I don't know what the laws are in Alabama, but I worked part time at a pawn shop here in Washington for about a year.
I mostly wrote loans and sold stuff. Their standard rule was to give one third of what they thought they could sell it for if you were going to PAWN it. If you were selling it outright they MAY give you a little more.
According to Washington State law, EVERY item they take in for pawn or sale MUST sit for thirty days to make sure it's not stolen. Since a loan on a pawned item is good for 90 days, this law is satisfied. But if it's bought outright it still has to sit for 30 days. And the pawn shop does not collect any fees when buying outright like they do when an item is pawned.
IMO $300 was a fair price for that gun. I wouldn't have thought that before I worked at the pawn shop. This pawn shop has been in business for over 40 years and is privately owned. The owner and manager know what it takes to stay in business.
And I don't care what ANY blue book says. It's just a guide and not very good one at that. Blue books do not take into consideration LOCAL or GEOGRAPHICAL demand, current state of the economy, and the local buying market.
SOME people that shop at pawn shops aren't the brightest people out there. Many of them are pawn customers who will pawn something and then turn right around and buy something from the pawn shop with that very money! Dumb, dumb, dumb! But they still do it. And these folks do no research. They get excited and will pay whatever price they see on an item. Including guns. So if you owned a pawn shop, wouldn't you mark up your guns for these buyers? I would and so would you. Why do you think SMART pawn shoppers will watch an item for a while to see if the price is lowered or they think they can make an offer for less?
Because of local demand, buying power, and other factors a pawn shop will offer what they think is fair. That will NEVER seem fair to the seller. If the pawn shop already has four or five of the gun you are trying to pawn for sale, he doesn't really want another one. So he of course is going to offer you less because he's already sitting on money from the others. A good pawn shop will either decline to buy the item or offer to pawn it for you instead.
It's not personal. It's business. Pawn shops operate differently than most businesess and are subject to different laws.
Whether you understand this or accept it doesn't matter cause EVERYBODY knows not to try and sell a gun to a pawn shop or gun shop. You wouldn't trade in your car and take a loss. You would sell it privately if you were smart.
Just my inflated 2 cents.
I mostly wrote loans and sold stuff. Their standard rule was to give one third of what they thought they could sell it for if you were going to PAWN it. If you were selling it outright they MAY give you a little more.
According to Washington State law, EVERY item they take in for pawn or sale MUST sit for thirty days to make sure it's not stolen. Since a loan on a pawned item is good for 90 days, this law is satisfied. But if it's bought outright it still has to sit for 30 days. And the pawn shop does not collect any fees when buying outright like they do when an item is pawned.
IMO $300 was a fair price for that gun. I wouldn't have thought that before I worked at the pawn shop. This pawn shop has been in business for over 40 years and is privately owned. The owner and manager know what it takes to stay in business.
And I don't care what ANY blue book says. It's just a guide and not very good one at that. Blue books do not take into consideration LOCAL or GEOGRAPHICAL demand, current state of the economy, and the local buying market.
SOME people that shop at pawn shops aren't the brightest people out there. Many of them are pawn customers who will pawn something and then turn right around and buy something from the pawn shop with that very money! Dumb, dumb, dumb! But they still do it. And these folks do no research. They get excited and will pay whatever price they see on an item. Including guns. So if you owned a pawn shop, wouldn't you mark up your guns for these buyers? I would and so would you. Why do you think SMART pawn shoppers will watch an item for a while to see if the price is lowered or they think they can make an offer for less?
Because of local demand, buying power, and other factors a pawn shop will offer what they think is fair. That will NEVER seem fair to the seller. If the pawn shop already has four or five of the gun you are trying to pawn for sale, he doesn't really want another one. So he of course is going to offer you less because he's already sitting on money from the others. A good pawn shop will either decline to buy the item or offer to pawn it for you instead.
It's not personal. It's business. Pawn shops operate differently than most businesess and are subject to different laws.
Whether you understand this or accept it doesn't matter cause EVERYBODY knows not to try and sell a gun to a pawn shop or gun shop. You wouldn't trade in your car and take a loss. You would sell it privately if you were smart.
Just my inflated 2 cents.
