Monitor: what it sells for at government auction
The median monitor lot sold for $20 across 403 completed United States government auctions in the last 12 months. Most close between $2 and $72.
Median sale
$20
Typical range
$2–$72
Completed lots
403
See live monitor auctions by ZIP & distance
Filter by price, location, and ending time in the live feed
Median sale price by month
2026-06
$14
2026-05
$20
Recent sold monitor examples
- Arzopa Portable Monitor (Anchorage, AK)$32Sold Jun 20, 2026 · AK
- Dual Monitor Arm Mounts$300Sold Jun 19, 2026 · IL
- KIOSK MONITOR$10Sold Jun 19, 2026 · NM
- COMPUTERS, PRINTERS and MONITOR STAND$52Sold Jun 19, 2026 · MO
- PHILIPS SURESIGN VITAL SIGN VS4 MONITOR$100Sold Jun 18, 2026 · CA
- Dual Monitor Stand with 2 Asus Monitors$30Sold Jun 17, 2026 · OR
Monitor sold prices by state
Other electronics sold prices
Frequently asked questions
- How much does a surplus monitor sell for at government auction?
- Across 403 completed United States government auctions in the last 12 months, the median monitor sold for $20, with most closing between $2 and $72. Final prices vary with year, condition, mileage, and location.
- Where can I buy a surplus monitor?
- Government agencies sell surplus monitor through official platforms like GSA Auctions, GovDeals, and Public Surplus. GovAuctions aggregates live monitor listings into one free, searchable feed — no bid packs or credits required.
- Are these sold prices before or after fees?
- These are realised final winning bids, excluding buyer's premium and taxes. Budget for an additional buyer's premium (often around 10%), applicable taxes, and transport when estimating your all-in cost.
Related
Methodology: median final winning bid on monitor lots that closed on official United States government auction platforms over the trailing 365 days, matched by title. Realised sale prices, excluding buyer's premium. No-bid lots excluded. Updated daily.