Most technology companies have a lifespan that peaks early and fades predictably. eBay defies that arc with unusual stubbornness. Founded in 1995 as an online auction house, it has spent three decades absorbing competitive pressure from Amazon, Shopify, and a wave of category specialists — and arrived in 2026 not as a relic, but as a genuinely transformed platform pursuing a strategy that is more focused, more technologically advanced, and more commercially coherent than at any point in its history. Understanding what eBay is today requires letting go of what it was.
The Scale Is Still Staggering
The foundation matters. eBay closed fiscal 2025 enabling nearly $80 billion of Gross Merchandise Volume, with 51% generated outside the United States, serving 135 million active buyers and hosting 2.5 billion live listings globally. The platform closed the year with roughly $11.1 billion in revenue and approximately $2.0 billion in net income. These are not the numbers of a declining marketplace — they are the numbers of a platform that has maintained extraordinary reach while undergoing a fundamental strategic reorientation. The question worth asking is not whether eBay is relevant, but how it has remained so.

The Strategic Pivot: From Everything to Enthusiasts
The most consequential decision eBay has made in the past five years is the one it made about what not to do. Rather than competing head-on with Amazon across commoditised everyday goods — a battle it could not win on logistics or price — eBay deliberately repositioned around what it calls Focus Categories: high-value, passion-driven product verticals including luxury watches, trading cards, sneakers, collectibles, vintage fashion, and automotive parts. By investing in authentication services for luxury goods, sneakers, and trading cards, eBay has increased its take rate while attracting high-value enthusiast buyers who spend significantly more than the average user. This is a qualitatively different customer, generating qualitatively different economics.
The February 2026 acquisition of Depop from Etsy for $1.2 billion extended this logic into Gen Z pre-loved fashion — a demographic that had largely bypassed eBay in favour of more culturally resonant platforms. Depop brings both the audience and the cultural credibility that eBay’s legacy brand struggles to project natively, and the strategic intent is clear: port eBay’s authentication infrastructure and payment sophistication onto Depop’s social commerce model to create a combined platform that dominates secondhand fashion across all age groups.
AI Is Now Structural, Not Supplementary
eBay’s use of artificial intelligence in 2026 goes well beyond search optimisation. More than 10 million sellers are already using eBay’s generative AI tools, creating 300+ million listings — helping small businesses operate more efficiently, reach new buyers, and compete on a more level playing field. The next-generation “Magical Listing” AI tool — image-first, requiring no manual title input — is now live in the iOS and Android apps for casual sellers, with a bulk version in Seller Hub for US, UK, and Germany sellers. For buyers, smarter search and personalised recommendations are moving the platform closer to what its VP of Product describes as a “personal shopping assistant” model — where AI surfaces items based on visual preferences and browsing behaviour rather than keyword matches alone.
On the seller tools side, June 2026 updates introduced Intelligent Dispute Defense, allowing sellers to respond to chargebacks and payment disputes in one click with AI-generated replies — a meaningful quality-of-life improvement that reduces the administrative burden of running a business on the platform. A Trading Card Price Guide is now available to all US sellers in the eBay app, enabling sellers to check recent sales, follow pricing trends, and see how similar cards are performing in real time.
The Authenticity Guarantee: Solving the Trust Problem
Trust has historically been eBay’s most significant competitive liability in premium categories. The Authenticity Guarantee programme — now covering luxury watches, sneakers, trading cards, fine jewellery, handbags, and high-end apparel — addresses this directly by routing eligible items through third-party expert authentication before delivery. The Authenticity Guarantee programme surpassed one million items inspected in a single quarter for the first time in 2025, a milestone that reflects both programme scale and the depth of demand for verified purchasing in high-value secondhand categories. The programme has expanded into fine jewellery and high-end apparel, utilising a network of third-party experts to verify goods before they reach the buyer — directly solving the trust gap that long plagued online secondary markets.

Recommerce as Strategy, Not Just Sustainability
Around 40% of eBay’s GMV now comes from circular commerce — used, overstock, refurbished, and spare parts. This isn’t incidental. eBay has framed recommerce as a core strategic pillar, not merely a sustainability footnote, backed by tangible investments: the acquisition of Tise, Norway’s leading social resale marketplace app, in September 2025 to boost its C2C pre-loved fashion business and better engage Gen Z and Millennial consumers in Europe, alongside a $1.2 million commitment to its Circular Fashion Fund supporting circular economy startups globally.
What This Means for Buyers and Sellers
For buyers, eBay in 2026 is the most credible large-scale destination for authenticated secondhand goods in the world — a platform where the combination of scale, verification infrastructure, and AI-powered discovery makes it genuinely competitive with specialist platforms in its chosen categories. For sellers, the platform’s AI tools have materially reduced the friction of listing, the take rate structure rewards high-value category participation, and the global reach of 135 million active buyers is an audience no niche competitor can match.
eBay’s reinvention is not yet complete. The Depop integration is a work in progress, competition from category specialists remains intense, and the platform’s reputation among casual users still carries legacy baggage. But the direction is coherent, the investments are substantial, and the results are measurable. For a 30-year-old company, that is no small thing.

