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Nevada Second Hand

Nevada Second Hand dealers are located in the greater area of Nevada and must receive state issued I.D. card that is valid before they can begin purchasing any second hand item from a customer. Nevada Second Hand dealers follow rules and regulations put forth from state and county laws. One law that varies by location is hold times with second hand dealers. A hold time is the amount of time a Nevada Second Hand dealer must hold an item in a safe or safe holding place before they can legally sell the item to the general public or melt the item if they don’t resell jewelry. In Nevada the law states 30 days is the allotted hold period for Nevada Second Hand dealers before the items are there’s to do with as they please. The hold period is there for unfortunate victims of theft a chance to file a police report and recover any stolen items from the Nevada Second Hand dealer so they don’t have to lose something that’s irreplaceable. Nevada Second Hand dealers can be found online. Nevada Second Hand dealers can be found in yellow pages under Nevada Second Hand dealers. Nevada Second Hand dealers are rated and reviewed like any other business.

Nevada Second Hand dealers are like pawn shops in some ways such as buying second hand items. Pawn shops unlike traditional Nevada Second Hand dealers will buy and pawn items. Pawning comes in handy for people who are short on funds and need some quick cash. Pawning works like this you take something that has a value and use it as collateral. Let’s use a watch as an example since more people probably have a watch than a power drill. If the watch sells brand new for $500 and is currently reselling on an online auction for $80-$100you can expect a loan close to $20 to $50 depending on condition. You may say that sure sounds cheap. The answer is simple it’s called depreciation. Watches just like any other items depreciate as soon as something better comes along. The pawn shop is going to make sure it’s getting its money back if you default on your loan and don’t come back. It costs the pawn shop money to store your object for 90 days. Pawn shops are not in the business to lose money. There loans are fair in there eyes and just and also serve to make sure they don’t lose any money.