We Buy Backhoes Of All Types, Makes & Models

Nationwide Excavator Buyers

Where To Sell Excavators, Mini Excavators & Hydraulic Digging Equipment

If you need to sell an excavator, mini excavator, crawler excavator, or older digging machine, you are in the right place. We buy excavators from contractors, utility crews, municipalities, rental fleets, farms, site developers, dealers, and private owners across the United States.

Our buying focus includes mini excavators, compact excavators, crawler excavators, large hydraulic excavators, older jobsite machines, rental fleet excavators, and long-idle digging equipment that still carries resale, export, rebuild, salvage, or parts value. Whether you have one machine or several units, we are ready to review it.

We buy excavators in all conditions. Running machines, rough units, older iron, non-running excavators, long-parked equipment, and surplus fleet machines may still be worth serious money. If your excavator is too small for the work, too large for the current jobs, or simply sitting long enough to start looking abandoned, now is the time to recapture value.

Mini Excavators Compact & Midi Units Crawler Excavators Large Hydraulic Excavators Running Or Non-Running Single Units Or Fleets
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Sell your excavator without repair work, listings, or auction delays.
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Excavators We Buy

Excavator Categories We Purchase Nationwide

We buy mini excavators, crawler excavators, older hydraulic excavators, and surplus digging equipment nationwide. If your machine fits one of the categories below, we are ready to review it and make a serious offer.

How We Buy

Excavator Buyers For Older Machines, Fleet Changes & Yard Cleanups

We are not only looking for clean, late-model excavators. We buy excavators based on real-world market value, including continued-use value, contractor resale value, export value, rebuild value, salvage value, and parts value. That makes us a strong fit for sellers trying to move used excavators quickly without sinking more money into repairs, transport staging, storage, or auction fees.

Whether your machine is at a contractor yard, subdivision project, utility site, farm, quarry, municipal property, rental branch, or long-term storage lot, we can review it and help plan the next step. Mini excavators, crawler excavators, and older hydraulic digging machines may still be worth serious money even when they are aged, rough, out of service, oversized for the current work, or no longer big enough for the jobs ahead.

We also hear from sellers who finished a project, upgraded to a larger machine, downsized to a smaller excavator, rotated a rental fleet, or finally decided not to let a rough digger keep sitting in the weeds. Those are the moments when moving the machine now usually makes more sense than waiting longer.

Why Excavator Sellers Reach Out To Us

No Repairs Needed
Mini To Full-Size Units
Fast Offer Turnaround
Older Machines Welcome
Pickup Coordination
Direct Buyer Communication
Nationwide Coverage

How To Sell Your Excavator To Us

Send us the manufacturer, model, serial number if available, year, hours, operating weight or size class, condition, location, and photos. If you are selling multiple units, send a simple list with the basics on each machine. We review the details, discuss the equipment with you directly, and work to provide a fair and competitive offer.

If the offer works for you, we coordinate loading, pickup, trucking, and payment so the sale stays simple from start to finish. You do not need to solve heavy removal or transport planning on your own.

Excavator Markets

Excavator Buyers By State

If you are looking for an excavator buyer in a specific market, start with one of our state pages below. These pages help contractors, utility crews, municipalities, rental operators, farmers, and equipment managers find local and statewide buying coverage faster.

Payment & Removal

We buy excavators across metro construction corridors, highway markets, rural work regions, utility territories, and smaller regional cities. If your machine is in service, parked in a yard, staged for disposal, or sitting at a long-idle property, we are ready to review it, coordinate removal, and pay by cashier check, wire transfer, PayPal, Cash App, Zelle, or cash depending on the deal.

Get A Fast Offer

We buy forklifts, electrical equipment, machinery, warehouse equipment, and many types of surplus material.

Send us what you have along with any photos, quantities, make, model, condition, and location details, and we will review it and get back to you with a competitive offer.

Attach photos below to expedite the offer process.
Common Selling Situations

Why Companies Sell Excavators Before Value Slips Further

Companies sell used excavators, mini excavators, and older digging machines for all kinds of practical reasons. These are some of the most common situations that push owners to sell before more time, job changes, and neglect chip away at the remaining value.

Older dilapidated excavator sitting rough after too much idle time

Rough Excavator Sitting Too Long

An older excavator can sit in a yard longer than anyone planned. What starts as a machine you might fix later or use on the next job can turn into a rough, long-idle asset that keeps aging while the market moves on.

Selling before the machine slips further can help recapture value now instead of letting it drift closer to parts-only status.

Small excavator working on a road project where a larger machine may now be needed

Small Excavator No Longer Big Enough

Contractors often outgrow a smaller excavator when the work shifts toward deeper digs, heavier pipe, bigger site cuts, or faster production demands. A compact machine that made sense on lighter work may no longer keep up with the jobs ahead.

That is a common reason owners sell a mini or small excavator and step into a larger machine that better matches the current project mix.

Large yellow excavator that may be too big for the current jobs and operating needs

Too Big Of An Excavator For The Work Ahead

Some companies go the other direction and realize the excavator they own is more machine than the current jobs require. A large excavator can be expensive to move, store, fuel, and maintain when the work has shifted to tighter sites or lighter tasks.

Selling the oversized machine can free up capital, simplify the fleet, and make room for an excavator that better fits the work you are actually bidding and performing now.