If you’ve ever stared at 200+ cases, graffiti sprays, and $0.03 skins in your inventory and thought “I should sell these,” you already know the pain. Bulk selling items on the Steam Market is one of those things Valve has never really made easy. There’s no “sell all” button. No batch listing. Just you, your mouse, and a whole lot of clicking.
But there are ways to speed things up and actually make it worth your time. Let’s get into it.
Why Bulk Selling on the Steam Market Is So Annoying
Steam’s selling interface was clearly designed for listing one item at a time. You pick the item, set a price, confirm on the mobile authenticator, and repeat. For one AWP skin, that’s fine. For 300 operation drops sitting in your inventory? That’s a nightmare.
Valve has never added a proper bulk listing feature, and honestly, it doesn’t look like they plan to. The system works the way it works, and you either deal with it or find workarounds.
Steam’s Hidden Multisell Page
Here’s something a lot of people don’t know about. Steam actually has a built-in multisell page that lets you list multiple copies of the same item at once. It’s tucked away at a specific URL format and doesn’t have a button anywhere in the normal UI, but it works.
The URL looks something like this:
steamcommunity.com/market/multisell?appid=730&contextid=2&items[]=ITEM_NAME
You plug in the item’s market name, and Steam gives you a page where you can select how many you want to list and set a price for all of them in one go. Way faster than listing each one individually.
The catch? It only works for items that are completely identical to each other. That means cases, stickers, patches, graffiti, and similar stuff. These items are fungible, every copy is exactly the same as every other copy, so Steam can batch them together.
It doesn’t work for weapon skins because every skin has a unique float value, paint seed, and potentially different stickers applied. Even two Factory New AK Redlines aren’t technically the same item in Steam’s eyes. So for actual skins, you’re still stuck listing them one by one.
We Built a Tool for That
Figuring out the exact multisell URL for each item is annoying, so we built a tool on CSGODRIP that generates the multisell URLs for you. Just pick the item you want to sell and it spits out the right link. No messing around with URL parameters, no typos, just click and start listing.
Check it out at http://csgodrip.com/multisell-url-generator/ if you’ve got a pile of cases or stickers to unload.
Pull Your Items Out of Storage Units First
You can’t sell directly from CS2 storage units, so if you’ve got items stashed away in there, you’ll need to move them into your main inventory before listing. If you’re running a bunch of storage units, Skinledger makes it easier to manage what’s where without clicking through each one manually.
Browser Extensions That Save Your Sanity
For everything the multisell page can’t handle, browser extensions pick up the slack.
CSGO Trader is a solid option. It’s open source, which is a nice plus if you’re cautious about extensions touching your Steam account. It adds quick sell buttons and lets you list items faster without the usual click-fest.
A word of caution though. Any extension that interacts with your Steam account carries some risk. Stick to well-known, widely reviewed ones. Check the permissions they ask for. And never, ever install something some random person linked you in a Discord DM.
The Steam Mobile Authenticator Bottleneck
Even with extensions and the multisell page, you’re still going to hit the confirmation wall. Every single market listing needs to be confirmed through Steam Guard. There’s no way around this.
Some extensions can batch-confirm listings for you on the web side, which helps a lot. But if you’re confirming 100+ listings, expect it to take a few minutes regardless. It’s a security feature, not a bug. Annoying, but it exists for a reason.
Is It Even Worth Selling Cheap Items?
Real talk. If you have a bunch of items worth $0.03 to $0.05, you need to think about whether it’s actually worth your time. Steam takes a 15% cut on every sale (5% Steam fee + 10% CS2/game fee). On a $0.03 item, you’re getting $0.01 after fees.
So if you have 200 of those, you’re looking at maybe $2.00 for what could be 30+ minutes of listing work. That’s not a great hourly rate.
Here’s a rough breakdown of where it starts making sense:
| Item Value | You Receive (After Fees) | Worth Listing? |
|---|---|---|
| $0.03 | $0.01 | Probably not |
| $0.10 | $0.07 | Borderline |
| $0.25 | $0.19 | Yeah, if you have a bunch |
| $1.00+ | $0.85+ | Definitely |
If your inventory is mostly penny skins, you might be better off trading them up through trade-up contracts or just letting them sit. Your call.
Third-Party Marketplaces for Bulk Selling
If the Steam Market feels too slow, third-party sites are another option. Places like CSFloat, Skinport, and Buff163 often have better bulk listing tools and sometimes lower fees than Steam’s 15% cut.
The tradeoff is that you’re sending your skins to a third party, and cashout options vary. Some pay via PayPal, crypto, or bank transfer, which is nice if you want actual money instead of Steam Wallet funds.
Just do your research on any site before sending your inventory over. Stick to well-known, reputable marketplaces.
The Bottom Line
Bulk selling items on the Steam Market isn’t fun, but it’s manageable once you know the tricks. Use the multisell page for your cases, stickers, and patches (or just grab the link from our tool). Lean on browser extensions for everything else. And for higher-value items, it’s absolutely worth the effort. For penny skins, think twice about whether your time is better spent elsewhere.
Get everything out of storage, batch your listing sessions, and rip the band-aid off all at once. Your inventory (and your wallet) will thank you.