eBay Goes Live For The Holidays, Bringing Livestream Shopping To Australia & More!
eBay Live makes holiday splash as livestream shopping launches in Australia!
From Black Friday through December 20th, eBay Live in the US is featuring sought-after pre-loved luxury goods and collectibles in livestream shopping experiences, including a brand-new “Spin the Wheel” format, $1-start auctions, surprise curated drops, surprise celebrity guest appearances, and more

eBay Live launched over 3 years ago in the US and has been live for over a year in the UK as well, but sellers have been frustrated with the slow pace of rollout and restrictive category, social media presence, and annual sales requirements that blocked many from participating - driving many into the arms of competing platforms like Whatnot, Poshmark and TikTok.
But eBay has been picking up the pace in the last few months, expanding Live into more categories like Hard Goods, Health and Beauty, and Art and Antiques and launching in Germany in November.

And now, eBay Live is also available in Australia, launching this week with trading cards and collectibles categories to start.

Alaister Low, Country Manager for eBay Live Australia, said the launch marks “the next chapter in eBay’s innovation in Australia”, adding that the company plans to expand eBay Live into additional categories next year.
eBay also currently has an open job ad for an eBay Live Category Manager based in Paris, France, as well, hinting at further European expansion coming soon.

So why is eBay suddenly expanding Live 3 years after the initial launch? It could be that TikTok's recent foray into auctions (with the help of some ex-eBay talent), and reports that TikTok Shop is within striking distance of overtaking eBay in Gross Merchandise Volume has put eBay on the defensive.

TikTop Shops auction initiatives are aimed squarely at the high-end collectibles market that eBay had previously dominated and analytics firm EchoTik estimates TikTok Shop sold ~$19 Billion worth of products globally from July through September of this year, with the US accounting for ~$4 Billion to ~$4.5 Billion of that total, an increase of about 125 percent compared to Q2 2025.
By comparison, eBay reported $20.1 Billion total global GMV for the same period, just barely managing to stay ahead of the social media giant despite devoting significant resources and discounts for users to try to boost usage of eBay Live livestream shopping.
eBay scrambling to expand Live into more categories and countries now is a stark contrast to their position just a few short months ago at eBay Open 2025 in August, where General Manager eBay Live Caroline Pougnier inexplicably encouraged smaller sellers who were interested in livestreaming to use competing sites to get comfortable with live selling and build an audience.
During the eBay Open Live Seller Panel titled Thriving in Real-Time Commerce, Pougnier told attendees:
Okay, so the next question is when is eBay live going to be open for more Sellers and more categories? And what's required to be eligible?
So our vision of course is to have eBay live be open to all trusted sellers on the platform. We're really keen on building a platform that has the best sellers who are very trusted because a lot can go wrong if you've got a not great or not very ethical seller.
At the moment though the technology is still in its earliest stages and so we're partnering with those who have existing livestreaming experience so that they can help us build the platform and make it ready for a broader audience. We're going to be opening up little by little as the platform gets more mature.
At the moment in order to join, you should have existing livestreaming experience and/or a very active social media community, in addition, of course to fantastic access to inventory.
Even more mind-blowing, when a small seller in the live audience asked how she could get into live selling if she didn't qualify for eBay Live, Pougnier explicitly told the seller she should start by practicing livestreaming and building an audience on other social media sites - an idea the seller had not previously considered before today!
Seller: my question is related to what you were just talking about. So I am a smaller seller. I am dying to get on to the Live platform and as I was applying I realized that I don't have any of the qualifications that you're looking for.
I have 998 followers on Tik Tok and a very small Instagram. So, what would you recommend for platforms for us that want to get into this business but cannot quite yet get onto eBay?
Caroline: Yeah. So it sounds like you're already doing the work of building a social media following, have you practiced going live on those platforms?
Seller: I have not and I really didn't think about that.
Caroline: I think that's a really good first step because first of all, you get used to being in front of the camera, moderating an audience, you get used how the chat goes. And also you'll find that you're following will grow much faster as you start live on social media platforms.
eBay has a long history of blundering into telling their customers to spend more time on competitor sites, has raised many questions about whether eBay leadership truly understands the current competitive landscape.

For example, As @unsuckEBAY so presciently explained in 2021, continuing to funnel users to Facebook for support, engagement and live shopping seemed like a bad move, especially in light of how StockX took a big bite out of eBay's sneaker business in 2019.

Earlier this year, eBay did in fact make a deal with Meta, announcing a partnership which allows eBay items to be listed on Facebook Marketplace - but it's important to note that the integration directs the buyer from Facebook to eBay to complete the transaction, so in theory it should be a net gain for eBay rather than a risk of losing existing users to a competitor.

That being said, it was absolutely wild to hear the General Manager of eBay Live actively encouraging sellers who are apparently too small for eBay to care about to go pay their dues (quite literally in the form of selling fees) and hone their live selling skills elsewhere
If that small seller followed Pougnier's advice and became successful with live selling by growing a sizeable following on Whatnot, TikTok or Instagram, why in the world would she want to come back groveling for a chance to be let into eBay Live?
eBay now seems to have reversed course somewhat from that monumentally short-sighted position, recently opening Live up to more sellers and more categories in the US while expanding internationally, but one has to wonder how much potential revenue eBay foolishly handed to their competitors in the meantime.

One of the biggest hurdles eBay has faced to gaining buyer adoption for Live may not be marketing, but rather persistent technical problems that make the user experience inconsistent and, in some cases, practically unusable.
For example, last year's Elton John Charity Event turned into an embarrassing debacle with terrible pixelation, extreme lag and buffering distracting and disrupting the event.

A year later, it seems eBay has gotten most of the bugs worked out and the increasing competition and pressure from investors to meet Gross Merchandise Volume (GMV) and Active Buyer targets appears to have lit a fire to finally start trying to catch up with themed shopping days and special events, not to mention generous discounts for buyers and subsidized lower fees for sellers, to boost adoption rates.

After 3 years of technical bottlenecks and squandered opportunities while smaller, scrappy upstart competitors have gained an early foothold in live selling, is eBay Live too late to the party or arriving just in time? Let us know what you think in the comments below!







