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Book Reseller’s Guide: How to Source Cheap Books and Flip Them for Profit

Book reselling is one of the most accessible side hustles you can start today — low barrier, flexible hours, and real profit potential. Here's how experienced book resellers source cheap inventory in bulk and sell it for consistent returns.

  • March 2, 2026
  • admin
  • 6 min read
Book Reseller’s Guide: How to Source Cheap Books and Flip Them for Profit
  • What makes a used book worth reselling
  • The best sourcing channels for books to resell
  • How to price for maximum margin on Amazon, eBay, and beyond
  • Why buying wholesale gives you a sourcing edge

The used book market on Amazon and eBay moves millions of dollars worth of inventory every month — and individual resellers capture a meaningful slice of that. Book reselling, sometimes called book flipping, is one of the most accessible side hustles around: low startup costs, no specialized knowledge required, and a massive inventory pool hiding in plain sight at thrift stores, library sales, and wholesale suppliers.

This guide covers everything you need to start sourcing books for resale and building a profitable book-flipping operation.

What Makes a Book Worth Reselling?

Not every book you find is worth listing. Profitable book reselling depends on understanding what drives value:

  • Scarcity: Out-of-print titles, limited editions, and textbooks with short print runs hold value longer than mass-market paperbacks.
  • Condition: Books in “Very Good” or “Like New” condition command 2–5x the price of the same title in “Good” condition on Amazon Marketplace.
  • Category: Textbooks, specialty non-fiction, and niche genres (certain history or biography titles) tend to hold value better than general fiction.
  • ISBN rank: Amazon’s Sales Rank (BSR) tells you how quickly a category moves. Books with a BSR under 1,000,000 in Books typically sell within weeks.

Use a scanning app like the Amazon Seller app or ScanLister to check ISBN prices before you buy — this is non-negotiable if you’re sourcing from mixed lots.

The Best Places to Source Books for Resale

Thrift Stores

Thrift stores are the classic starting point for book resellers. Goodwill, Salvation Army, and independent secondhand shops price most books at $1–3, making it easy to find titles that sell for $10–30 on Amazon. The downside: you’ll sort through a lot of low-value inventory to find the gems.

Pro tip: Build relationships with thrift store managers. Many will alert you to new book donations or sell you unsorted boxes before they hit the floor.

Library Book Sales

Library sales are gold for resellers. Libraries price books to move — often $0.25–$2 each — and the inventory is typically in better condition than thrift store finds. Library deaccession programs sometimes offer pallet or box pricing that dramatically reduces cost-per-unit.

Estate Sales and Moving Sales

Estate sales frequently include large personal book collections, often sold at aggressive prices when the family just wants everything gone. These can be hit-or-miss on selection, but the price-per-book is usually excellent.

Wholesale Book Suppliers

For resellers who want to scale beyond one-off sourcing, wholesale book suppliers offer the most consistent and predictable inventory. Instead of spending hours sorting through thrift stores, you can buy genre-sorted lots — non-fiction, self-help, literary fiction — in bulk at a set cost per book.

This approach trades the thrill-of-the-hunt for predictability and volume, which is exactly what resellers need as they scale from a hobby to a real business.

How to Price Books for Resale

Pricing strategy separates successful book resellers from those who stall out. Here are the fundamentals:

  • Match the lowest FBA price on Amazon, or price slightly below to win the Buy Box on competitive titles.
  • Factor in all fees: Amazon charges referral fees (15% for books) plus FBA fulfillment fees. Use Amazon’s fee calculator before committing to any lot.
  • Set a minimum margin: Most experienced resellers won’t source a book unless they can net at least $3–5 after all fees. This means the source price needs to be well below the current selling price.
  • Don’t forget eBay: Some books — especially niche non-fiction, vintage cookbooks, and religious texts — sell faster and at better prices on eBay than Amazon.

Scaling Your Book Reselling Business

Most successful book resellers start with thrift stores and library sales, then transition to wholesale sourcing as they grow. The reason is simple: time. Spending 6 hours at a thrift store to find 40 sellable books is fine when you’re starting out, but unsustainable as a full-time operation.

Wholesale sourcing lets you buy 200–500 books per order, sorted by category, at a predictable per-book cost. You spend more time listing and fulfilling — the actual revenue-generating activities — and less time hunting.

Zoom Books supplies books for resale across 12 categories including mystery and thriller, romance, science fiction and fantasy, and teen and young adult.

Essential Tools for Book Resellers

The difference between a casual book flipper and a profitable reseller often comes down to one thing: speed of evaluation. These tools let you make buy/no-buy decisions in seconds rather than minutes.

ISBN Scanner Apps

  • Amazon Seller App (free): Point your phone camera at a barcode and instantly see the current lowest price, your estimated profit after fees, and the Sales Rank. The starting point for every reseller.
  • Scoutly / ScoutIQ: More advanced scanning with offline database access — critical if you’re sourcing at library sales with poor cell signal. Shows 90-day and 180-day sales rank averages, not just the current snapshot.
  • BookScouter: Compares buyback prices from 30+ vendors simultaneously. Useful when you find books that sell better through direct buyback than Amazon FBA.

Understanding Amazon Sales Rank (BSR)

Amazon’s Best Sellers Rank tells you how frequently a book sells relative to all other books. Here’s a practical guide for the Books category:

  • Under 100,000: Sells multiple copies per day — fast mover, great to stock.
  • 100,000–500,000: Sells a few times per week — solid inventory.
  • 500,000–1,000,000: Sells a few times per month — acceptable if margins are high.
  • Over 1,000,000: May sit for months — avoid unless the book is rare and priced accordingly.

Never make a decision based on a single BSR snapshot. A book ranked 50,000 today might have been 2,000,000 last week. Tools like ScoutIQ show the historical trend, which is far more informative.

Pricing and Inventory Management

  • Keepa: Shows Amazon price history graphs for any ASIN. Invaluable for spotting price spikes and understanding a book’s true market value over time.
  • InventoryLab or Airtable: Track your cost of goods, fees, and profit per unit. Knowing your actual margin — not just the selling price — is what separates a hobby from a business.

When You’re Buying in Bulk, Tools Matter Even More

When sourcing from wholesale suppliers, you’re often evaluating lots rather than individual titles. In that case, the key metric shifts from per-title BSR to category sell-through rate — how quickly books in that genre move overall. Genre-sorted wholesale lots (like those from Zoom Books) let you apply category-level knowledge rather than scanning every ISBN, which makes bulk sourcing significantly faster to evaluate.

Browse wholesale books for resale →

Ready to scale your sourcing? Get in touch and tell us what categories you’re looking for.