Copart Fee Calculator

Estimate your true all-in cost before you bid at a Copart auction in the US. Add buyer fees, internet bid fees, gate, and environmental charges to your winning bid and see the real total instantly. Free and private, by Online Tools.

Secured / Bank or Cash
Secured / Bank or Cash
Unsecured / Credit Card
Pre-Bid (Proxy)
Pre-Bid (Proxy)
Live Bid

Estimated Total Cost

--
--

Winning Bid

--

Buyer Fee

--

Internet Bid Fee

--

Gate Fee

--

Environmental Fee

--

Broker Fee

--

Total Fees

--

Fees as % of Bid

--

About This Tool

The Copart Fee Calculator helps US buyers estimate the real, all-in cost of a vehicle before placing a bid at a Copart salvage auction. Copart adds several fees on top of your winning bid, including a tiered buyer fee, an internet bid fee, a gate fee, and an environmental fee, and those charges can add hundreds or even thousands of dollars to the price you actually pay. This tool adds them all up so you know your true cost and can bid with confidence instead of getting surprised at checkout.

Whether you are a dealer, a flipper, or a first-time salvage buyer, knowing your total out-the-door cost is essential to making a profitable purchase. Enter your planned bid, choose your payment method and bid type, adjust the flat fees if needed, and the calculator instantly breaks down every charge plus your grand total.

How the Copart Fee Calculator Works

Copart's total cost is built from your bid plus a stack of fees:

  • Winning Bid Amount: the price you bid and won the vehicle for
  • Buyer Fee: a tiered fee that increases with your bid amount, the largest added cost
  • Internet Bid Fee: charged for bidding online, and it depends on your bid amount and whether you pre-bid or bid live
  • Gate Fee: a flat charge applied to nearly every purchase (around $95)
  • Environmental Fee: a small flat fee (around $15)
  • Broker Fee: optional, charged when you buy through a licensed broker because the general public often cannot buy directly

Your payment method also matters. Paying by secured funds such as a bank transfer or cash usually carries lower buyer fees than paying with an unsecured method like a credit card, so the calculator lets you choose.

Copart Buyer Fee Tiers (Estimated)

Copart's buyer fee scales with your winning bid. Here is a representative tier structure for secured payments. Use it as a guide, exact amounts vary by location, membership, and payment type:

Winning Bid Range Estimated Buyer Fee
$0 – $99$25
$100 – $499$45 – $150
$500 – $999$175 – $200
$1,000 – $1,499$225
$1,500 – $1,999$250
$2,000 – $3,999$300 – $400
$4,000 – $5,999$450 – $500
$6,000 – $7,999$550 – $600
$8,000 – $9,999$650
$10,000 – $14,999$725
$15,000+6% of bid (approx.)

Benefits of Using the Copart Fee Calculator

  • Know your true cost: see the real out-the-door total before you bid, not just the bid price
  • Avoid checkout surprises: every fee is itemized so nothing catches you off guard
  • Bid smarter: set a maximum bid that keeps your total within budget
  • Compare scenarios: switch payment method or bid type to see how fees change
  • Protect your margin: dealers and flippers can confirm a deal is still profitable after fees
  • Free and private: runs in your browser, no signup, nothing stored

Tips to Reduce Your Copart Fees

  • Pay with secured funds: bank transfer or cash usually means lower buyer fees than a credit card
  • Pre-bid instead of bidding live: proxy pre-bids can carry a lower internet bid fee
  • Pick up quickly: avoid storage fees that pile up if you leave the vehicle on the lot
  • Factor fees into your max bid: decide your total budget first, then work backward to your bid cap

Frequently Asked Questions

What fees does Copart charge?
Copart charges a tiered buyer fee based on your winning bid, an internet bid fee for online bidding, a flat gate fee (around $95), and an environmental fee (around $15). If you buy through a licensed broker, a broker fee may also apply. These are added on top of your winning bid.
How much are Copart fees on a $3,000 car?
On a roughly $3,000 winning bid, expect a buyer fee in the $300 to $400 range, plus an internet bid fee, the gate fee, and the environmental fee. All in, fees often add about $450 to $600, bringing the total to roughly $3,450 to $3,600 before transport. Use the calculator above for your exact estimate.
Why are Copart buyer fees so high?
Buyer fees scale with the bid amount and cover Copart's auction services, storage infrastructure, and processing. Because they are tiered, a higher bid means a higher fee, which is why calculating your total before bidding is so important to protecting your budget.
Does the payment method change the fee?
Yes. Paying with secured funds such as a bank wire or cash usually results in lower buyer fees than paying with an unsecured method like a credit card. The calculator lets you switch between the two to compare.
What is a Copart broker fee?
In many US states the general public cannot buy directly from Copart and must use a licensed broker or a registered dealer. The broker charges a fee for placing the bid on your behalf. If you are buying through a broker, enter their fee in the optional broker field.
Is the gate fee always charged?
The gate fee is applied to nearly every Copart purchase and is typically around $95. It is a flat charge regardless of your bid amount. You can adjust it in the calculator if your local Copart facility charges a different amount.
How accurate is this Copart fee calculator?
It uses a representative, current fee structure and gives a close estimate. Copart updates its fee schedule periodically and amounts vary by location, membership level, and payment type, so treat the result as a planning estimate and confirm the exact fees in your Copart account before bidding.
Is this calculator free?
Yes. It is completely free, runs entirely in your browser, requires no signup, and stores none of your information. Calculate as many bids as you want.
Scroll to Top