AI-powered eBay listing tool for Bose headphones, speakers & audio equipment
Upload photos of your Bose headphones, speaker, or home audio equipment and RGLister's AI reads the model name from the product label and identifies the generation. For Bose QuietComfort, it differentiates between the QC35, QC35 II, QC45, and QC Ultra — each with different resale values ($80 to $280 range). For the Bose 700 vs QC45 vs QC Ultra, it reads the physical design and label since these models have overlapping price ranges but different buyer audiences. For SoundLink speakers, it identifies the SoundLink Mini, Flex, Revolve, and Revolve+ from form factor and product markings. For home audio, it reads the model number from the back panel label.
All eBay item specifics are filled automatically — model name, product type, connectivity, color, noise cancellation features, and included accessories. No manual Bose product catalog lookups needed.
Bose QuietComfort Ultra headphones (the current flagship) sell $200-$280 used. Bose 700 headphones sell $150-$220 — strong sustained demand years after release. Bose QC45 sells $150-$200. Bose QuietComfort Earbuds II sells $120-$180. Bose SoundLink Flex portable speaker (waterproof, floatable) sells $80-$120 used and is a fast-moving item. Bose SoundLink Revolve+ (360-degree) sells $100-$160.
Vintage Bose is a significant collector and audiophile market. Bose 901 Series VI speakers (the "direct/reflecting" speaker system) sell $200-$500 per pair in good condition — audiophiles specifically seek these out. Bose Wave Music System sells $80-$180. Bose Lifestyle home theater systems sell $200-$600 depending on configuration. Original Bose SoundDock (for older iPods and iPhones) sells $30-$80. Bose Acoustic Wave systems sell $80-$200 to vintage hi-fi collectors.
Bose spans portable audio, home audio, and professional audio with dozens of product lines across multiple decades. The QC35, QC35 II, and QC45 look nearly identical in photos but have $30-$50 price differences. The SoundLink Mini I and SoundLink Mini II have the same shape but different charging connectors and prices. Getting these details wrong leads to return disputes. RGLister reads the model number and product label to confirm the exact version before listing, preventing the misidentification that costs resellers time and money on returns.
For Bose headphones, photograph the model name printed inside the earcup — it's the authoritative source. Test ANC (active noise cancellation) before listing since non-functional ANC on a premium Bose headphone is a material defect that requires disclosure and a significant price reduction. For SoundLink speakers, photograph the charging port — Bose used proprietary charging ports on older models that are harder to find charging cables for, which affects value. For vintage Bose 901 speakers, photograph the serial number tag on the back and test both speakers to confirm they work equally — imbalanced pairs are common and reduce value. For Bose home theater systems, note all included components since missing pieces significantly reduce value. Include the original remote for all home audio equipment — Bose remotes are not universal and buyers need them. Original box adds $15-$20 to most Bose products, especially headphones.
List your Bose audio gear faster with AI
Try RGLister FreeRGLister is not affiliated with Bose Corporation. Bose and QuietComfort are registered trademarks of Bose Corporation.