Head-to-head comparison

AspectAuctionInternational direct sale
Gross proceedsMarket median + 0–40%Market median
Seller's commission8–15% of the hammer price0% (portal fee only, €35–200 / approx. £30–172 / US$38–216)
Consignment fee€250–1,000 (approx. £215–860 / US$270–1,080)
Sales preparation / livery costs€800–2,500 (4–8 weeks in the auction yard)
Time to saleFixed (sale day)3–12 weeks
Choice of buyerNone (highest bidder wins)Full control
Risk of no salePossible (reserve price not met)No revenue risk, only time
International reachHigh (auctions pull buyers from 10+ countries)High (with a multi-portal strategy)

Top horse auctions 2026 — Europe, UK and US

AuctionCountryFocusSeller's commission
PSI Auction AnkumDETop sport horses, international collection10–12%
Excellent Horses LuxembourgLUPremium showjumpers by leading sires12–15%
Hannoveraner Verband Auction VerdenDEHanoverian foals and riding horses8–10%
KWPN Online AuctionNLKWPN foals, yearlings, sport horses8–12%
Westfalen Auction MünsterDEWestphalian sport and breeding horses8–10%
BWP Premium AuctionBEBelgian Warmblood showjumping premium10–12%
ehorses Live AuctionDEOnline auction, mid-market segment5–8%
Excellent Horse-Lux RiesenbeckDETop-level showjumpers10–15%
Trakehner Verband AuctionDETrakehner riding and sport horses10%
Fences Saint-LôFRSelle Français elite auction10–12%
Goresbridge Go For Gold SalesIE/UKPerformance sport horses, eventing focus10–12%
BrightwellsUKSport horses, performance and stores at Addington8–12%
Sportshorse AuctionsUKOnline showjumping and dressage prospects7–10%
Iron Spring Farm AuctionUS (PA)KWPN-NA bred dressage and sport horses10–15%
Hilltop Farm SalesUS (MD)Sport horse prospects, young horses10–12%
Brookledge Sport Horse AuctionUSImported European sport horses10–15%
Borchard Sport HorsesUSHunter/jumper sales, all levels10–15%

How a horse auction runs (4 phases)

  1. Consignment (4–8 weeks ahead): You submit the horse with papers and video. The auction team views the horse and decides. Acceptance rate at premium auctions runs 10–30%.
  2. Sales preparation at the auction yard: The horse moves to the auction yard for roughly 4–8 weeks, is schooled by the auction team, photographed, filmed and listed in the sale catalogue.
  3. Viewing days: Prospective buyers come to view and try the horse 1–3 days before the sale — the seller is typically not present.
  4. Sale day: Live bidding on site and online. The highest bidder takes the horse at the hammer price (above your reserve price / Limit). The auction house collects payment, withholds the commission and pays the balance to you.

The real cost of an auction — a €25,000 worked example

ItemCost
Gross hammer price€25,000 (approx. £21,500 / US$27,000)
Seller's commission (12%)−€3,000
Consignment fee−€500
Sales preparation and livery (6 weeks)−€1,500
Transport to the auction house−€400
Video and photo production−€250
Seller's net proceeds€19,350

The same gross price through a direct sale:

ItemCost
Gross sale price€25,000
Platform fee (Post-Your-Horse single listing)−€35
Advertising / professional photos (optional)−€300
Seller's net proceeds€24,665

The direct sale therefore puts €5,315 more in your pocket — provided the same price is achieved. With a premium horse at auction (+30% from a bidding war), the picture flips the other way.

Advantages of a direct sale with international marketing

  • Full control over the buyer: you choose the "right hands", and a sale to an amateur or family rider is just as possible.
  • No auction commission: the 8–15% stays in your pocket.
  • Flexible pricing: negotiable, no fixed auction reserve.
  • No stress on the horse: the horse stays home, no change of yard or routine.
  • International reach without an auction: a multi-portal strategy reaches the same international audience an auction does. More in our horse advert copywriting guide.

Rule of thumb: when does each route pay off?

Decision framework

  • Auction makes sense when:
    • Top bloodlines (leading sires like Comme il faut, Diamant de Semilly, Totilas line)
    • Market value > €25,000 (approx. £21,500 / US$27,000)
    • Documented international potential
    • Accepted by a premium auction (PSI, Excellent Horses, Hannoveraner, Goresbridge, Iron Spring Farm)
  • Direct sale makes sense when:
    • Leisure, amateur or all-rounder horse
    • Market value < €25,000
    • Choice of buyer ("right hands") matters to you
    • You're flexible on the timeline

Hybrid strategy: international direct sale first, auction as a backup

Many breeders run 3–6 months of international direct sale (with Post-Your-Horse across 10+ portals in 7 countries) — if no sale happens, the horse goes to a seasonal auction. That gives you the chance at 100% net proceeds without the auction stress, with the auction as a safety net. List your horse from €35.

Frequently asked questions: auction vs direct sale

Auction or direct sale — which nets more?

Top sport horses with leading sires: auction +20–40%. Average horses: direct sale nets more once you subtract the 8–15% seller's commission.

What are the top horse auctions in 2026?

PSI Ankum, Excellent Horses LU, Hannoveraner Verden, KWPN Online, Westfalen Münster, BWP, ehorses, Trakehner, Goresbridge, Brightwells, Iron Spring Farm, Hilltop Farm.

What commission do auctions charge?

8–15% seller's commission plus consignment and sales preparation costs. At a €25,000 hammer price: roughly €5,000 in total fees.

How does a horse auction work?

Four phases: consignment and acceptance, sales preparation at the auction yard, viewing days, sale day with live bidding.

What are the advantages of a direct sale?

Full control of the buyer, no commission, flexible pricing, no stress on the horse, international reach through a multi-portal strategy.

Start your international direct sale

One advert — 10+ portals, 20+ Facebook groups, 4 languages. You keep control of the buyer decision and 100% of the net proceeds.

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