Where To Sell Skid Steers, Skid Loaders & Compact Wheeled Loaders
If you need to sell a skid steer, compact loader, or older skid loader, you are in the right place. We buy skid steers from contractors, landscapers, farms, municipalities, rental fleets, dealers, demolition crews, and private owners across the United States.
Our buying focus includes Case skid steers, CAT skid steers, Deere skid steers, Bobcat loaders, wheeled compact loaders, attachment-ready machines, older jobsite units, and long-idle skid steers that still carry resale, export, rebuild, salvage, or parts value. Whether you have one machine or several units, we are ready to review it.
We buy skid steers in all conditions. Running units, rough machines, high-hour loaders, non-running skid steers, and surplus fleet equipment may still be worth serious money. If your skid steer is parked after the job, no longer fits the current work, or becoming a backup machine that never leaves the yard, now is the time to recapture value.
Skid Steer Categories We Purchase Nationwide
We buy skid steers, compact loaders, older wheeled skid loaders, and surplus jobsite machines nationwide. If your machine fits one of the categories below, we are ready to review it and make a serious offer.
Skid Steer Buyers For Older Machines, Fleet Changes & Jobsite Cleanups
We are not only looking for clean, late-model skid steers. We buy compact loaders 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 skid steers quickly without sinking more money into repairs, storage, remarketing, or auction fees.
Whether your machine is at a contractor yard, farm, landscaping shop, utility property, rental branch, municipal yard, demolition site, or long-term storage lot, we can review it and help plan the next step. Case, CAT, Deere, and other skid steers may still be worth serious money even when they are aged, rough, out of service, or no longer part of the current work mix.
We also hear from sellers who finished a project, standardized around a different brand, moved up to a larger loader, downsized to smaller support equipment, rotated rental inventory, or finally decided not to let an older skid steer keep sitting in the yard. Those are the moments when moving the machine now usually makes more sense than waiting longer.
Why Skid Steer Sellers Reach Out To Us
How To Sell Your Skid Steer To Us
Send us the manufacturer, model, serial number if available, year, hours, condition, location, and photos. If the machine comes with attachments, include that list too. 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 removal or transport planning on your own.
Skid Steer Buyers By State
If you are looking for a skid steer buyer in a specific market, start with one of our state pages below. These pages help contractors, landscapers, farmers, municipalities, rental operators, and equipment managers find local and statewide buying coverage faster.
Payment & Removal
We buy skid steers across metro construction corridors, landscaping 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.
Why Companies Sell Skid Steers Before They Sit Too Long
Companies sell used skid steers, older compact loaders, and surplus jobsite machines for all kinds of practical reasons. These are some of the most common situations that push owners to sell before more time, maintenance, and neglect chip away at the remaining value.
Older Case Skid Steer Parked After The Job
An older Case skid steer often ends up parked after a grading job wraps, a cleanup phase ends, or a contractor moves on to different work. What starts as temporary downtime can quietly turn into months of sitting in the yard while upkeep and storage exposure keep adding up.
Selling the machine while it still has continued-use value can free up space, cut maintenance exposure, and put money back to work instead of leaving it tied up in idle iron.
CAT Skid Steer No Longer Fits The Fleet
Many companies move a CAT skid steer after standardizing around another size, another brand, or a different equipment mix altogether. The outgoing machine may still run well, but it no longer fits the fleet plan, job mix, or maintenance budget.
For sellers trying to upgrade without juggling slow retail listings, a direct buyer can make more sense and help turn the outgoing loader into working capital for the next purchase.
Deere Skid Steer Still Has Value
An older Deere skid steer may look like a backup machine now, but it can still carry resale, rebuild, salvage, or parts value. Many owners wait too long because the loader still might be useful someday, even though it is no longer part of daily operations.
If the machine is headed toward long-idle status, selling now can help recapture value before more age, wear, and neglect make the outcome worse.