
Quick Answer: Hermès bags boast the highest resale value retention in the luxury market, typically commanding 90% to 150%+ of their original retail price across the range. The Constance leads all models with an average retention of 105%. The Kelly Mini II frequently sells for 280%+ of retail; the Birkin 25 in pristine condition commands massive premiums well above retail. Rare exotic versions can reach six figures at auction. The model, size, leather, construction, and condition strictly determine the specific value. No other handbag brand comes close to Hermès resale value retention.
A Recent Auction That Proves Birkin Resale Value Is Real
On May 22, 2026, a Vietnamese government official stepped up to the podium at the Ho Chi Minh City Asset Auction Service Center. The lots: two rare white crocodile-skin Hermès Birkin bags seized from jailed tycoon Truong My Lan, convicted of a $44 billion banking fraud. Within 30 minutes, both bags had sold — the star lot, a rhinestone-embellished Birkin 25, for $440,144. Nearly 35 times its retail price. The other, a Birkin 30, for $94,858. No boutique. Neither waitlist. Nor pre-spend. Just pure, undiluted demand is doing the talking.
This wasn’t a fluke. Last year, Jane Birkin’s original prototype — scuffed, stickered, and visibly used — had sold at Sotheby’s Paris in July 2025 for €8.6 million ($10.1 million), becoming the most expensive handbag ever sold at auction. A private Japanese collector outbid eight rivals in a room that gasped when bidding opened at €1 million.
The lesson from both sales is the same: a Hermès Birkin is not just a bag. In the right configuration, it is a financial asset that outperforms gold, rivals the S&P 500, and holds its value through recessions, pandemics, and even government seizures. This guide breaks down exactly why — and what it means for buyers, sellers, and collectors in 2025–2026.
Why Hermès Bags Hold Their Value — The Fundamentals
Every asset class has its supply-demand story. The Birkin is unusually compelling because Hermès controls both sides of the equation with extraordinary discipline.
Controlled Scarcity
Hermès deliberately limits production. Every Birkin and Kelly is handcrafted by a single artisan in one of the brand’s French ateliers, taking 18–25 hours per bag. Hermès has never advertised the Birkin, never discounted it, and has never allowed third-party retail. Beyond bags, the brand also limits the number of quota bags a single client may purchase per year. The result is a permanent gap between global demand and available supply — and in economics, that gap is where value lives.
Annual Price Increases That Raise the Resale Floor
Hermès increases retail prices almost every year — approximately 7% in January 2025, another 5–10% in mid-2025, and a further 6–7% in early 2026. A Birkin 25 in Togo leather, which retailed for $10,400 in 2023, now starts at $13,500 in 2026. Every retail price hike automatically raises the resale floor, making earlier purchases relatively more valuable.
Global Demand Has Never Been Stronger
Buyers across the U.S., Europe, the Middle East, and Asia are all competing for the same limited supply. Sotheby’s reported approximately 44% growth in Hermès bag sales in 2025 compared with 2024, and sales are up 55% since 2023. Average resale prices at Sotheby’s rose approximately 35% in 2025 alone. Since 2021, Sotheby’s has sold nearly $160 million worth of Birkin and Kelly bags, cementing their status as the most-traded handbags in the world. This is not niche collecting. It is a global secondary market with institutional momentum.
The Numbers: How Birkins Compare as an Investment
Investment comparisons for luxury goods require nuance — not every Birkin doubles in value, and not every seller profits. But the data makes a credible case:
- According to a widely cited Baghunter study, Hermès Birkin bags appreciated at an average annual rate of 14.2% between 1980 and 2015 — outperforming the S&P 500’s real return of 8.65% and gold’s average of -1.5% over the same period.
- Rebag’s 2025 Clair Report found that Hermès achieved an average value retention of 138% — the highest of any luxury brand and a 38% increase from 2024. Eight Hermès models sold above retail throughout 2025, led by the Kelly Mini II at 282% over retail and the Sellier Birkin at 183% over retail.
- The Mini Kelly II returned more than 300% from 2022 through 2025, rising from $9,200 to $36,980, according to FashioNica data cited by Business Insider — versus a 43% S&P 500 return in the same period.
- Resale premiums have compressed from their 2022 pandemic peak of 2.2× retail to around 1.4–2× retail in late 2025 — a healthy correction, not a collapse.
The honest summary: Birkins are not a substitute for a diversified portfolio. But among tangible, wearable assets, they have a track record that few collectibles can match.
The 6 Hermès Bags With the Best Resale Value — Ranked
Not all Hermès bags perform equally on the secondary market. Here is how the major models rank in 2025–2026, from entry-level to the undisputed champion:
#6 — Hermès Herbag | Average Resale Value: ~60–75%
The Herbag serves as the accessible entry point into Hermès bag ownership — typically combining canvas and leather in a functional, interchangeable design. While it does not break records like the Birkin or Kelly, it maintains solid secondary-market demand. It typically retains 60–75% of its original price, making it one of the strongest value-retention pieces among entry-level luxury bags. Its approachable price point and Hermès craftsmanship make it a reliable gateway purchase.
Authentication tip: The Herbag’s canvas should show clean, even stitching with no fraying. The leather trim and hardware should bear the correct Hermès markings. The interchangeable pouch system should fit cleanly and securely.
#5 — Hermès Picotin | Average Resale Value: ~72%
Introduced in 2002 and inspired by horse feed bags and troughs, the Picotin reflects Hermès’ deep equestrian heritage. With its casual bucket-bag silhouette and understated padlock, it is the ideal entry point for buyers who appreciate Hermès craftsmanship without needing the “Holy Trinity” of Birkin, Kelly, and Constance. With Hermès constantly rotating colors and seasonal updates, Picotins are reliably in demand on the secondary market regardless of color or size.
Authentication tip:
Check the edge paint on the handles and top of the bag — it should be perfectly straight and clean. The feet on an authentic Picotin should never detach entirely; they may spin, but they remain attached.
#4 — Hermès Evelyne & Lindy | Average Resale Value: ~70–80%
Neither the Evelyne nor the Lindy breaks records like the Birkin or Kelly. Still, both are incredibly popular for daily wear and consistently retain 70–80% of their value, well above that of almost any other luxury brand.
The Evelyne, designed in 1978 by Evelyne Bertrand, was created to hold horse-grooming tools and today is one of the most versatile and accessible Hermès crossbody styles. The mini TPM 16 attracts above-average resale prices. The Lindy Mini similarly punches above its weight class, with demand growing season by season. Popular colors for both include oranges, yellows, greens, all neutrals, and increasingly soft pinks and pastels.
Current 2026 resale benchmarks:
- Evelyne TPM 16: Retail ~$2,350. Resale $3,500–$4,600
- Lindy Mini: Retail ~$7,800. Resale $9,800–$12,500
Evelyne authentication tip: The snap closure varies by production year — some are blank, some feature four letters on the female component, others read SBH. The male component should always be attached to the bag. Any snap that reads a brand name or shows six stars is a sign of inauthenticity.
#3 — Hermès Birkin | Average Resale Value: ~80% standard; up to 300%+ for rare configurations
The world’s most iconic handbag — and the one most associated with investment-grade resale. The Birkin’s average resale value sits at approximately 80%, but this figure significantly understates what top configurations achieve. The Birkin 25 now consistently sells at over 2× retail, with rarer colorways and leathers doubling that. Birkin 25s accounted for only 12% of Birkins sold in 2022, versus 50% for Birkin 35s — that scarcity drives persistent price pressure.
For exotic leathers, the Birkin enters an entirely different asset category. A Himalaya Crocodile Birkin with 18k gold diamond hardware sold for over €500,000; a white crocodile-skin rhinestone-embellished Birkin 25 sold at government auction in Vietnam in May 2026 for $440,144 — nearly 35 times its standard retail price. (BBC News)
Current 2026 resale benchmarks:
- Birkin 25 Togo (Pristine): $28,000–$32,000 (vs. retail $13,500)
- Birkin 30 Togo (Pristine): $24,000–$30,000 (vs. retail $14,900)
- Birkin Sellier: Commands 15–30% premium over Retourne; sold at 183% over retail in 2025
- Exotic Birkin 25 (Crocodile, Alligator, Ostrich): $35,000–$480,000+
Authentication tip: Authentic Birkins feature two signature stamps — a heat stamp in metallic foil matching the hardware, and a blind stamp indicating the production year and artisan. The blind stamp should be barely visible. A large or deeply embossed blind stamp is a common indicator of counterfeiting.
#2 — Hermès Kelly | Average Resale Value: ~92%
The Kelly’s legacy is inseparable from Grace Kelly, who famously used hers to shield her pregnancy from paparazzi in the 1950s. Beyond its storied history, the bag’s elegant structure, versatile shoulder strap, and timeless silhouette make it a perennial favorite among collectors. The Kelly has been rising in market standing — a Mini Kelly 20 in pristine condition can now sell for more than a Birkin 30, even though the Birkin 30 costs more at retail.
The Kelly Pochette and Mini Kelly 20 are the standout models right now, driven by the global trend toward mini styles. Exotic versions are extraordinarily rare and command exceptional premiums. The Kelly Sellier construction — with its crisp, architectural edges — trades at 15–30% above Retourne equivalents and is particularly strong in Epsom or Chevre leather.
Current 2026 resale benchmarks:
- Mini Kelly II 20 (Pristine): $28,000–$36,000+ (vs. retail ~$10,000) — frequently sells for 280%+ of original retail
- Kelly 25 Sellier (Pristine): $26,000–$32,000 (vs. retail $12,600)
- Kelly 28 Sellier (Pristine): $24,000–$30,000 — strong sustained demand
- Kelly 32: Growing collector interest; sees heavy demand, especially in Sellier construction and neutral colors
Authentication tip:
#1 — Hermès Constance | Average Resale Value: ~105%
The Constance is the only Hermès bag that, on average across all configurations, sells for more than its original retail price on the secondary market — placing it in a rare category of assets that appreciate reliably even in standard, non-exotic configurations. It is the quiet champion of the Hermès resale world, often overshadowed by the Birkin’s fame yet consistently outperforming it in value retention.
The first Hermès bag to feature the iconic, bold H-logo clasp, the Constance combines sleek, rounded edges with the practicality of a crossbody strap. Completing Hermès’ “Holy Trinity” alongside the Birkin and Kelly, it is a favorite among handbag connoisseurs who appreciate hands-free elegance. The Micro Constance 14 and Mini 18 are the most coveted models — even rarer than the Mini Kelly at the boutique level, driving high demand across all colors and leathers.
Current 2026 resale benchmarks:
- Constance 18 Epsom (Pristine): $11,000–$14,000 (vs. retail ~$9,500)
- Micro Constance 14: Commands significant premiums due to extreme scarcity
Authentication tip:
The 6 Value Multipliers: What Makes One Bag Worth Far More Than Another
Two Birkin 25s can sit side by side and differ in resale value by $20,000. Here is what drives that gap:
1. Size — Smaller Is More Valuable
The resale market inverts retail logic: while Hermès prices increase with size, the secondary market prizes smaller models. The Birkin 25 and Mini Kelly 20 II are consistently the top performers. Birkin 30s and 35s can trade at 30–50% less than their smaller counterparts when all other factors are equal. Compact designs suit modern lifestyles and are harder to find at retail — scarcity drives premium pricing.
2. Construction — Sellier Commands a Premium
The construction method — Sellier or Retourne — is a critical but often overlooked value driver. Sellier bags, identified by their crisp edges and rigid silhouette, are more labor-intensive and command 15–30% premiums over Retourne equivalents. The Birkin Sellier, introduced in 2010 with limited production, sold at 183% over retail in 2025. The Kelly Sellier is the most coveted Kelly format globally. Retourne remains a classic, but the market favors Sellier’s architectural precision.
3. Leather Type — Togo and Epsom Lead
- Togo & Clemence: The most popular for Birkin bags. Soft yet structured grain, lightweight, excellent durability, and scratch resistance.
- Epsom: The leading choice for Kelly Sellier and Mini Kelly. Embossed texture holds shape impeccably and resists scratches.
- Chevre: Fine goatskin used for smaller bags and limited editions, and prized for its sheen and strength.
- Exotic leathers (Crocodile, Alligator, Ostrich, Lizard): A separate investment tier entirely. Ostrich Birkins trade at $20,000–$35,000; Shiny Niloticus crocodile from $35,000–$70,000+. The Himalayan crocodile (Niloticus crocodile), in a gradient from smoky grey to white, is the apex predator. Lizards are considered the most luxurious by many collectors; the Porosus and Niloticus crocodiles each command their own devoted followings.
- Box Calf & Barenia: Vintage leathers with niche connoisseur followings. Collector premiums apply to well-preserved older pieces, though they appeal less to the broader resale market than Togo and Epsom.
4. Color — Neutrals and Soft Pastels Lead; Vivid Brights Lag
Color is one of the most defining factors in resale liquidity and price:
- Top-performing neutrals:
Hermes Leather Orange Etoupe Bag Noir (Black), Gold, Etoupe, Craie, Etain, Nata — versatile, seasonless, universally desired, and the most liquid on any resale platform.
- High collector demand — soft pastels:
Hermes Evelyne 16 Amazone Purple Leather Bag in Pristine Condition Rose Sakura, 5P Bubblegum Pink, Vert Criquet, purple — increasingly outperforming vivid colors and regularly setting records at Sotheby’s. They balance rarity with wearability. Demand for soft pinks and pastels is also rising on the accessible end of the market, with the Evelyne in particular attracting new pastel buyers.
- Vivid trend colors — higher risk: Reds, oranges, yellows, and vivid greens can spike short-term but have more limited audiences, slower resale turnover, and greater long-term price volatility. Even bold HSS custom orders don’t always command premiums unless paired with a neutral tone.
5. Hardware
- Gold Hardware (GHW): The most demanded hardware option. Particularly strong paired with Gold or Etoupe leather — a classic combination that consistently outperforms at auction.
- Palladium Hardware (PHW): A close second; preferred by buyers who favor a contemporary aesthetic.
- Rose Gold & Brushed Gold: Limited edition finishes that attract collector premiums.
- Diamond Hardware: Maison-set diamonds transform a bag into jewelry-grade collectible territory, as the Vietnam auction proved.
6. Condition, Age & Provenance
Condition and date stamp together are decisive. Bags produced from 2020 onward command premiums over older equivalents in the same condition — they reflect current craftsmanship standards and limited boutique availability.
- Pristine / store-fresh: Can command up to 3× retail. The original box, dust bag, lock, keys, clochette, and receipt further elevate value by 5–15%.
- Visible wear: Scuffed corners, tarnished hardware, handle creasing — reduces value by 30–40% or more.
- Provenance: The 2025 Jane Birkin sales illustrated the provenance effect at its most extreme — a worn, stickered bag sold for $10.1 million because of who owned it. Limited editions, Special Orders (HSS), and discontinued leathers attract collector premiums beyond standard pricing.
The Auction Record Timeline: A Market in Motion
The auction market tells the clearest story of Birkin’s investment trajectory — including one “unsold” result that is as instructive as the records:
| Date | Bag | Auction House | Price | Significance |
| 2021 | White Himalaya Niloticus Crocodile Diamond Kelly 28 | Christie’s, Hong Kong | $513,040 | World record (pre-2025) |
| Jul 2021 | Himalaya Birkin 30, Matte Niloticus Crocodile, PHW | Sotheby’s, Hong Kong | $226,180 | Record — Himalaya Birkin 30 |
| Sep 2022 | Himalayan Kelly 25 | Sotheby’s, Paris | $345,000+ | European auction record at the time |
| Jul 10, 2025 | Original Birkin (1984 prototype) — Jane Birkin’s own | Sotheby’s, Paris | $10.1M (€8.6M) | All-time world record — any handbag |
| Dec 5, 2025 | Birkin 40, Black Box Calf — “Birkin Voyageur”, Jane Birkin’s own | Sotheby’s, Abu Dhabi | $2.86M | Sold in 11 minutes to phone bidder |
| Dec 15, 2025 | Birkin 35, Black Box Calf — gifted to photographer Gabrielle Crawford | Hôtel Drouot, Paris | Unsold | No bids — provenance alone does not guarantee results |
| May 22, 2026 | Birkin 25, White crocodile-skin, rhinestone-embellished — seized from Truong My Lan | Ho Chi Minh City Auction Center, Vietnam | $440,144 | ~7× starting bid; ~35× retail; government seizure |
| May 22, 2026 | Birkin 30, White crocodile-skin — seized from Truong My Lan | Ho Chi Minh City Auction Center, Vietnam | $94,858 | Both bags sold within 30 minutes |
The Drouot “unsold” result is as instructive as the records. That Birkin 35 had genuine Jane Birkin provenance, a compelling backstory, and a low estimate — yet attracted zero bids. Timing, condition, presentation, and the right platform all matter. Provenance is an amplifier, not a guarantee.
The Risks: What Can Hurt Your Hermès Resale Value
Condition Damage
Scratches, color transfer on light leathers, tarnished hardware, and misshapen bags all significantly reduce resale value. Unlike stocks, a Birkin degrades physically. Proper storage is not optional for investment-grade pieces.
Wrong Color or Leather for the Market
Trend-driven or vivid colors can be difficult to move at premium prices. Exotic leather markets are thinner — fewer buyers means more price volatility and longer selling timelines.
Platform Risk
Selling through a lower-tier resale platform or without authentication documentation can significantly reduce your earnings. Authenticated platforms with condition guarantees — Sotheby’s, The Luxury Closet, The RealReal, Christie’s — command better prices because buyers pay for certainty.
Market Cycles
Resale premiums compressed from 2.2× retail in 2022 to around 1.4× in late 2025. The structural investment thesis remains intact, but anyone who bought at the 2022 peak prices and sold in 2024 may have seen flat or slightly negative returns. Timing matters.
New Factory Supply
Hermès has announced four new production facilities to meet rising demand. While the brand has historically managed supply with extreme discipline, any sustained increase in production could gradually compress resale premiums over the medium term. Worth monitoring.
How to Protect and Maximize Your Hermès Resale Value
- Store it correctly: Stuffed to maintain shape, in its dustbag, in a cool, dry space away from direct light. Avoid plastic bags — leather needs to breathe.
- Keep everything: the original box, dustbag, lock, keys, clochette, and any receipts or purchase documentation. Missing accessories reduce value by 5–15%.
- Use Hermès Spa services: Hermès offers leather cleaning and restoration (“Spa”) services through its boutiques. A professionally restored bag recovers significant resale value and commands buyer confidence.
- Choose classic over trendy: Noir, Gold, and Etoupe in Togo or Epsom leather with Gold Hardware — ideally in Sellier construction — are the most liquid, consistently demanded configurations.
- Favor newer date stamps: Bags produced from 2020 onward command premiums over older equivalents in the same condition.
- Time your sale strategically: The resale market responds to Hermès retail price increases. Selling shortly after a boutique price hike can optimize your return.
- Build relationships: Engage with reputable resellers and collector communities for early access to buyers and real-time market insights.
- Choose the right platform: For rare or high-value pieces, auction houses like Sotheby’s and Christie’s generate competitive bidding. For immediate, authenticated sales, platforms like The Luxury Closet offer speed, reach, and trust.
Hermès vs. Other Luxury Investments
- Hermès vs. Chanel: Chanel’s Classic Flap has also appreciated significantly, but its resale premium-to-retail ratio is generally lower than the Birkin’s and more vulnerable to trend shifts.
- Hermès bags vs. Luxury Watches (Rolex, Patek Philippe): Comparable investment logic — both rely on scarcity and brand prestige. Rolex maintained a 104% retention rate in 2025. Watches offer greater price transparency; Birkins offer greater aesthetic range.
- Hermès bags vs. Art: Art markets are less liquid and more opaque. A Birkin is easier to authenticate, store, and sell quickly through established platforms.
- Hermès bags vs. Gold: Gold averaged -1.5% annually over the Baghunter study period, compared with 14.2% for Birkins. And unlike gold, you can wear it to dinner.
The Bottom Line: Is a Hermès Bag a Good Investment in 2026?
A Hermès Birkin or Kelly is not a guaranteed investment. No bag is. But among wearable assets, few have demonstrated the combination of consistent appreciation, global demand, brand permanence, and cultural resonance that Hermès has sustained for four decades — and continues to demonstrate through auction records, government seizure sales, and six-figure resales on a trusted platform.
The Vietnam auction said it plainly: when a government needs to recover $27 billion in fraud losses and reaches for the most liquid assets it can find, it sells Hermès Birkins. And the room bids — hard.
Whether you are buying your first Birkin or selling a rare Kelly, The Luxury Closet offers the authentication, reach, and trust to ensure you get the value your bag deserves. Explore our curated Hermès collection at theluxurycloset.com.
Looking for guidance on where to buy — retail or resale? Read our full comparison: Hermès Retail vs. Resale: Which One is Right for You?
FAQs: Hermès Resale Value
1. Do Hermès bags increase in value over time?
Yes, consistently. Birkin bags have appreciated at an average annual rate of 14.2% over 35 years, outperforming gold and the S&P 500. Hermès led all luxury brands in 2025 with an average value retention of 138% — a 38% increase from 2024. Value growth is strongest for classic leathers, neutral colors, Sellier construction, and smaller sizes, such as the Birkin 25 and Kelly Mini.
2. Which Hermès bag holds its value best?
The Constance leads all models, with an average resale value of approximately 105% and an average sale price above retail. The Kelly Mini II frequently sells for 280% or more of its original retail price. The Birkin 25 in pristine condition commands massive premiums well above retail. Evelyne and Lindy retain 70–80% of their value, which is strong for everyday bags. The Herbag, as an entry-level model, retains 60–75%. For exotic configurations, the Himalaya Birkin occupies its own stratospheric category, regularly exceeding $300,000–$500,000+ at auction.
3. What color Hermès bag has the best resale value?
Neutrals, Noir (Black), Gold, Etoupe, Craie, Etain, and Nata are the most consistently liquid and reliable performers. Soft pastels like Rose Sakura and 5P Bubblegum Pink are increasingly outperforming vivid colors at Sotheby’s and regularly setting records. Reds, oranges, and vivid greens can generate short-term spikes but carry more long-term resale risk.
4. Does Sellier or Retourne construction affect resale value?
Yes, significantly. Sellier bags command 15–30% premiums over Retourne equivalents. The Birkin Sellier sold at 183% of retail in 2025. The Kelly Sellier in Epsom or Chevre is among the most coveted formats globally. If resale value is a priority, Sellier is the stronger choice.
5. How much does condition affect Hermès resale value?
Enormously. A pristine bag can sell for up to 3× its retail price. Visible wear reduces that by 30% or more. Missing original accessories (dust bag, box, lock, keys) will incur an additional 5–15% charge. Bags with 2020+ date stamps command premiums over older equivalents in the same condition.
6. Are Hermès bags a good investment in 2025–2026?
The structural investment case remains strong — rising retail prices, compressed supply, and growing global demand continue to support the resale market. Sotheby’s reported 44% sales growth and 35% average price growth in 2025. That said, premiums have corrected from 2022 peaks, and new Hermès factories are on the horizon. Classic models in pristine condition, with Sellier construction and neutral colors, continue to offer a compelling risk/reward profile among tangible assets.
7. What was the most expensive Hermès bag ever sold?
Jane Birkin’s original Hermès prototype, custom-made for her in 1984, sold at Sotheby’s Paris on July 10, 2025, for €8.6 million ($10.1 million) — the world record for the most expensive handbag ever sold at auction. The previous record was $513,040 for a White Himalaya Niloticus Crocodile Diamond Kelly 28 at Christie’s Hong Kong in 2021.
8. Where is the best place to sell a Hermès bag?
For rare or exceptional pieces, auction houses such as Sotheby’s and Christie’s generate competitive global bidding. For fast, guaranteed sales with authenticated buyer confidence, platforms like The Luxury Closet, The RealReal, and Vestiaire Collective are trusted choices. The right platform depends on your bag’s value, your timeline, and the quality of your presentation. At The Luxury Closet, you can sell your Hermes bag online for cash.
9. Is the Constance a better investment than the Birkin?
In terms of average resale value retention, yes, the Constance averages approximately 105% retention versus the Birkin’s ~80% average across all configurations. However, the Birkin’s premium configurations (Birkin 25, exotic leathers, Sellier) reach far higher absolute prices. The Constance is the more reliable everyday investment; the Birkin offers the highest ceiling for exceptional pieces.
10. How long does it take to sell a Hermès bag online?
It varies by model and condition, but Birkins and Kellys in classic colors (black, gold, étoupe) in excellent condition typically sell within days on premium platforms due to consistent global demand. More unusual colorways or bags with noticeable wear may take longer. Platforms like The Luxury Closet have an active international buyer base, which shortens time-to-sale considerably compared to selling privately.
11. Will I get more money selling through a resale platform or privately?
Private sales (through Instagram, Facebook groups, or direct buyer networks) can yield slightly higher net returns since there are no platform fees. Still, they come with significant risk: no authentication, no payment protection, and full responsibility for disputes. Consignment fees on resale platforms typically range from 15% to 30% of the final sale price, which is a reasonable trade-off for the authentication guarantee, buyer trust, and speed that established platforms provide. For a first-time seller, a trusted platform is almost always the smarter choice.
12. Does the condition of my bag affect how much I’ll receive?
Yes, significantly. Most platforms grade bags on a scale, pristine/giftable, excellent, good, fair, and price them accordingly. A Birkin 30 in excellent condition might sell for $25,000–$27,000, while the same bag showing visible wear could list for under $14,000. Clean your bag gently before submission, store it in its dust bag, and photograph it in natural light. Avoid attempting DIY repairs; if professional restoration is needed, discuss it with the platform first.
13. Is it safe to sell my Hermès bag online?
Yes, provided you use a reputable, authenticated platform. Avoid direct peer-to-peer sales to unknown buyers, and never ship your bag before payment is confirmed. Established platforms like The Luxury Closet handle the entire transaction, authentication, listing, buyer communication, and payment, so you’re protected at every step. They also carry the liability if a buyer disputes authenticity, which you would bear alone in a private sale. You can sell your Hermes bag online securely at The Luxury Closet.
Sources & References
- Rebag 2025 Clair Report — PR Newswire, December 10, 2025.
- Higher Hermès Bag Prices in 2026: What You Need to Know — Sotheby’s, January 27, 2026.
- Top 5 Things to Consider When Valuing a Birkin Bag or Hermès Kelly Bag — Sotheby’s (Vanessa Wat, Head of Sale, Handbags & Fashion, Hong Kong), October 2025.
- What Influences a Hermès Birkin Bag Price — Sotheby’s, January 28, 2026.
- Complete Guide to Buying and Selling a Birkin — Sotheby’s, January 28, 2026.
- Jane Birkin’s Original Hermès Birkin Bag Shatters Auction Records at $10.1 Million — $10.1M / €8.6M world record, July 10, 2025. Sotheby’s.
- Hermès Birkin and Kelly Bags Lead Sotheby’s List of Most Expensive Handbags Sold at Auction — Sotheby’s.
- Vietnam Sells Disgraced Tycoon’s Hermès Bags to Recoup $27 Billion in Damages — Vietnam government auction May 22, 2026: $440,144 + $94,858, Truong My Lan conviction. South China Morning Post, May 22, 2026.
- Vietnam Sells Convicted Mogul’s Hermès Bags in Recovery Push — Vietnam auction corroboration, 14.21 billion dong total. Bloomberg, May 21, 2026.
- Two Hermès Handbags Confiscated from Truong My Lan Up for Auction — Pre-auction starting prices, bag descriptions, and size details. VnExpress International, May 10, 2026.
- Hermès Dominates: Inside Rebag’s 2025 Resale Report — WWD (Women’s Wear Daily), December 10, 2025.
- Top 5 Hermès Bags with the Best Resale Value — Model-by-model resale percentages: Constance 105%, Kelly 92%, Birkin 80%, Evelyne 78%, Picotin 72%; authentication tips. LovedBags.
- Hermès Resale Value Comparison: A Comprehensive Guide — Resale value drivers, model comparisons, 90%–150%+ retention range. SecondSense.
- Mini Kelly II Returns 300%: Hermès Resale Outperforms S&P 500 — Mini Kelly II $9,200 → $36,980 (300% return vs. S&P 500 43%), 2022–2025. Business Insider, citing FashioNica data, 2025.
- Baghunter Investment Study: Hermès Birkin 1980–2015 — 14.2% average annual appreciation vs S&P 500 (8.65%) and gold (-1.5%). Baghunter.