By Quentin Fottrell
As soon as Apple unveiled the iPad mini Tuesday, the first thing many consumers did was sell their old iPads.
Two major resale sites reported eye-popping surges in business in the run-up to the iPad Mini launch. Some 140,000 devices were put up for sale on Gazelle.com Tuesday â" a 700% spike from the day before, says Anthony Scarsella, chief gadget officer at the site. Half of that increase occurred in the hours just before the announcement, he says â" and the most common model put up for sale was the ; ânew iPadâ released just six months ago. Another resale site, NextWorth.com, reported that trade-ins for iPads rose over 1,000% on Tuesday. (Nextworth declined to release actual numbers.) Gazelle and Nextworth are two of the biggest reselling portals, but industry experts say they represent only a small percentage of total trade-in traffic.
The $ 329 iPad Mini, which will hit shelves on November 2 in time for the holiday shopping season, is primarily aimed at competition from smaller, less expensive tablets such as Amazonâs Kindle Fire HD and Googleâs Nexus 7, both of which cost $ 199. But, given the price difference between the mini and other 7-inch tablets and the spate of iPad trade-ins over the last 24 hours, experts say the 7.9-inch Miniâs big gest competitor may be the larger 9.7-inch iPad.
While some people are trading in first and second generation iPads, both Nextworth and Gazelle say that nearly 70% of their resellers are dumping the iPad 3. In fact, the third generation iPad 32-gigabyte with Wi-Fi is the most popular device being traded in, according to Gazelle.com. Why? âConsumers can fetch up to $ 495 for an old iPad,â Scarsella says. In other words, they can swap the used tablet for the mini and walk away with 111;ver $ 160.
Of course, some diehard fans could also be upgrading to the fourth-generation iPad because it has a processor with twice the speed, says e-commerce consultant Bryan Eisenberg. But others say thatâs less likely given that itâs coming out just seven months after the third-generation model was announced. And as MarketWatch reported, 35% of iPad owners surveyed by deal aggregator TechBargains.com say theyâd trade in their old model for a mini. The shrunken tablet is over 50% lighter than the iPad, Apple says, and nearly a quarter thinner.