Recent Sold Prices & Market Trends

Real Resale Data Across Brands, Categories, and Models

Introduction: Why Sold Prices Matter More Than Listings

Active listings show hope.
Sold prices show reality.

If you want to price accurately, you must analyze what buyers actually paid — not what sellers are asking.

This page tracks resale market behavior across clothing, sneakers, vintage workwear, and high-demand brands.

If you want an instant estimate based on current market activity, you can check your item directly using Flip411.

Check Current Value with Flip411

What This Page Covers

This hub provides:

• Recent sold price ranges
• Average and median resale values
• Trend observations
• Market movement analysis
• Brand-specific data breakdowns

For detailed pricing frameworks, visit the Brand Guides.

How Sold Price Analysis Works

Understanding sold prices requires filtering.

We evaluate:

• Last 30–90 days of sales
• Same model or SKU
• Comparable size
• Similar condition
• Exclusion of extreme outliers

Outliers happen when:

• Item is mislisted
• Auction bidding spikes
• Condition is exceptional
• Bundle sales distort value

The goal is identifying true market value — not anomalies.

Clothing Sold Price Trends

Carhartt Detroit Jacket

Recent sold range (modern production):
$70–$140

Vintage USA production:
$150–$350+

Trend observation:
Streetwear crossover continues supporting vintage pricing, though heavily saturated listings can suppress modern resale values.

View Full Carhartt Resale Guide

Levi’s 501

Modern pairs:
$25–$60

Vintage Big E examples:
$300+ depending on condition

Trend observation:
True vintage denim remains strong. Modern production sees stable but limited upside.

View Full Levi’s Resale Guide

Patagonia Fleece

Recent sold range:
$50–$140 depending on model

Retro and limited seasonal colors outperform basic fleece.

Trend observation:
Outdoor brands maintain stable resale due to brand equity and durability.

Sneaker Sold Price Trends

Jordan 4 Retro

Recent sold range:
$180–$350 depending on release

High-demand colorways can exceed $500 during peak hype cycles.

Trend observation:
Re-releases and restocks typically reduce short-term resale values.

New Balance Made in USA

Recent sold range:
$120–$250

Collaborations outperform inline releases.

Trend observation:
Heritage manufacturing continues supporting resale stability.

Dr. Martens 1460

Modern pairs:
$50–$100

Vintage Made in England:
$120–$250

Trend observation:
Condition sensitivity is significant — sole wear impacts resale heavily.

Understanding Average vs Median Price

Average price can be distorted by high or low outliers.

Median price often reflects true market midpoint.

Example:

Sales:
$120
$130
$135
$140
$400 (rare condition example)

Average = inflated
Median = realistic pricing baseline

Serious sellers track medians.

30-Day vs 90-Day Analysis

Short-term (30 days):
Reflects current demand spikes.

Long-term (90 days):
Shows stable market baseline.

High-volatility markets (sneakers) require short-term monitoring.
Stable markets (heritage clothing) benefit from longer-term averaging.

Seasonal Market Movement

Fall/Winter:
Outerwear increases in demand.

Spring/Summer:
Lightweight clothing and sneakers move faster.

Holiday season:
Giftable items surge.

Timing listings correctly can increase final sale price by 10–25%.

Price Compression and Saturation

When large numbers of sellers list the same item:

• Visibility drops
• Buyers negotiate harder
• Average sale price declines

Scarcity drives premium pricing.
Oversupply compresses margins.

Model-Specific Sold Price Snapshots

These are examples of how pricing shifts by model — not just brand.

Carhartt:
Detroit jacket vs generic active jacket = major price difference.

Levi’s:
Big E vs modern 501 = massive valuation shift.

Jordan:
High OG vs Mid = dramatic resale spread.

Model precision matters more than brand name.

Why Manual Sold Research Takes Time

To accurately evaluate sold prices manually, you must:

• Filter condition
• Compare sizes
• Remove auctions
• Calculate fee-adjusted profit
• Identify trends

This process takes time — especially when sourcing multiple items.

If you want an instant estimate instead of manual filtering:

Upload Photo & Check Current Value with Flip411

How Often Do Sold Prices Change?

Clothing:
Moderate seasonal shifts.

Sneakers:
Rapid movement after releases or restocks.

Luxury:
Slower shifts, unless influenced by trends or authentication changes.

Understanding volatility helps determine pricing strategy.

Using Sold Prices to Calculate ROI

Example:

Purchase price: $60
Recent median sold price: $180

Platform fees (13%): $23.40
Shipping: $15

Net: $141.60

Projected profit: $81.60

Without sold data, you are guessing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do I see huge price differences for the same item?

Condition, size, region, and timing all influence final sale price.

Should I price at the highest recent sale?

Not unless your condition matches or exceeds that listing.

Use median pricing for realistic turnover.

Do auctions reflect true value?

Sometimes.
But auctions can be influenced by bidding wars or underexposure.

Fixed-price sold listings are often more reliable indicators.

How reliable are resale price trends?

They reflect recent transaction data.
However, markets shift with trends and seasonality.

Real-time valuation tools can reduce research time.

Final Takeaway

Sold price analysis is the foundation of accurate resale pricing.

Successful resellers:

• Track real transaction data
• Price within realistic market ranges
• Adjust for seasonality
• Calculate fees before purchasing

If you want to skip manual filtering and get a current valuation estimate:

Check Your Item’s Resale Value with Flip411