How to Buy on Craigslist
How to Buy on Craigslist
Have you considered Craigslist, a widely used classified-ad web page containing local postings for your individual area throughout the world? It is mostly first come first served with "cash in hand" and "as is, where is..."–like a clearance (like a garage sale). "Promises, promises" are not good enough for the seller–people do not always show up (because of distance, transportation, money and many other "stoppages").

Do you need a job–check the employment categories; so, you not only shop Craigslist for good usable items from toys, musical instrument–to a bike, car, truck or RV that you may want to buy–but there are also personals, commercial services and dealers.

The listings are similar to visiting a number of of flea markets or garage sales online, or employment offices right there in your home, with some incredibly low prices -- or even free items. Expect great deals or rip-offs...
Steps

Get on Craigslist at http://www.craigslist.com.

Click on your state name and then click your city or one near your town or community. Craiglist has an advantage of being hyper local. If you want to purchase a thing, let's say, in Los Angeles and don't want to go outside of Beverley Hills, you can view only those listings.

Choose a sales category in the drop down list. Click the category from that menu, to narrow the field of stuff in which you are mainly interested. Select "free stuff" as your chosen category on the drop-down list to see how lucky you might be. There may be free dirt, firewood–old or green (pre-cut or long pieces that you'll have to take and cut later), rocks, scrap metal, furniture, garage sale leftovers, used lumber, etc.; sometimes free stuff is left on the street curb for the taking and may be gone quickly.

Enter a search item, brand and/or kind, for example: you can spell out a search for a "riding mower," or do you need a "tiller," under the category: "Farm and garden" by clicking that. A large number of ads have pictures, and so the search has a button so that you can limit your results to ads that include pictures. You can also limit your search to items between certain prices.Click "lowest price," as a search setting, then $1 will lead the list, but some people put that to get you to click their listing which may contain mostly higher priced items.

Create a bookmark/favorite of your search so that you may search easily again the next day or next weekend. Or, even if you don't–it will open in the listings for the last city that was searched.

Click the title of an item–in the listing of items found by the search–that you want to examine in detail (to see the seller's ad and description for that item).

Read the ad carefully; be doubtful of fabulous descriptions. An ad should include a brief description of the condition of the item, price, and seller's area location and, possibly, a phone number. Follow the seller's instructions to the buyer such as instructing you to use the secure Craigslist email inquiry, or to call a phone number. Avoid deals that seem too good to be true. Be aware that there are a lot of scammers.

Try replying to the seller with a message sent through Craigslist anonymous secure response link that you can paste into your email to send the request to Craigslist, and then they relay it to the seller. Protect your email address; be anonymous at first and be secure from spammers by creating a membership in Craigslist (if you wish); that way your email is not revealed at the first level of making an inquiry.

Agree on the selling price. Advertisers fear tricks by buyers and often accept only cash. Be prepared to pay cash for your item. Agree when and where to pick up your purchase. Most sellers do not guarantee the product, and say it is "as is" and that sales are "final!":

Examine the item, and try to get it to work, etc.–buyer beware!

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