Taylor Swift Eras Tour Snow Globes Are Reselling

Key Points
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The Eras Tour piano snow globe retailed for $55 and sold out within hours of launch this morning
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Current eBay listings show prices between $120-140 with multiple confirmed presales
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Features the acoustic piano from the Eras Tour with multicolor confetti and plays “You’re On Your Own, Kid” live
The Eras Tour Acoustic Piano Snow Globe hit her official store this morning at $55 and sold out within hours. Secondary market listings already show the musical collectible moving for $120-140 on eBay, with some sellers pushing prices even higher for quick presales.
Eras Tour Snow Globe Drop
Since her debut design in 2019, Swift has released eight different snow globes tied to albums and tours. Each one sells out in minutes and commands significant premiums on resale platforms. The pattern is consistent: limited quantities, one-per-customer limits, and a fanbase willing to pay multiples of retail to complete their collections.
This globe captures the acoustic piano segment from the Eras Tour, one of the most intimate moments of the highest-grossing concert tour in history. The Eras Tour sold 4.35 million tickets and became the first tour to gross over $1 billion, making any official merch tied to it instantly collectible.
The globe features multicolor confetti inside, the Eras Tour logo and flower design on the base, and plays “You’re On Your Own, Kid” from the live recording. It measures 6 inches by 3.7 inches and requires three AAA batteries.
Swift’s store enforced a strict one-per-order limit, which always signals limited production. Combined with the “ships separately” note on the product page, this suggests they knew inventory would move fast.
The $55 retail price point is actually higher than her earlier globes, suggesting Swift’s team understands secondary market dynamics. They priced it knowing resellers would add premiums, but kept it accessible enough that fans wouldn’t riot.
Taylor Swift Snow Globes Resell
eBay presale listings are the main game currently, with most sellers asking $120-140. These are confirmed orders that will ship when Swift’s store fulfills them in late November or early December.
A few aggressive sellers are trying $150-180, but those listings aren’t moving yet. The realistic flip right now sits around $130, giving you $75 profit before eBay’s 13% fees. After fees, you’re looking at roughly $58 profit per globe.
Not massive margins, but volume potential exists if you secured multiple orders through friends or family. The one-per-order limit makes this tougher than some flips, but Swifties always find ways around restrictions.
The biggest risk is Swift deciding to do another production run. She re-released the Lover globe in 2023, which tanked original values temporarily. If she floods the market with restocks, your $130 flip becomes a $60 loss real quick.
Market saturation is the other concern. If thousands of resellers secured orders, the secondary market gets crowded fast. Current prices assume relatively limited supply, but we won’t know true quantities until shipments arrive.
Bottom Line
If you copped one this morning at $55, you’re sitting on a guaranteed $50-75 profit with minimal effort. List it as a presale, collect payment, ship when it arrives.
For those who missed retail, paying $130 on eBay right now is risky unless you’re a collector completing a set. Prices will likely dip once everyone’s orders ship in late November.
The smart reseller play was securing checkout this morning. The smart collector play is waiting until January when holiday demand dies and prices soften.
Swift’s snow globe track record suggests long-term holds work better than quick flips on these items. But not everyone has the capital or patience to sit on $130 inventory for 2-3 years.




