How to buy a used iPhone 13 in 2026

A reseller's playbook: what to pay, what to inspect, the scams to spot, and how to walk away from a bad deal in under 5 minutes. Pricing as of Apr 30, 2026.

What you should pay

Target wholesale price — 128GB, good condition, unlocked
$169 – $156

If you can resell at $184 (current market), $169–$156 leaves you a meaningful spread per unit before fees.

Pay 10–15% less for carrier-locked phones. Pay 20% less for battery health below 85%. Pay nothing if the IMEI doesn't come back clean.

💡 Tip: Run every IMEI through the free blacklist check before you hand over cash. 60 seconds. Saves $200 mistakes.

The 8-point inspection checklist for iPhone 13

Run an IMEI blacklist check

Dial *#06# to surface the IMEI. Run it through any free GSMA-backed blacklist tool. Walk away on red.

Catches stolen / financed / blocked phones — the #1 cause of $0 buyback returns.

Verify Activation Lock is OFF

Go to Settings → General → Reset → Erase All Content. If it asks for the previous owner’s account, the device is account-locked and unusable.

Forgot-to-sign-out is the most common honest mistake — but the device is worthless until fixed.

Check battery health

On iPhone: Settings → Battery → Battery Health & Charging. On Android: a third-party app or *#*#4636#*#*.

Below 80% caps your resale tier and shaves real money off the sell price.

Test the screen

Open Camera and Photos. Pinch-to-zoom and swipe across the entire screen. Tap each corner with a fingertip.

Flickering or dead-zone touches are repair-cost-prohibitive on most generations.

Test the cameras

Take a photo with each lens (wide, ultrawide). Switch to video, do a slow pan.

Ultrawide failure is silent — the device still functions, but resale grade drops a tier.

Verify carrier status

On iPhone: Settings → General → About → Carrier Lock. Should read "No SIM restrictions" if unlocked.

Locked devices resell for 10–15% less. Verify in the menu, do not trust the seller.

Match IMEI to the SIM tray

Pull out the SIM tray. The IMEI printed there should match what *#06# displayed.

Mismatch = the device has had its logic board swapped — these are rebuilds with unpredictable warranty status.

Confirm the box and serial

If the seller has the box, the IMEI / serial on the box should match the one on the device.

Matching paperwork raises resale grade and signals legitimate ownership.

Inspect the screen — corner pressure damage

iPhone 13 had a manufacturing run with weak adhesive in the bottom-right corner. Tap each corner with a fingertip and watch for flicker.

Flickering or touch dead zones are repair-cost-prohibitive on this generation.

Test Face ID enrollment

Settings → Face ID & Passcode → Reset Face ID, then enroll. If 'Move iPhone Lower / Higher' loops indefinitely, the TrueDepth camera is dead.

TrueDepth replacement is ~$120 and a hard requirement for full resale value on iPhone 13.

Common scams when buying a used iPhone 13

The "I’ll sign out at home" stall

Seller demos the device, then says they’ll sign out of iCloud / Google account later. The device arrives Activation Locked.

Tell: Insist on signing out in front of you. No exceptions.

The cloned-IMEI swap

The IMEI on the screen is clean — but the SIM-tray IMEI is different. The screen-displayed IMEI was changed in software.

Tell: The two IMEIs don’t match.

The "DPP-released" lie

Seller claims their device-payment-plan was paid off. It hasn’t been — the carrier blocks the IMEI 30 days after you buy it.

Tell: Ask for the carrier release email. No email, no deal.

The replaced-screen markup

Phone has a third-party screen (often visually perfect). Resale value drops a tier because Apple's True Tone won't work.

Tell: Settings → Display & Brightness → Display Tones missing.

The iCloud sign-out promise

Seller demos the phone, says they'll sign out at home. Phone arrives Activation Locked.

Tell: Insist on signing out in front of you.

Should you buy this iPhone 13 in 2026?

Margins compress sharply on fair-condition iPhone 13 units — usually only worth picking up if you have a parts buyer.

ScenarioAction
Excellent · large storage · >90% battery · unlockedBuy at $146, flip at $218+
Good · base storage · 85–90% battery · unlockedBuy at $169, flip at $186
Carrier-locked · DPP not confirmed paid offDiscount 15% AND demand carrier release email
Battery below 80% · cracked screenBuy at $68 max, plan to sell as parts
Account-locked · seller claims forgot passwordWalk away. The previous owner has to sign out.
Blacklisted IMEIWalk away. The phone has effectively zero US resale value.

Build your own buyback site that runs all of these checks automatically

The 8-point inspection above happens automatically when sellers submit a quote on your buyback site — IMEI blacklist, carrier lock, battery health, all in the quote engine.

Start free →

FAQ

Is the iPhone 13 still worth buying in 2026?

Yes — for ~$220 you get iOS 26 support, A15 Bionic, Face ID, and a strong camera. The main reasons to skip it: no Dynamic Island, Lightning instead of USB-C, no 120 Hz display.

Why does my iPhone 13 trade-in offer keep dropping?

Carrier trade-in offers ratchet down monthly. Third-party platforms are more stable. Current spread is ~$60 in favor of third-party platforms.

Should I repair an iPhone 13 with a cracked screen before selling?

For 128 GB models, a $90 third-party screen repair lifts resale value about $75 — usually not worth it. For 256/512 GB models, the gap widens to ~$140 and repairs are typically worth it.

Do I need to factory reset an iPhone 13 before trade-in?

Yes — and you must also sign out of iCloud and remove Activation Lock before shipping. Phones received still tied to an Apple ID typically pay $0.

See the live price page for the iPhone 13 for current condition-specific values.