A used Xbox One usually sells for about $60 to $180, with the final price shaped by model, storage, condition, controller count, and included games.
Selling an Xbox One is less about finding one magic number and more about knowing what buyers still pay for each version. The old base model sits at the low end. The Xbox One S still draws decent interest. The Xbox One X holds up best because it offers more power and still feels fine for plenty of players.
If you want a fair asking price, start with the model, then adjust for storage, working condition, accessories, and whether you’re selling the console alone or as a full bundle. That’s what moves a listing from ignored to sold.
How Much Can You Sell An Xbox One For In Today’s Used Market?
Most sellers land in a simple range. A plain console-only unit with wear and no extras goes lower. A clean system with one good controller, cables, and a few worthwhile games can land much better. A special edition or a well-kept Xbox One X can still pull solid money.
There’s also a gap between what buyers pay in person and what trade-in services pay. Local cash sales often bring more. Trade-in sites are easier, but the offer is usually lighter because the buyer needs room for refurbishment, fees, and resale margin.
Typical Xbox One resale range by model
Use these as realistic asking ranges, not guaranteed sale prices. Your exact result can swing fast based on photos, timing, and whether your listing includes the right extras.
- Original Xbox One 500GB: about $60 to $100
- Xbox One S 500GB: about $80 to $120
- Xbox One S 1TB: about $100 to $145
- Xbox One S All-Digital: about $70 to $115
- Xbox One X 1TB: about $130 to $180
That spread exists for a reason. The Xbox One X still has the strongest pull in the lineup, while the first Xbox One is now mostly a budget buy. The Xbox One S stays in the middle because it remains a familiar, easy entry point for casual players and second-room setups.
Microsoft still shows broad hardware and game continuity across the Xbox family, which helps older systems keep some resale life. Xbox notes that many Xbox games and accessories remain compatible across generations on its game compatibility page and accessory pages.
What actually changes your sale price
Small details can shift your sale price by $20, $30, or more. Buyers scan listings fast. They want to know if the console works, whether it comes with the power cable and HDMI cable, and if the controller is clean, original, and free from stick drift.
Condition matters more than sellers think
A scratched shell is not a deal-breaker. Heavy grime, loud fan noise, disc read trouble, random shutdowns, and a weak controller are. Buyers pay up for a system that looks cared for and works on the first try.
Before listing, wipe the console, clean the vents, remove old stickers, and test Wi-Fi, disc loading, controller sync, and USB ports. That half hour can pay for itself.
Storage and model still shape demand
Storage matters, but model matters more. A 1TB Xbox One S usually beats a 500GB unit. Still, an Xbox One X often sells better than both because buyers know it is the stronger machine.
The all-digital Xbox One S can be a tougher sell to buyers who still use discs. Microsoft states on the Xbox One S product page that the All-Digital Edition does not play physical discs, so that limitation is worth stating clearly in your listing.
Controllers, games, and extras can lift the total
One official controller in clean shape adds value. A second controller can help more than an extra sports title ever will. Good extras include a headset, rechargeable battery pack, or a useful game bundle. Low-value shovelware does little.
If you have a pile of games, don’t assume they all help. Bundle the ones that still sell well. Then price the weak titles separately or leave them out.
| Factor | What buyers see | Likely price effect |
|---|---|---|
| Original Xbox One vs S vs X | Newer or stronger models feel safer to buy | Big jump from base model to One X |
| 500GB vs 1TB | More storage means less hassle on day one | Usually adds a modest premium |
| Console-only listing | Buyer must source missing parts | Drops interest and price |
| Official controller included | Ready to play right away | Often adds clear value |
| Extra controller | Better for families and local multiplayer | Can raise total faster than most games |
| Visible wear or dirt | Suggests poor care | Pushes offers down |
| Disc drive or sync issues | Higher risk purchase | Cuts value hard |
| Popular games in bundle | Buyer sees instant play value | Helps if titles still have demand |
| Original box and inserts | Cleaner resale feel | Small to medium boost |
Where to sell your Xbox One
You have three common paths: local sale, online marketplace, or trade-in service. Each one changes how much money you keep and how much hassle you take on.
Local sale
This is often the best route for top dollar. There are no shipping costs, no platform cuts, and buyers can see the console working. The catch is time. You may deal with no-shows, lowball messages, and awkward meetup plans.
Online marketplace
This works well if your local market is thin. You can also reach collectors looking for a certain edition. But shipping, payment fees, and return risk eat into the final amount, so your sale price can look better than your net result.
Trade-in service
This is the easy path. It is also the lowest-paying path in many cases. Trade-in works best when you want the console gone fast and care more about speed than squeezing out every last dollar.
If your sale pitch needs a stronger hook, mention practical benefits buyers still care about. Xbox says many Xbox One accessories still work across newer hardware on its accessory compatibility page, which helps older gear feel less dead-end than buyers may assume.
Best asking price by selling scenario
Price too high and your listing sits. Price too low and you leave money on the table. A better move is to set an asking price with room for a little negotiation.
Use this pricing approach
- Start at the upper end of the model range if the console is clean and fully working.
- Trim the price if the controller is worn, missing, or third-party.
- Add value for a second controller, strong game bundle, or original box.
- Cut the price fast for disc drive trouble, overheating, or power issues.
- Leave a small margin for bargaining if you’re selling locally.
| Selling setup | Smart asking range | What usually happens |
|---|---|---|
| Base Xbox One, console only | $60 to $85 | Good for a fast local sale |
| Base Xbox One with controller and cables | $80 to $100 | Better buyer response |
| Xbox One S with one controller | $95 to $130 | Strong middle-market listing |
| Xbox One S bundle with games | $120 to $150 | Works best if games still hold demand |
| Xbox One X with one controller | $145 to $180 | Usually the easiest premium sale |
| Any model with faults | $25 to $70 | Parts or repair buyers only |
How to get more money without dragging out the sale
A better listing beats a longer listing. Take clear photos in daylight. Show the console powered on. Include a shot of the storage screen, the controller, and all included cables. Buyers trust what they can see.
Write a plain description with the model, storage size, condition, what is included, and any flaws. If the controller has drift, say it. If the disc drive works, say you tested it. Clear honesty cuts wasted messages and weak offers.
Simple listing formula
- Model and storage in the title
- “Tested and working” only if you actually tested it
- List every included item
- State any flaw in one clean sentence
- Use a price with a little room to negotiate
When selling may not be worth it
Sometimes the better move is keeping it. If your Xbox One still works and the local offers are weak, it can still serve as a second-room console, media box, or backup machine. That’s even more true if you already own digital games tied to your account.
Sell it when the console is clean, complete, and easy to ship or hand over. Keep it when the expected sale price feels too low for the effort, or when your bundle has more use value than resale value.
References & Sources
- Xbox Support.“What games are compatible with my Xbox console?”Supports the point that many Xbox games remain playable across Xbox hardware generations.
- Xbox.“Xbox One S.”Supports the note that the Xbox One S All-Digital Edition does not play physical discs.
- Xbox Support.“Which accessories are compatible with Xbox Series X|S?”Supports the point that many Xbox One accessories still work with newer Xbox hardware.
