⚡ Buyer FAQ
Before You Buy — Quick Answers
Clear answers to the buyer questions that usually come up before a liquidation, overstock, or mixed-lot deal moves into quote review.
FAQ
Verification
Can I verify warehouse location or live stock before I pay?
Yes. We can align warehouse notes, live stock checks, and confirmation timing before you release payment for the lot.
Can I verify warehouse location or live stock before I pay?
Yes. We can align warehouse notes, live stock checks, and confirmation timing before you release payment for the lot.
Yes. For many closeout and overstock deals, buyers first want confirmation on where the goods are sitting, whether the lot is still open, and what kind of pickup or dispatch timing is realistic. Before payment, we can usually help confirm warehouse notes, stock-sheet status, and the current verification path so you reduce avoidable back-and-forth before committing.
FAQ
Proof
Can I ask for photos, video, or a stock sheet first?
Usually yes. Buyers often review stock sheets, photos, or a short video before deciding whether to move forward.
Can I ask for photos, video, or a stock sheet first?
Usually yes. Buyers often review stock sheets, photos, or a short video before deciding whether to move forward.
Usually yes. For selected lots, we can help arrange a stock sheet, warehouse pictures, or a short video confirmation before the deal moves deeper. This step is especially useful for mixed liquidation inventory, customer-return lots, and fast-moving closeout deals where buyers want a practical snapshot rather than a long formal presentation.
FAQ
MOQ
What MOQ should I expect on liquidation or excess inventory?
MOQ depends on the lot. Some deals move by case or pallet, while others require taking a mixed truckload or the full clo...
What MOQ should I expect on liquidation or excess inventory?
MOQ depends on the lot. Some deals move by case or pallet, while others require taking a mixed truckload or the full clo...
MOQ depends on the seller, the warehouse setup, and how the lot is packed. Some closeout deals can move by case or pallet, while others are only practical as a mixed truckload or full lot take-over. If MOQ is the main decision point for you, review that first before spending time on detailed pricing, because it usually determines whether the deal fits your channel at all.
FAQ
Pricing
How are mixed lots or closeout bundles usually quoted?
Mixed lots are normally quoted from the lot structure first: unit, quantity range, condition, and how complete the inven...
How are mixed lots or closeout bundles usually quoted?
Mixed lots are normally quoted from the lot structure first: unit, quantity range, condition, and how complete the inven...
Mixed closeout lots are usually quoted from the lot structure first, not just from a single product price. Buyers normally need to understand the sales unit, condition, quantity range, and whether the stock sheet is complete. If the inventory is mixed or fast-moving, the quickest path is to narrow the lot type first and request a quote with those assumptions already clear.
FAQ
Timing
How long can stock usually be held or reserved?
Reservation windows vary. Fast-moving deals may need same-day confirmation, while more stable lots can allow a short hol...
How long can stock usually be held or reserved?
Reservation windows vary. Fast-moving deals may need same-day confirmation, while more stable lots can allow a short hol...
Reservation windows depend on how quickly the inventory is moving and how many parties are watching the same lot. Some deals need same-day confirmation, while more stable inventory can sometimes allow a short hold period. If timing matters, ask about reservation rules early because it affects whether you should go straight into verification, pricing, or shipping alignment.
FAQ
Start Fast
What should I prepare before sending RFQ or buyer contact details?
Have your target lot type, quantity range, destination, and verification request ready first. That makes the first reply...
What should I prepare before sending RFQ or buyer contact details?
Have your target lot type, quantity range, destination, and verification request ready first. That makes the first reply...
Before you send RFQ or start direct contact, it helps to have four basics ready: lot type, quantity range, destination or pickup region, and your preferred verification method. When those four points are clear, the first buyer-support reply is usually faster and more actionable.
⚡ Next Step
Need a stock check after reviewing the FAQ?
Once the basics are clear, move to Contact or RFQ with the lot type, quantity range, warehouse preference, and verification request you already narrowed down here.