Once you set up automatic bidding, you can stay ahead of the competition for an item without needing to be on the eBay site.
How to set up automatic bidding
When you're ready to bid on an auction listing, enter the maximum amount you'd like to pay for the item and select Place bid. We'll then bid in increments on your behalf – enough to keep you in the lead, but only up to your limit.
We'll let you know if someone outbids you and you can decide if you want to increase your maximum bid.
Keep in mind when you're deciding on the maximum amount you'd like to pay that you'll need to pay the cost of postage too.
Tip
Bidding on items can be exciting, but it is a contractual obligation. When you're deciding on your maximum bid, be sure you're happy to pay that amount if you win the auction.
Why you've been outbid immediately
If you get outbid immediately after placing a bid, it's likely another bidder is using automatic bidding, and has a maximum limit that's higher than yours. You'll need to increase your maximum limit in order to be the highest bidder.
Bid increments
When someone else places a bid, which is lower than the maximum bid, we'll place a slightly higher bid on your behalf. The amount the bid increases by is known as a bid increment. Bid increments are smaller when the bid price is low, and larger in higher price brackets.
Current price | Bid increment |
£0.01 - £0.99 | £0.05 |
£1.00 - £4.99 | £0.20 |
£5.00 - £14.99 | £0.50 |
£15.00 - £59.99 | £1.00 |
£60.00 - £149.99 | £2.00 |
£150.00 - £299.99 | £5.00 |
£300.00 - £599.99 | £10.00 |
£600.00 - £1,499.99 | £20.00 |
£1,500.00 - £2999.99 | £50.00 |
£3,000.00 and up | £100.00 |
Occasionally you'll see bids increase by less. This means that someone else placed a bid just slightly higher than your automatic bid amount.