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Public Surplus FAQ (2026): The Underrated Government Auction Site

By Ben|

Common questions about Public Surplus: how it differs from GovDeals, registration, fees, payment, pickup, and tips for finding less-competitive auctions.

Public Surplus (publicsurplus.com) is the quieter cousin to GovDeals. It runs the same kind of state and local government surplus auctions but with a smaller listing volume - and, critically, fewer bidders per listing. For experienced buyers willing to work around its dated interface, Public Surplus often produces better win prices because the competition is thinner. Here are the questions buyers ask most often.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Public Surplus?

Public Surplus is an online marketplace for state and local government surplus auctions. School districts, counties, cities, transit authorities, and other public agencies use it to sell surplus vehicles, equipment, and miscellaneous items. It's been operating since 1999 and is run by The Public Group, LLC, an independent, privately held company based in Utah. A common misconception is that Public Surplus and GovDeals share an owner - they don't. GovDeals is owned by Liquidity Services; Public Surplus is a separate, unaffiliated competitor. The two run entirely independently, with different sellers and different bidder bases.

How is Public Surplus different from GovDeals?

Both platforms target the same kind of seller (state and local agencies) but they operate independently. Public Surplus has fewer listings - maybe 10–20% of GovDeals' volume on a typical day. The benefit is that fewer bidders compete for each listing, so winning prices tend to be lower. The downside is selection: you may have to wait longer for the specific item you want.

How do I register for Public Surplus?

Registration is free at publicsurplus.com. Provide your name, address, email, and a valid payment method. Email verification is required. Unlike GovDeals, Public Surplus does not impose a 90-day probation period or limit new bidders, so you can bid on any listing immediately after registering. One caveat: the platform (or an individual seller) reserves the right to require an earnest-money deposit before or during bidding on certain higher-value items, so read the listing terms - a specific lot may still ask for a deposit even though there's no blanket new-bidder restriction.

Is there a buyer's premium on Public Surplus?

Most listings carry a buyer's premium, but there is no flat platform rate - each seller sets its own and it's disclosed on the auction page before you bid. In practice it clusters around 10% (a mid-2026 Loudoun County, Virginia sale ran 9.75%, for example); some agencies waive it entirely. Always read the specific listing's premium before submitting your max bid rather than assuming a rate.

What payment methods does Public Surplus accept?

Wire transfer, ACH, cashier's check, and credit card (with limits). Higher-value items typically require wire or certified check. Personal checks are usually not accepted. Payment is due within 3–5 business days of winning, depending on the seller's terms.

How does pickup work on Public Surplus?

Items are picked up directly from the selling agency's location - county yards, school facilities, municipal warehouses, etc. Pickup contact, hours, and any access restrictions are listed on each auction page. Pickup deadlines are typically 5–10 business days after payment. Late pickup can incur storage fees or forfeiture, depending on agency policy.

Can I have items shipped?

Generally no - most sellers are pickup-only. Some agencies will allow buyer-arranged shipping for smaller items (the buyer pays and coordinates), but vehicles and heavy equipment are essentially always pickup-only. Use a freight service like uShip if you need transport.

Are Public Surplus auctions open to anyone?

Yes. Public Surplus is open to all buyers over 18 with a valid payment method. Some agency-specific restrictions apply to certain categories (controlled substances, weapons, hazardous materials), but the vast majority of listings are unrestricted.

What's commonly listed on Public Surplus?

Municipal vehicles (sedans, vans, pickup trucks, dump trucks, school buses), heavy equipment (loaders, backhoes, mowers), school district items (laptops, desks, athletic equipment, instruments), public works items (trailers, tools, generators), and miscellaneous bulk lots. The mix skews more toward education and municipal than GovDeals does.

How is the user experience on Public Surplus?

Honestly: the desktop site is dated. The interface looks like it hasn't been updated since 2010, search is limited, and filtering options are basic. Photos are often low resolution and limited in number. The platform works, but expect to spend more time scrolling listings than you would on a modern marketplace. This is part of why bidder competition is lower - many casual bidders give up.

Is there a Public Surplus mobile app?

Yes, and it's meaningfully better than the desktop site. The Public Surplus Buyers app (iOS and Android) is where most of the platform's recent development has gone: 2025 updates added dark mode, cleaner reserve-price and time-left displays, and Face ID in the bidding flow. If you find the desktop experience clunky, the app is the more modern way to track lots, get outbid notifications, and place bids from your phone. Note the app is buyer-facing only - sellers still list through the web.

Why bid on Public Surplus instead of GovDeals?

Three reasons: (1) some agencies list exclusively on Public Surplus (so the only way to access their inventory is here); (2) lower bidder competition means winning prices are often 10–25% below comparable GovDeals lots; (3) buyer's premium is often slightly lower. The trade-off is volume - there's just less to bid on day-to-day.

How do I find deals on Public Surplus?

Set up keyword alerts (the platform's email notifications work, but they're noisy). Better: use GovAuctions to aggregate Public Surplus listings alongside GSA, GovDeals, and others into one search. Look for: items in low-population states, listings with poor titles or photos, auctions ending overnight, and lots that mix valuable items with low-value filler (the lot description often understates the contents).

What happens if the item is misrepresented?

Same default as GovDeals: all sales are final, as-is. Your only recourse is to negotiate with the selling agency directly. Some agencies are reasonable about clear misrepresentations; many are not. Inspect before bidding when at all possible, especially for vehicles and equipment. If inspection isn't allowed, bid conservatively or skip the listing.

Can I inspect before bidding?

Most agencies allow inspection by appointment during the auction period. Contact information for scheduling is on the listing page. Some agencies have set inspection days; others ask you to call ahead. Sellers that don't allow inspection should be treated with extra caution - the absence of inspection access usually means the item has issues the seller doesn't want photographed.

How does the auction format work?

Public Surplus uses a standard ascending-price auction with a defined end time. Some auctions extend automatically by a few minutes if a bid arrives in the last 30 seconds (anti-sniping), so plan to monitor the close if you care about the item. Maximum-bid (proxy bidding) is supported - set your max once and the system bids on your behalf up to that limit.

What happens to my account if I don't pay or pick up?

Failure to pay or pick up can result in account suspension, forfeiture of any earnest money or deposits, and potential blacklisting from future auctions. Public Surplus and the seller may also pursue civil collection on larger amounts. Don't bid more than you're prepared to pay and pick up.

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