AI-powered eBay listing tool for Adidas shoes, Yeezy, Ultraboost & sportswear
Upload photos of your Adidas shoes, clothing, or accessories and RGLister's AI reads the model name, colorway, and size from the tongue label or hang tag. For Yeezy Boost 350 V2 in Zebra, RGLister confirms the colorway from the shoe pattern and reads the style code from the box label — Yeezy colorway accuracy is critical since some versions sell for 2-3x what others fetch. For Adidas Ultraboost, it differentiates between the 1.0 Retro, 22, 23, and current generation, which have different resale values. For vintage Adidas sportswear, it identifies era from design details and label style.
All eBay item specifics are filled automatically — model name, colorway, size, style code, material, and condition. No manual Adidas product catalog lookups needed.
Adidas Yeezy Boost 350 V2 remains one of the highest-value Adidas products on eBay — Zebra colorway sells $200-$350, Natural sells $150-$250, and rarer colorways like Static (Non-Reflective) sell $300-$500. Adidas Samba OG has surged in popularity and sells $80-$160 used. The Adidas Gazelle sells $60-$120 and the Forum Low sells $60-$120. Ultraboost 1.0 Retro (the original 2016 silhouette) sells $100-$180 in popular colorways.
Vintage Adidas is a strong category — Franz Beckenbauer tracksuits from the 1970s-80s sell $80-$250, vintage Adidas shell toe track jackets sell $50-$150, and original 1980s Superstar shoes in good condition sell $100-$300. Adidas x Pharrell, Adidas x Gucci, and other collaboration pieces command significant premiums. Adidas Stan Smith Lux and premium materials versions sell $80-$150 while standard Stan Smiths sell $40-$80.
Adidas is one of the most searched brands on eBay with hundreds of active shoe models and thousands of colorways. The gap between a correct and incorrect Adidas listing can be $50-$200 in sale price — especially for Yeezy where colorway determines nearly everything. RGLister reads the tongue tag, box label, and shoe design to confirm the exact model and colorway, eliminating the manual StockX or Adidas website lookup that slows down high-volume sneaker resellers.
Always photograph the tongue tag — it contains the style code that uniquely identifies the model and colorway. For Yeezy, photograph the box label with the full style code (e.g., FW5317) since buyers verify authenticity against databases. Photograph both the heel and the toe box in good lighting to show sole condition — yellowing and sole separation are the most common issues on older Adidas. For vintage Adidas, photograph the inner country-of-manufacture label — "Made in France" or "Made in West Germany" pieces are more desirable to collectors. Include original box when available since Adidas shoes with original box sell $20-$40 more, especially for Yeezy and limited editions. For Ultraboost, photograph the boost sole from the side — cracked or compressed boost significantly reduces value and must be disclosed.
List your Adidas inventory faster with AI
Try RGLister FreeRGLister is not affiliated with Adidas. Adidas is a trademark of adidas AG.