemnify Disc.Market against third-party claims (including intellectual-property and authenticity claims) relating to your listings. See the Pro Shop Terms in our Terms of Service.
Accuracy
Use clear photos of the actual item. Show wear, ink, and flaws. Stock or borrowed images aren't allowed for used items.
Grade condition accurately and disclose anything a buyer would want to know — dings, dyes, refinishes, or a tournament stamp.
If you run an auction
Auctions add a timed-bidding format for rare, grail, and out-of-print discs. They run on the same escrow and payout pipeline as fixed-price sales, with a few rules that make binding bids work for everyone.
A bid is a commitment to buy at that price. There is no casual bidding here — to bid you must have a valid payment method and a shipping address on file, and every bid is payment-verified.
When an auction ends, the high bidder's saved card is automatically charged for the winning bid plus shipping and tax. This is how we eliminate the non-payment problem that plagues comment-bid auction groups.
If a winner's payment can't be collected and isn't fixed within the grace window, the win is forfeited and offered to the runner-up. Repeat non-payment leads to bidding suspension and, ultimately, a permanent ban. A chargeback on a delivered item is grounds for a permanent ban.
After your auction receives its first bid, you can no longer edit its key terms or cancel it yourself — your commitment to sell is binding, and the final price could be the runner-up's lower bid if the winner forfeits. If something genuinely goes wrong before close (the item is lost or damaged, or there's a material listing error), contact support; only Disc.Market can cancel an auction after bidding has begun, and we notify all bidders.
Auction sales are final: you can't return a won item because you changed your mind. You are still fully protected by escrow and the 3-day post-delivery dispute window if the item is significantly not as described.
Buyer protection
The buyer's payment is held on the platform and only released to you after delivery is confirmed and the 3-day dispute window passes. Buyers are protected; honest sellers are paid reliably.
Disputes are limited to "significantly not as described." A rare or grail item is not a free trial — buyers can't open a dispute simply because they changed their mind. If the item matches your listing, the sale stands.
What it costs
A 10% commission on the item price plus shipping (never on tax), plus a flat $0.35 per order. The same fees apply to auction sales, Buy-It-Now sales, and second-chance offers. There are no listing fees and no buyer fees.
See the full fee breakdownNot allowed
These terms supplement the general Terms of Service. Disc.Market is the marketplace facilitator and is not a licensed auctioneer; auctions are seller-listed timed sales. We may update these terms; the version in effect when you publish a listing governs that listing.
How selling works