The global refurbished tablet market is on track to surpass $19 billion in annual transaction value by the end of 2026, driven by longer device lifespans, tighter consumer budgets, and a massive wave of corporate and education fleet refreshes. While smartphones still dominate the secondary electronics trade by sheer volume, tablets have quietly become the fastest-growing category in the refurbished space—up an estimated 23% year-over-year in units traded on major resale platforms.
For dealers, resellers, and IT asset disposition (ITAD) firms, understanding model-by-model pricing and demand dynamics is the difference between healthy margins and dead inventory. This report breaks down the three tablet ecosystems that matter on the secondary market—Apple iPad, Samsung Galaxy Tab, and Microsoft Surface Pro—with current pricing, depreciation benchmarks, and buyer profiles for each.
Several converging forces are pushing more tablets into secondary channels than ever before:
No other tablet brand comes close to Apple in secondary market liquidity. iPads account for roughly 68% of all used tablet transactions in North America and command the highest resale values relative to original MSRP. Apple’s controlled hardware ecosystem, long software support, and brand recognition create a resale floor that Android and Windows tablets simply cannot match.
The following table reflects average completed sale prices for Grade B (good cosmetic condition, fully functional) Wi-Fi models in the most common storage configuration. Cellular models typically add $30–$60 to these figures.
| Model | Year | Storage | Original MSRP | Avg. Resale | Retention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPad (9th Gen) | 2021 | 64 GB | $329 | $148 | 45% |
| iPad (10th Gen) | 2022 | 64 GB | $449 | $225 | 50% |
| iPad Air (5th Gen, M1) | 2022 | 64 GB | $599 | $310 | 52% |
| iPad Air (M2, 11") | 2024 | 128 GB | $599 | $408 | 68% |
| iPad Pro 11" (M2) | 2022 | 128 GB | $799 | $430 | 54% |
| iPad Pro 11" (M4) | 2024 | 256 GB | $999 | $680 | 68% |
| iPad Pro 13" (M4) | 2024 | 256 GB | $1,299 | $870 | 67% |
| iPad mini (6th Gen) | 2021 | 64 GB | $499 | $235 | 47% |
The pattern is clear: newer iPads with Apple Silicon (M1 and later) hold their value dramatically better than A-series models. The M4 iPad Pro retains roughly two-thirds of its MSRP after nearly two years, while the A13-powered iPad 9th Gen has settled into the sub-$150 range—a price point that makes it extremely attractive for education bulk buyers.
The 9th-generation iPad deserves special mention. At under $150 in Grade B condition, it has become the default device for K–12 school districts operating on tight budgets. It still receives iPadOS updates, runs every mainstream education app, and its Lightning port—while outdated—is compatible with the millions of cables and accessories schools already own. Dealers report that pallets of iPad 9th Gen units move within days of listing, often before they even reach public-facing marketplaces.
“We can’t keep 9th Gen iPads in stock. School districts are buying them 500 at a time. At $140 per unit, they’re getting a device that still runs everything they need for less than the cost of a graphing calculator.”
— Operations manager at a mid-Atlantic ITAD firm
Samsung occupies a complicated position on the secondary market. The Galaxy Tab S series competes on specs and features, but Android tablets depreciate significantly faster than iPads. A two-year-old Galaxy Tab S8 typically trades at 32–38% of its original MSRP, compared to 50–55% for an iPad of similar vintage.
Several factors drive steeper depreciation for Galaxy Tabs:
Despite lower resale values, Galaxy Tabs have carved out real niches. The Tab Active series is popular in warehouse, field service, and logistics environments where ruggedness matters more than brand prestige. The Galaxy Tab A series, trading at $80–$120 used, fills a low-cost niche for small businesses that need a basic point-of-sale or customer-facing display. And the Tab S series appeals to Android-loyal consumers who want a premium tablet without paying Apple’s premium.
For resellers, Galaxy Tabs offer thinner margins per unit but can be acquired at much lower cost. Wholesale lots of Galaxy Tab A8 and Tab S6 Lite devices frequently sell for $45–$75 per unit, leaving room for refurbishment and a reasonable markup even at consumer-friendly price points.
The Surface Pro occupies a unique space as a tablet-laptop hybrid, and its secondary market dynamics differ meaningfully from consumer-oriented iPads and Galaxy Tabs. Surface devices are overwhelmingly purchased by enterprises and institutions on three-year lease cycles, which means the secondary market sees large, predictable waves of inventory as corporate fleets turn over.
Surface Pro pricing is more configuration-dependent than any other tablet. A Surface Pro 9 with an i5 processor and 8 GB of RAM trades at $340–$400, while the same chassis with an i7 and 16 GB commands $480–$560. Storage also matters more here than on iPads, since Surface devices run full Windows and users expect desktop-class storage—256 GB models sell significantly faster than 128 GB units.
The Surface Pro 8 (2021) has hit the pricing sweet spot for many buyers: available at $250–$320 for an i5/8 GB configuration, it runs Windows 11 capably, supports the full Microsoft 365 suite, and accepts the same Type Cover and Surface Pen accessories as newer models. Small businesses and remote workers are the primary buyers.
One quirk of Surface resale: devices bundled with a Type Cover keyboard sell for 20–30% more than tablet-only units. Since a new Type Cover retails for $130–$180, bundling even a used cover with the device creates disproportionate perceived value. Savvy resellers source Type Covers separately at $25–$40 in bulk and bundle them to significantly boost per-unit revenue.
Understanding depreciation timing is critical for resellers deciding when to buy and sell. Based on our analysis of completed sales data from Q4 2024 through Q1 2026, here are the general depreciation patterns:
The critical insight for dealers: the steepest depreciation happens in the first 12 months after a new model launches. When Apple announces a new iPad Air, the previous Air generation can drop 10–15% in resale value within weeks. Timing acquisitions just after these announcement-driven dips—but before the older model disappears from new retail—can capture significant margin on the rebound.
The used tablet buyer base has diversified well beyond bargain-hunting consumers. Today’s demand comes from several distinct segments:
School districts are the largest single buyer category for used tablets, particularly iPads. Post-pandemic 1:1 device programs remain standard, but many districts can no longer justify new-device pricing for every student. Refurbished iPad 9th and 10th Gen units at $140–$225 deliver the same classroom functionality as a $349+ new base iPad. Districts typically purchase in lots of 200–2,000 units through certified resellers.
Restaurants, retail stores, medical offices, and real estate agencies use tablets as POS systems, patient check-in kiosks, digital menus, and presentation tools. A used iPad or Galaxy Tab at $120–$250 is a fraction of the cost of purpose-built commercial hardware, and locked-down MDM profiles eliminate concerns about previous ownership.
A used iPad is the default “kid’s tablet.” Parents who would never hand a $500+ new device to a six-year-old are comfortable buying a $140 refurbished unit with a $20 case. This segment is highly price-sensitive and gravitates toward the cheapest functional iPad available.
Used iPad Pro and iPad Air models with Apple Pencil support have created a secondary market for digital artists, note-takers, and design students. An M1 iPad Air at $310 with a $70 used Apple Pencil (2nd Gen) delivers a professional-grade creative tool for under $400.
Surface Pro devices appeal to remote workers, contractors, and small firms that need a Windows machine in a portable form factor. IT departments refreshing to Surface Pro 10 or 11 often sell off Pro 8 and Pro 9 units in bulk, creating opportunities for resellers to serve the individual buyer market.
Cosmetic condition has an outsized impact on tablet resale values compared to smartphones, primarily because tablets have larger screens that make scratches and blemishes more visible. The typical pricing spread between grades:
Battery health is the other critical variable. Tablets with battery health above 85% sell significantly faster and at a premium. Units below 80% battery health face buyer resistance unless priced aggressively, since battery replacement on iPads runs $99–$149 through Apple and $60–$90 through third-party repair shops.
Looking ahead to the second half of 2026, several trends will shape the used tablet market:
The used tablet market in 2026 rewards specialization. Dealers who understand model-level pricing, time their acquisitions around product cycles, and serve specific buyer segments—education, enterprise, or consumer—are positioned to capture the strongest margins. With supply growing and demand broadening across multiple sectors, tablets are no longer a side category in the refurbished electronics trade. They are a core business line.
We trade iPads, Galaxy Tabs, and Surface devices across all models and grades.
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