Sell on SMProud
Sell your Facebook Page with linked-asset transparency
Buyers want to know what comes with the Page: Ad Account history, Pixel data, Custom Audiences, Marketplace access. Document the asset stack honestly and you price at the upper end of the band.
Reviewed by SMProud Marketplace Operations, Marketplace Operations. Last updated 2026-05-08.
How selling through SMProud works
Préparer la preuve d'annonce
Prepare public profile links, analytics screenshots, audience details, niche notes, monetization context, recovery-access expectations, and transfer timing.
Soumettre le compte
Create a listing that explains what the buyer receives, what is seller-stated, what proof is available, and which platform-specific transfer steps are needed.
Utiliser le séquestre
Keep payment inside escrow while you complete the agreed handover, answer buyer questions, and document access changes.
Finaliser le transfert
Confirm the buyer has the agreed control, preserve handover evidence, and close the sale after the transfer conditions are satisfied.
Why sell Facebook pages with SMProud
SMProud is built for buyers who compare audience quality, niche value, seller proof, escrow readiness, and transfer expectations before they negotiate. A strong listing gives them the data they need without pushing the conversation into private messages.
What Facebook page details buyers expect
For Facebook, buyers care about escrow and buyer protection, page quality verification, admin transfer control, platform trust history, inventory transparency. Include audience, niche, country, monetization notes, account history, public profile links, and handover expectations wherever they apply.
Pricing should match the proof
A higher asking price needs support: audience quality, revenue context, account age, policy history, niche demand, country mix, and a handover route the buyer can understand. Escrow structures the payment, while the listing proof supports the valuation.
Sell
Sell by platform
Choose the platform-specific sell page so your copy, proof, and transfer notes match how buyers evaluate that asset.
Sell YouTube Channel
Prepare subscriber, niche, watch-history, monetization, ownership, and Brand Account handover details buyers need before escrow.
Sell TikTok Account
List follower quality, recent activity, niche, feature access, location context, and transfer expectations for TikTok buyers.
Sell Instagram Account
Show account age, niche, audience quality, engagement pattern, recovery context, and seller proof before buyers compare price.
Sell Facebook Page
Prepare Page admin access, Page quality, monetization notes, country relevance, and transfer expectations before listing supply.
Sell X (Twitter) Account
Explain audience credibility, handle value, impressions, account age, monetization context, and recovery-control details for X buyers.
Sell Telegram Channel
Document member quality, ownership control, posting cadence, niche fit, admin transfer, and 2FA timing for Telegram channel buyers.
Marketplace transaction FAQs
What can I sell on SMProud?
SMProud is built for established social media assets: YouTube channels, TikTok accounts, Instagram accounts, Facebook Pages, X accounts, and Telegram channels.
What proof should sellers prepare?
Prepare public profile links, analytics screenshots, monetization notes, country and niche context, recovery-access details, policy history, and any revenue support you want buyers to trust.
Do sellers get paid before transfer?
Payment should move through the escrow workflow. The release point depends on the agreed handover steps and final marketplace policy.
Can I list a risky account?
You should disclose material risks. Hidden strikes, fake followers, recovery problems, or policy issues can create disputes and damage seller reputation.
How should I price my account?
Price from audience quality, niche, monetization, country, revenue proof, account age, and transfer complexity. A screenshot of follower count is not enough.
Can I ask buyers to pay me directly?
That is exactly the behavior serious buyers are trying to avoid. Direct payment reduces trust and can kill the deal.
Does SMProud approve every listing?
No. Listings should be reviewed for completeness, control, and risk signals. Low-proof assets should not be presented as verified.
What makes a listing easier to sell?
Clear proof, accurate category selection, honest risk notes, responsive communication, and a transfer path that does not surprise the buyer.
What you are actually selling on Facebook
Selling a Facebook Page is a transfer of admin access rather than a credentials handover. The Page is a record inside Facebook's database; ownership of that record sits with whichever personal Facebook accounts hold admin roles. The transaction is, in mechanical terms, the seller adding the buyer's personal Facebook account as admin, the buyer accepting the role, and the seller then removing themselves and any other admins. This means a Facebook Page sale is structurally different from selling an Instagram account or a TikTok account — there is no username, password, or recovery email being exchanged. The seller and buyer keep their own personal Facebook accounts; what changes is who has admin access to the Page.
What buyers want to see in your listing
- Page Insights for the last 90 days. Reach, impressions, page-likes growth, and follower-demographic breakdown. Recordings should walk through these tabs continuously.
- Page Quality dashboard. The Page Quality page shows current and historical restrictions, ad-account flags, and Community Standards strikes. Listings that omit this recording are flagged as incomplete.
- Business Manager status. If the Page sits inside a Business Manager, documenting which BM owns it (and whether the seller will release ownership at transfer) is critical. Pages "in a BM" but where the seller cannot release ownership are not transferable.
- Linked assets. Ad Accounts, Pixels, Custom Audiences, Catalog connections, Instagram Business links, WhatsApp Business numbers — each is a separate asset with its own transfer mechanics. Listings should specify which linked assets are included.
- Monetization status disclosure. Whether the Page is enrolled in in-stream ads, ads on Reels, the Subscription program, or Brand Collabs Manager. These are separate programs with separate transfer implications.
The pre-listing prep that raises your clearing price
- Audit the Page Quality dashboard. Resolve any active restrictions or appeal any strikes you believe were applied in error. A clean Page Quality record is the most consistently undervalued seller-side asset.
- Consolidate to a single Business Manager. Pages with messy multi-BM ownership history are harder to transfer cleanly. If you can move the Page into a single BM you control fully, do that before listing.
- Document the Ad Account history if you are including it. Lifetime spend, recent CPM/CPC trends, audience pools, and conversion-event history are the data assets that command the largest premium. A walkthrough of Ads Manager makes this concrete for buyers.
- Remove inactive admins and editors. Pages with five or more historical admins or editors create transfer friction because each one needs to be addressed at handover. Remove inactive ones before listing to simplify the closing.
How Facebook Page pricing works in practice
Facebook Page pricing is structured around three multipliers stacked on top of follower count: US-vs-non-US (1.5–2.5×), monetized-vs-non-monetized (1.4–2.0×), and Marketplace-enabled-vs-not (1.2–1.5×). A US-based, monetized, Marketplace-enabled Page is the highest-value tier on the platform. The pricing calculator on the pricing page applies these multipliers to the base follower-tier band. Sellers in the highest tier can price toward the upper end of the recommended band; sellers without the multipliers should price toward the lower end and expect buyers to negotiate from there.
Time-to-sale and the structural reasons it runs longer
Median time-to-sale for Facebook Pages is 22 days, the longest among major platforms. The reasons are structural rather than market: the transfer flow itself takes time (Business Manager invitations, role assignments, BM ownership release, admin cleanup), the buyer pool for Pages skews toward business buyers who have longer evaluation cycles, and the asset stack (Page + Ad Account + Pixel + Custom Audiences) is more complex to evaluate than a standalone social-media account. Sellers should plan accordingly and not interpret a 14-day silence as seller-side disinterest.
Common rejection reasons on initial review
- Active Page restrictions visible in Page Quality. Pages under active restriction cannot be sold during the restriction period.
- Personal account that owns the Page is recently new or restricted. If the seller's personal account does not have stable admin tenure, the role-transfer chain is fragile.
- Ad Account with recent policy violations or active billing issues. Linked Ad Accounts in problem states transfer those problems to the buyer; sellers need to resolve before listing.
- Page categorized as something the content does not match. A Page categorized as "Local Business" but posting entertainment content cannot be transferred under that category to a buyer who intends to operate it differently. Re-categorize to the correct category before listing.