Flagship channel-state reference guide

Start Facebook Marketplace in Indiana: full reference guide

Use this page when you want the complete dense version: all sections, all appendices, and the full official source directory in one scrollable reference surface.

Last verified: April 28, 2026 Reference mode Dense appendix

Built from reviewed public pages for Indiana, IRS, FinCEN, Indianapolis, Facebook Marketplace. Use it as a first-pass guide, then verify the official links that match your setup.

How to use this page

Dense appendix modeFull source directory attachedLast verified April 28, 2026

This version favors completeness over pacing. Use it when you need the appendix, the dense source trail, or the full long-form reference in one place.

Best reading order

  1. Use the fast-answer and official-links sections first if you only need the main route and source trail.
  2. Open the entity, setup, tax, and local sections only where your exact launch path actually branches.
  3. Use the full source directory last as the appendix, not the starting point, unless you already know the exact agency task.

Reference mode

Everything in one dense page

The guided journey is the easier starting point. This page keeps the full accordion guide and source appendix when you want the complete research-backed reference view.

Best when you need

  • The full section map in one scroll without the lighter journey framing.
  • The appendix and official-source directory preserved next to the answer sections.
  • A clearer audit trail before you print, compare, or cross-check another route.

Still better handled in the journey

  • First-pass reading when you want the shortest, safest beginner route.
  • Deciding what to do first before you need the full appendix.
  • Switching states or platforms quickly without reading the full dense version.
Reference map
Start here Fast answer If you want to open Facebook Marketplace in Indiana, you usually need to do five things in order: Everyone 5 steps

If you want to open Facebook Marketplace in Indiana, you usually need to do five things in order:

  1. Choose your setup: sole proprietorship vs single-member LLC.
  2. Get your federal and Indiana registrations or registration decision in place before launch, but keep marketplace-only sales, resale, and any future direct or off-platform sales as separate questions.
  3. Verify local county assumed-name, zoning, and Indianapolis home-occupation branches before using the address operationally.
  4. Confirm your real Facebook Marketplace account access, choose whether you are starting with direct local sales or shipping and checkout if available, and keep those branches separate.
  5. Launch only after your product, tax, shipping, and compliance setup are ready.

Practical first-launch recommendation

If you are testing casually with minimal risk, sole proprietor can work.

If you intend to build a real Facebook Marketplace business selling physical goods, single-member LLC is usually the better long-term path in Indiana.

Avoid these first-launch mistakes

  • Assuming Indiana marketplace-only relief also answers the RRMC and ST-105 questions for every later sales lane
  • Using an Indianapolis home address for inventory or repeated deliveries without clearing home-occupation and zoning limits first
  • Treating every Facebook Marketplace sale like a marketplace-facilitated transaction

Indiana-specific friction

Indiana marketplace-only relief does not automatically answer the RRMC, ST-105, or county assumed-name branches once direct sales or supplier resale facts appear.

  • Indiana marketplace-only relief does not automatically answer the RRMC, ST-105, or county assumed-name branches once direct sales or supplier resale facts appear.
  • If the business is in Indianapolis, the home-occupation, zoning, delivery-traffic, and local personal-property branches can matter before the first listing is ever live.
  • Indiana's county-versus-state assumed-name split and conflicting public LLC fee materials make record consistency important from day one.

Facebook Marketplace-specific friction

Facebook Marketplace is not one stable business-seller program in the public record. It still mixes consumer local sales, feature-gated shipping flows, and help pages that are partly account-specific.

  • Facebook Marketplace is not one stable business-seller program in the public record. It still mixes consumer local sales, feature-gated shipping flows, and help pages that are partly account-specific.
  • Marketplace access runs through the seller's main Facebook profile and can be restricted.
  • Public Meta help still says Marketplace is intended for consumers and says businesses that list there may be blocked or have listings removed.
  • Shipping, checkout, seller verification, payout setup, protection, and listing limits should be treated as live account and action-date questions rather than permanent certainties.

Insurance reality

Physical-product sellers should think about general liability and product liability coverage early, but no public Facebook Marketplace seller-wide liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance mandate was identified in the reviewed official public sources on April 29, 2026.

  • Physical-product sellers should think about general liability and product liability coverage early, but no public Facebook Marketplace seller-wide liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance mandate was identified in the reviewed official public sources on April 29, 2026.
  • Separate carrier, landlord, warehouse, payment, or commercial-lease requirements can still create insurance obligations even if Facebook Marketplace itself does not publish a universal threshold.
Checklist Quick-start checklist Use the research-backed checklist groups before you spend, before your first sale, and before launch goes live. Everyone 3 groups

Do these before you spend money

  • Pick your entity.
  • Pick your business name.
  • Decide your product lane.
  • Decide whether you will stay Facebook Marketplace-only or also make direct or off-platform sales later.
  • Decide whether you need a resale-purchase path.
  • Stay in low-risk general merchandise for the first launch.
  • Avoid regulated or high-risk categories such as food, supplements, cosmetics, medical-claim products, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, and children's products unless you are doing separate category research.
  • Confirm the offer is not blocked by law, safety rules, or live Facebook Marketplace policy pages.
  • Make sure you can document sourcing, authenticity, and supplier legitimacy.

Do these before your first sale

  • Finish the entity or public-name branch that applies.
  • Get the EIN if applicable.
  • Open a dedicated business bank account.
  • Resolve the marketplace-only, RRMC, resale, and ST-105 branch that fits your exact facts.
  • Check local permits and the Indianapolis branch if applicable.
  • Confirm your real Facebook Marketplace account access and complete the listing, payout, meetup or shipping, and policy setup that matches the real sales lane.

Do these before launch goes live

  • If you will use shipping and checkout, confirm the live Meta fee wording before final pricing.
  • Complete the listing, meetup or shipping, payout, and returns setup branch that matches the real sales lane.
  • Confirm product and category eligibility.
  • Build one or two accurate first listings.
  • Keep the first launch operationally simple and avoid inventory or logistics complexity you have not tested yet.
  • Start small so you can test demand and catch compliance mistakes early.
Choose your setup Entity choice Compare the sole-proprietor and single-member LLC paths before banking, tax setup, and platform onboarding. Everyone 2 options

Sole proprietor

Best for: Best if you want the cheapest and simplest start.

What it means

  • Indiana does not require a state entity-formation filing if you operate under your own legal name.
  • If you use a trade name, Indiana's official Secretary of State FAQ says sole proprietors and general partnerships file the assumed name with the County Recorder in each county where they are situated.
  • You still handle tax registration, local permits, and Facebook Marketplace requirements separately.
  • You usually do not get a liability shield.

Why someone chooses it

  • Faster launch
  • Lower up-front cost
  • Fewer entity-maintenance steps

Main downside: Personal liability

single-member LLC

Best for: Best if you want a more durable setup for a real business.

What it means

  • Indiana LLC formation uses Articles of Organization Domestic Limited Liability Company (State Form 49459).
  • The stronger public fee source reviewed on April 28, 2026 still shows $100.00, while older official online-registration guidance still shows a conflicting $85 generic for-profit figure plus processing.
  • Indiana keeps the biennial Business Entity Report separate from tax filings.
  • Default single-member LLC federal treatment usually stays disregarded unless you elect otherwise.

Why someone chooses it

  • Liability protection
  • Cleaner setup for banking, vendors, bookkeeping, and scaling
  • Better fit for sourcing, branding, insurance, and later hiring

Main downside: Higher setup friction and recurring maintenance than a sole proprietorship

Main path What to do in order The full end-to-end setup path, kept in the same order as the researched guide. Everyone 14 steps
  1. Step 1: Choose a low-risk launch model

    Main guide step 1

    For a first launch, stay inside the safest lane:

    Why it matters: Practical rule: If the product touches health, safety, children, chemicals, dangerous goods, medical claims, or strong intellectual-property risk, slow down and do product-specific compliance research before buying inventory.

    • general merchandise
    • low-breakage, low-return products
    • products with clean invoices and sourcing records
    • no high-risk categories from food, supplements, cosmetics, medical claims, batteries-heavy hazmat, alcohol, children's products
    • no products that require specialized approvals or testing unless the guide is explicitly built for them
  2. Step 2: Choose your name and brand approach

    Main guide step 2

    You need to decide whether you are:

    Why it matters: Important:

    • operating under your own legal name,
    • using a trade name, assumed name, or other public-name branch,
    • reselling existing brands,
    • creating your own brand,
    • or building toward a private-label path.
    • Your Facebook Marketplace identity, payout, and tax details still need to match real-world records.
    • Marketplace selling does not replace state registration, local permits, or your recordkeeping duties.
    • If you want strong long-term control, start your trademark, invoice, and authenticity-record path early.
    • Indiana splits county assumed-name filings, INBiz registrations, and local zoning across different offices instead of one filing.
    • Marketplace-only sales can avoid registration, but that does not automatically solve supplier resale paperwork or local property issues.
    • If you plan to resell physical goods, keep invoices and authenticity records from day one.
  3. Step 3: Form the business

    Main guide step 3

    If you choose sole proprietor: If you sell under your own legal name, Indiana does not require a state entity-formation filing for the sole proprietorship itself.

    • If you choose sole proprietor: If you sell under your own legal name, Indiana does not require a state entity-formation filing for the sole proprietorship itself.
    • If you choose sole proprietor: If you use a trade name, file the assumed name with the County Recorder in each county where the business is situated.
    • If you choose sole proprietor: Keep the county naming branch separate from Indiana tax registration, local zoning, and marketplace-seller analysis.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: Do this in order:
    • If you choose single-member LLC: Check name availability in INBiz before filing.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: File Articles of Organization Domestic Limited Liability Company (State Form 49459) through the Indiana Secretary of State system.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: Name a registered agent and registered office in Indiana, and re-check the live checkout total before filing because older official fee materials still conflict with the current form.
    • If you choose single-member LLC: If the LLC will operate under another name, use the Secretary of State assumed-name branch instead of the county sole-proprietor branch.
  4. Step 4: Get your EIN

    Main guide step 4

    Use the IRS EIN application if applicable. For most LLCs this is part of the normal setup. For many sole proprietors it is optional but still useful for banking, supplier relationships, Facebook Marketplace setup, and privacy.

  5. Step 5: Open banking and bookkeeping

    Main guide step 5

    Do this right away:

    • Open a business checking account.
    • Keep business money separate from personal money.
    • Save every invoice, shipping bill, Facebook Marketplace fee statement, and tax record.
    • Build a sourcing folder and a tax folder from day one.
  6. Step 6: Register for state tax, seller permit, or resale setup

    Main guide step 6

    Safe practical takeaway:

    • Indiana business-tax registration runs through INBiz. Older official Indiana guidance still refers to the application as BT-1, but the live registration workflow routes through INBiz.
    • Indiana's marketplace-facilitator FAQ says a seller that only makes sales through a marketplace facilitator is not required to register and file Indiana sales-tax returns for those marketplace-only sales.
    • If you already registered but now only make marketplace sales, Indiana says you can elect to maintain the account, close it, or adjust filing frequency.
    • If you keep the account and have no direct sales, Indiana says you can file $0 returns.
    • If you also make direct sales through your own site, invoices, local pickup, or in-person events, the marketplace-only carveout no longer controls the whole answer.
    • If Indiana registration is required, the current DOR FAQ still shows a one-time $25 Registered Retail Merchant Certificate fee per location.
    • Indiana uses Form ST-105 for resale or exemption support. Indiana's marketplace guidance also says a marketplace facilitator may issue ST-105 with Other and Marketplace Sales completed for marketplace-only sellers.
    • If you plan to stay Facebook Marketplace-only, keep the marketplace-only Indiana registration carveout explicit and do not assume it answers direct-sales or resale questions that have not happened yet.
    • If you expect to add your own website, direct invoices, or local in-person selling, resolve the Indiana RRMC branch before launch instead of assuming marketplace collection replaces it.
    • If supplier resale support matters on day one, keep the ST-105 branch visible and confirm whether the supplier accepts the marketplace-sales version or expects a seller-held Indiana registration.
  7. Step 7: Check local permits, county rules, and home-business limits

    Main guide step 7

    Indiana does not have one statewide local-business form for every county or city.

    Why it matters: Do this before operating: For Indianapolis specifically:

    • check the city or county branch for local licensing or zoning,
    • contact the County Recorder if you need a sole-proprietor assumed name,
    • contact the city or county planning office if you will operate from home or store inventory,
    • and review local business-property rules if the business will hold taxable equipment or other local-situs property.
    • use the official zoning browser for the exact address,
    • review the dwelling-district home-occupation rules if you will operate from a residence,
    • note that the reviewed ordinance says the activity must stay within the dwelling structure, may use no more than 600 square feet or 30% of the dwelling unit, whichever is less, and may use no more than 1 nonresident assistant,
    • note that the same ordinance says the use may not regularly attract more than 4 individuals simultaneously and restricts stock in trade received, retained, used, stored, or physically transferred on the premises,
    • and do not assume a home-based Facebook Marketplace inventory, prep, or shipping setup is automatically allowed.
  8. Step 8: If you hire employees, handle payroll registrations and insurance

    Main guide step 8

    If you do not hire anyone yet, skip this for now.

    Why it matters: If you hire:

    • Indiana DWD guidance says a new employer should register through ESS after paying the first dollar in payroll to a worker performing covered services in Indiana.
    • Indiana says you must keep filing quarterly wage reports until the DWD account is officially terminated or inactivated.
    • Indiana's new-hire reporting page says employers must report newly hired employees within 20 days after the employee begins working.
    • Indiana's workers' compensation guidance says most businesses must have workers' compensation insurance.
  9. Step 9: Create your Facebook Marketplace account and listing workflow

    Main guide step 9

    Have these ready:

    Why it matters: What the public pages say: What that means in practice:

    • government-issued ID
    • main Facebook profile in good standing
    • phone number
    • email address
    • bank account information if you are using shipped checkout and payouts
    • tax information if you are using shipped checkout and Facebook asks for it
    • Marketplace access is for adults with active Facebook accounts and uses the seller's main profile rather than an additional profile.
    • Access can be restricted for new, inactive, or policy-violating accounts.
    • Public Meta help also says Marketplace is intended for consumers and that businesses that list on Marketplace may be blocked or have listings removed.
    • Do not assume a normal Indiana business can rely on Facebook Marketplace the same way it could rely on a conventional business-seller marketplace.
    • Treat account standing and feature availability as a live operational risk, not a one-time setup item.
  10. Step 10: Choose the right platform plan

    Main guide step 10

    Local or message-based sales: No public universal listing fee was identified for ordinary local-only listings.

    • Local or message-based sales: No public universal listing fee was identified for ordinary local-only listings.
    • Local or message-based sales: Local payment is generally arranged between buyer and seller, often through cash or person-to-person payment methods.
    • Local or message-based sales: This branch does not use the Meta payout stack described in shipping-help pages.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Public Meta merchant-policy pages reviewed on April 29, 2026 say Individual Sellers using onsite checkout are charged a 5% selling fee per transaction with a minimum fee of $0.40.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: The public policy wording says the fee is calculated on the full transaction amount including item price, shipping fees, and applicable taxes.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Public help pages show a feature-gated payout stack and reference both PayPal and bank-account update help pages.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Safe practical takeaway:
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Keep payout guidance provider-agnostic.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Treat local sales and shipped-checkout payouts as different branches.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Re-check the actual account flow on the day you use it.
  11. Step 11: Decide whether brand or authenticity records belong in the initial launch

    Main guide step 11

    Facebook Marketplace does not offer a clean public brand-registry-style program for ordinary sellers in the reviewed public record.

    • Facebook Marketplace does not offer a clean public brand-registry-style program for ordinary sellers in the reviewed public record.
    • What matters first is authenticity, ownership rights, and clean sourcing records.
    • If you are reselling branded goods, keep invoices, receipts, and condition records from day one.
    • If you are building your own brand, trademark planning can still matter, but Facebook Marketplace is usually better treated as a resale or lead-generation surface than as the primary long-term brand system.
  12. Step 12: Decide whether you will ship, meet locally, or both

    Main guide step 12

    Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Best if you want the simplest first launch and do not need onsite checkout.

    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Best if you want the simplest first launch and do not need onsite checkout.
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: What you need:
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: a realistic meetup or handoff plan
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: clear listing descriptions and condition disclosures
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: safe public meeting habits
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: records showing what was sold, when, for how much, and how payment happened
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Important:
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Local transactions are the clearest direct sale branch.
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: They do not get flattened into Facebook-protected or marketplace-facilitated transactions just because the listing started on Marketplace.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Best if:
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: the account is actually eligible,
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: the item qualifies,
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: and you want Facebook-facilitated checkout rather than a pure local deal
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: What the public record says:
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Shipping is not available to all users.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Shipping performance includes Cancellation Rate and Missed Handling Rate.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Public help says cancellation rate should stay below 10%.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Public Meta merchant-policy pages say an individual-seller order that is not fulfilled within 3 business days from purchase may be automatically canceled by Meta.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Public help and policy pages also keep seller protection narrower than many sellers assume.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Practical beginner recommendation:
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Start with one or two low-risk local or seller-managed listings and keep the operational model simple. Expand into shipped checkout only if the account actually supports it and the first live flow matches the public Meta rules you reviewed that day.
  13. Step 13: Confirm product, condition, and category eligibility before scaling

    Main guide step 13

    Before you scale, confirm four different things:

    Why it matters: Important Facebook Marketplace public rules:

    • Listings must be physical products for sale.
    • Services are not allowed.
    • Animals, medical and healthcare products, recalled products, and other noncompliant items are not allowed.
    • Buyers and sellers are also responsible for complying with applicable laws and regulations.
    • the item is lawful in Indiana
    • the item is lawful in Indianapolis if local rules matter
    • the item is allowed by Facebook Marketplace, Meta Commerce Policies, and Community Standards
    • the item is described and priced in a way that will not trigger policy or scam concerns
  14. Step 14: Launch with a compliance-first operating routine

    Main guide step 14

    Once live, keep these habits:

    • separate local direct records from any shipping and checkout records
    • reconcile proceeds, refunds, fees, and tax reports
    • keep invoices and supplier records
    • keep tax reserves separate
    • avoid mixing personal and business spending
    • review listing accuracy and reported issues early

Best practical order for the LLC launch path

  1. Choose the product lane first.
  2. Choose the entity name and public-facing brand approach.
  3. Check name availability and decide whether you need only the county assumed-name branch or both that branch and an Indiana LLC filing.
  4. Get the EIN early.
  5. File the Indiana LLC formation step if using an LLC, or the county assumed-name step if staying sole proprietor and using a public-facing name.
  6. Resolve the marketplace-only, direct-sales, RRMC, and resale branches through INBiz before you rely on any one shortcut answer.
  7. Open the bank account and bookkeeping lane.
  8. If the business uses an Indianapolis address, clear the zoning, home-occupation, and local-property branch.
  9. Confirm your real Facebook Marketplace account access only after the legal, tax, and bank records line up.
  10. Create one or two low-risk listings and keep the first launch inside direct local sales or shipped checkout on Facebook only if the feature is actually available.
  11. Track business-entity-report, local-property, and employment dates on a real calendar.
  12. Re-check local and platform rules before scaling into direct sales, employees, or more inventory-heavy operations.
State filing and tax Indiana tax stack Keep the Indiana registration, tax, and maintenance rules together while you launch. Everyone 7 checks

1. EIN

A single-member LLC generally needs one.

  • A single-member LLC generally needs one.
  • A sole proprietor may not always need one federally, but it is often the cleaner operating choice for Facebook Marketplace, banking, and supplier paperwork.

2. Indiana sales tax, seller permit, or equivalent registration

Indiana business-tax registration runs through INBiz.

  • Indiana business-tax registration runs through INBiz.
  • If an Indiana tax registration is required, DOR says a Registered Retail Merchant Certificate is issued after the application is processed.
  • Current DOR FAQ and handbook materials reviewed on April 28, 2026 still show a one-time $25 RRMC fee per location.
  • An Facebook Marketplace seller that truly remains inside marketplace-only sales should keep that relief explicit instead of assuming it answers every future resale or mixed-channel question.

3. Marketplace or platform tax rule

Indiana's marketplace-facilitator guidance says a seller that only makes sales through a marketplace facilitator is not required to register and file Indiana sales-tax returns for those marketplace-only sales.

  • Indiana's marketplace-facilitator guidance says a seller that only makes sales through a marketplace facilitator is not required to register and file Indiana sales-tax returns for those marketplace-only sales.
  • The same guidance says a seller that previously registered, but now only makes marketplace sales, may maintain the account, close it, or adjust filing frequency.
  • That marketplace-only carveout does not answer a seller who later adds direct website, invoice, or in-person sales.

4. Resale purchases or exempt purchasing

Indiana uses Form ST-105, General Sales Tax Exemption Certificate.

  • Indiana uses Form ST-105, General Sales Tax Exemption Certificate.
  • A registered retailer can use it for resale purchases.
  • Indiana marketplace guidance also says a facilitator can issue ST-105 with Marketplace Sales identified for marketplace-only sellers.
  • For an Facebook Marketplace seller, keep the facilitator-issued resale-support branch separate from your own Indiana registration-backed certificate.

5. Entity tax treatment

IRS guidance reviewed on April 28, 2026 still says a single-member LLC is usually a disregarded entity for federal income-tax purposes unless it elects corporate treatment.

  • IRS guidance reviewed on April 28, 2026 still says a single-member LLC is usually a disregarded entity for federal income-tax purposes unless it elects corporate treatment.
  • Current Indiana tax materials reviewed for this packet still treat LLC filing as dependent on the underlying federal tax classification.

6. Entity filing-fee or recurring state-maintenance rule

Indiana's recurring public-entity maintenance filing verified for this starter lane is the biennial Business Entity Report.

  • Indiana's recurring public-entity maintenance filing verified for this starter lane is the biennial Business Entity Report.
  • This packet did not verify a separate public Indiana LLC franchise tax or annual LLC-only state tax on the official pages reviewed.

7. If the founder changes entity type later

Treat a structure change as a fresh compliance event.

  • Treat a structure change as a fresh compliance event.
  • Re-check EIN rules, state tax registrations, banking records, supplier files, and Facebook Marketplace account details before assuming the old setup carries over cleanly.
Platform setup Facebook Marketplace account and operations Use this section for the Facebook Marketplace-specific account, plan, eligibility, and operations work. Everyone 5 steps
  1. Step 9: Create your Facebook Marketplace account and listing workflow

    Platform step 1

    Have these ready:

    Why it matters: What the public pages say: What that means in practice:

    • government-issued ID
    • main Facebook profile in good standing
    • phone number
    • email address
    • bank account information if you are using shipped checkout and payouts
    • tax information if you are using shipped checkout and Facebook asks for it
    • Marketplace access is for adults with active Facebook accounts and uses the seller's main profile rather than an additional profile.
    • Access can be restricted for new, inactive, or policy-violating accounts.
    • Public Meta help also says Marketplace is intended for consumers and that businesses that list on Marketplace may be blocked or have listings removed.
    • Do not assume a normal Indiana business can rely on Facebook Marketplace the same way it could rely on a conventional business-seller marketplace.
    • Treat account standing and feature availability as a live operational risk, not a one-time setup item.
  2. Step 10: Choose the right platform plan

    Platform step 2

    Local or message-based sales: No public universal listing fee was identified for ordinary local-only listings.

    • Local or message-based sales: No public universal listing fee was identified for ordinary local-only listings.
    • Local or message-based sales: Local payment is generally arranged between buyer and seller, often through cash or person-to-person payment methods.
    • Local or message-based sales: This branch does not use the Meta payout stack described in shipping-help pages.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Public Meta merchant-policy pages reviewed on April 29, 2026 say Individual Sellers using onsite checkout are charged a 5% selling fee per transaction with a minimum fee of $0.40.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: The public policy wording says the fee is calculated on the full transaction amount including item price, shipping fees, and applicable taxes.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Public help pages show a feature-gated payout stack and reference both PayPal and bank-account update help pages.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Safe practical takeaway:
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Keep payout guidance provider-agnostic.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Treat local sales and shipped-checkout payouts as different branches.
    • Shipped orders with checkout on Facebook: Re-check the actual account flow on the day you use it.
  3. Step 11: Decide whether brand or authenticity records belong in the initial launch

    Platform step 3

    Facebook Marketplace does not offer a clean public brand-registry-style program for ordinary sellers in the reviewed public record.

    • Facebook Marketplace does not offer a clean public brand-registry-style program for ordinary sellers in the reviewed public record.
    • What matters first is authenticity, ownership rights, and clean sourcing records.
    • If you are reselling branded goods, keep invoices, receipts, and condition records from day one.
    • If you are building your own brand, trademark planning can still matter, but Facebook Marketplace is usually better treated as a resale or lead-generation surface than as the primary long-term brand system.
  4. Step 12: Decide whether you will ship, meet locally, or both

    Platform step 4

    Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Best if you want the simplest first launch and do not need onsite checkout.

    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Best if you want the simplest first launch and do not need onsite checkout.
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: What you need:
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: a realistic meetup or handoff plan
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: clear listing descriptions and condition disclosures
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: safe public meeting habits
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: records showing what was sold, when, for how much, and how payment happened
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Important:
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: Local transactions are the clearest direct sale branch.
    • Option 1: Local meetup, pickup, or drop-off: They do not get flattened into Facebook-protected or marketplace-facilitated transactions just because the listing started on Marketplace.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Best if:
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: the account is actually eligible,
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: the item qualifies,
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: and you want Facebook-facilitated checkout rather than a pure local deal
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: What the public record says:
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Shipping is not available to all users.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Shipping performance includes Cancellation Rate and Missed Handling Rate.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Public help says cancellation rate should stay below 10%.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Public Meta merchant-policy pages say an individual-seller order that is not fulfilled within 3 business days from purchase may be automatically canceled by Meta.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Public help and policy pages also keep seller protection narrower than many sellers assume.
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Practical beginner recommendation:
    • Option 2: Seller-managed shipping with checkout on Facebook if available: Start with one or two low-risk local or seller-managed listings and keep the operational model simple. Expand into shipped checkout only if the account actually supports it and the first live flow matches the public Meta rules you reviewed that day.
  5. Step 13: Confirm product, condition, and category eligibility before scaling

    Platform step 5

    Before you scale, confirm four different things:

    Why it matters: Important Facebook Marketplace public rules:

    • Listings must be physical products for sale.
    • Services are not allowed.
    • Animals, medical and healthcare products, recalled products, and other noncompliant items are not allowed.
    • Buyers and sellers are also responsible for complying with applicable laws and regulations.
    • the item is lawful in Indiana
    • the item is lawful in Indianapolis if local rules matter
    • the item is allowed by Facebook Marketplace, Meta Commerce Policies, and Community Standards
    • the item is described and priced in a way that will not trigger policy or scam concerns
Local branch Local permits and Indianapolis branch These local and city checks can still change the answer even after the state and platform path is clear. Location-specific 2 branches

Local permits and location checks

Indiana pushes many real-world naming, permit, zoning, and occupancy questions down to counties or municipalities.

  • Indiana pushes many real-world naming, permit, zoning, and occupancy questions down to counties or municipalities.
  • For any place where the business will operate:
  • check the city, county, or state routing pages named in the source directory,
  • contact the local clerk, zoning, building, or licensing office when the address matters,
  • ask whether home inventory, delivery activity, signage, or storage changes the approval path,
  • keep written answers with the address and date when possible.
  • Typical local risk areas:
  • county assumed-name filing
  • home occupation restrictions
  • zoning for storage
  • delivery or carrier traffic
  • signage
  • business tangible personal property

Indianapolis Appendix

If the business operates in Indianapolis, add one more review layer.

  • If the business operates in Indianapolis, add one more review layer.
  • The official Indianapolis zoning browser should be part of the first local review for the exact address.
  • The official dwelling-district zoning ordinance surfaced by the city's zoning system says home occupations must remain clearly incidental and subordinate to residential use and limits the activity area to no more than 600 square feet or 30% of the dwelling unit, whichever is less.
  • The same ordinance says all on-premises activity must occur within the dwelling structure, only 1 nonresident assistant is permitted, and goods or stock in trade on the premises remain constrained.
  • If the founder will store inventory, run prep work, or create recurring delivery traffic from home, get local confirmation before launch.
  • Indiana's DLGF personal-property guidance says businesses with business tangible personal property may still have a local filing branch even though inventory is no longer taxed.
Optional branch Employees and insurance Use this branch if you plan to hire or need the insurance follow-up that comes with scaling. Only if hiring or scaling 5 branches

1. Employer registration

Indiana DWD guidance says a new employer should register through ESS after paying the first dollar in payroll to a worker performing covered services in Indiana.

  • Indiana DWD guidance says a new employer should register through ESS after paying the first dollar in payroll to a worker performing covered services in Indiana.
  • Indiana says you must keep filing quarterly wage reports until the DWD account is officially terminated or inactivated.
  • Indiana's new-hire reporting page says employers must report newly hired employees within 20 days after the employee begins working.

2. Workers' compensation

Indiana's new-hire reporting page says employers must report newly hired employees within 20 days after the employee begins working.

  • Indiana's new-hire reporting page says employers must report newly hired employees within 20 days after the employee begins working.
  • Indiana's workers' compensation guidance says most businesses must have workers' compensation insurance.

3. Disability, paid leave, or similar coverage

Indiana's workers' compensation guidance says most businesses must have workers' compensation insurance.

  • Indiana's workers' compensation guidance says most businesses must have workers' compensation insurance.
  • No separate Indiana state disability-insurance or paid-family-leave payroll program was verified on the official employer pages reviewed on April 28, 2026.

4. Exemption certificate if applicable

Indiana DOR issues a Worker's Compensation Exemption Clearance Certificate in eligible fact patterns, but this is not the normal starter-path filing.

  • Indiana DOR issues a Worker's Compensation Exemption Clearance Certificate in eligible fact patterns, but this is not the normal starter-path filing.

Insurance reality

Physical-product sellers should think about general liability and product liability coverage early, but no public Facebook Marketplace seller-wide liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance mandate was identified in the reviewed official public sources on April 29, 2026.

  • Physical-product sellers should think about general liability and product liability coverage early, but no public Facebook Marketplace seller-wide liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance mandate was identified in the reviewed official public sources on April 29, 2026.
  • Separate carrier, landlord, warehouse, payment, or commercial-lease requirements can still create insurance obligations even if Facebook Marketplace itself does not publish a universal threshold.
Stay compliant Ongoing compliance calendar Keep the recurring compliance checks and live-operating routine visible after launch. Everyone 5 groups

Before first sale

  • Finish the entity or assumed-name setup.
  • Get the EIN if applicable.
  • Open the bank account.
  • Complete the controlling Indiana registration or marketplace-tax analysis that fits your facts.
  • Check local permits.
  • Confirm your live Facebook account branch and listing flow.

Before first live launch

  • Confirm the product is allowed and accurately described.
  • Confirm whether the listing is local direct or shipping and checkout.
  • Finish meetup, shipping, returns, and recordkeeping setup.
  • Build accurate listings.

Monthly

  • Reconcile payments, fees, refunds, and chargebacks.
  • Review tax reserves and supporting records.
  • Review listing status, seller ratings, and policy notices.
  • Review whether your account access or shipping eligibility changed.

Quarterly

  • If the state assigns you a filing cadence, follow the cadence on the account.
  • Review whether your sales mix changed enough to alter the Indiana marketplace or direct-sale answer.
  • Review whether home-based inventory, meetup, or shipping activity still fits your local rules.

Annual or periodic

  • Re-check the state annual-report or entity-maintenance branch that applies to your legal setup.
  • Re-check any local business-license, occupancy, or personal-property renewals that apply to your operating address.
  • Re-check the state employer pages if you add employees.
  • Re-check live Meta help and policy pages before relying on an older feature, fee, or protection assumption.
Avoid these Common mistakes These are the repeated beginner errors called out in the research pack. Everyone 7 mistakes

Common Mistakes New Operators Make

  • Assuming Indiana marketplace-only relief also answers the RRMC and ST-105 questions for every later sales lane
  • Using an Indianapolis home address for inventory or repeated deliveries without clearing home-occupation and zoning limits first
  • Treating every Facebook Marketplace sale like a marketplace-facilitated transaction
  • Treating Facebook Marketplace like a stable business-seller platform instead of a consumer-oriented, feature-gated surface
  • Assuming a payout rail, shipping option, or protection benefit exists just because an old help page mentioned it
  • Mixing personal and business money
  • Adding local pickup, direct invoicing, or off-platform sales later without re-checking the state tax posture

Practical first-launch recommendation

If you are testing casually with minimal risk, sole proprietor can work.

If you intend to build a real Facebook Marketplace business selling physical goods, single-member LLC is usually the better long-term path in Indiana.

Full appendix Full official source directory Every official source row from the research pack, kept in its full table structure. Everyone 48 rows

Source group

Statewide Start

INBiz

State start-here page

Form / portal Business Filings portal
Fee None for the page
Timing First planning step
Who needs it Everyone

Official Indiana business-filings hub with filing, reporting, update, and reinstatement branches.

Open official link

INBiz

State business portal

Form / portal Indiana Business Roadmap
Fee None for the page
Timing Before launch
Who needs it Founders forming entities or registering for taxes

Official roadmap linking Secretary of State, EIN, DOR, DWD, and worker's compensation steps.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

State small business support hub

Form / portal New and Small Business Education
Fee None for the page
Timing Optional
Who needs it Founders needing tax orientation

Official DOR support page that points to the Indiana tax handbook and education tools.

Open official link

Source group

Entity Choice and Formation

IN.gov

Compare business types

Form / portal Business Owner's Guide
Fee None for the page
Timing First decision
Who needs it Everyone

Official statewide guide that explains there is no single comprehensive business license and separates entity, tax, and local branches.

Open official link

Indiana Secretary of State / INBiz

Formation hub

Form / portal Business forms and filing links
Fee Varies
Timing Before launch
Who needs it Filing entities

Starting point for current SOS forms and filings.

Open official link

Indiana Secretary of State

Default entity formation filing

Form / portal Articles of Organization Domestic Limited Liability Company (State Form 49459)
Fee State Form 49459 shows $100.00
Timing At formation
Who needs it single-member LLC founders

Current form reviewed on April 27, 2026 includes the exact fee line and registered-agent fields.

Open official link

Indiana Secretary of State FAQ

Registered-agent rule

Form / portal FAQ guidance
Fee None for the page
Timing During formation
Who needs it single-member LLC founders

Indiana says the business must continuously maintain a registered agent and registered office in Indiana, and PO boxes are not acceptable.

Open official link

Indiana Secretary of State legacy FAQ

Fee cross-check caveat

Form / portal Online registration FAQ
Fee Older public page shows $85 generic for-profit online registration plus processing
Timing Re-check on filing day
Who needs it Filing entities

This older official page conflicts with the current State Form 49459 fee line, so treat it as a retained caveat rather than the primary fee source.

Open official link

INBiz / Indiana Secretary of State

Ongoing entity maintenance

Form / portal Business Entity Report
Fee $32.00 on INBiz; $50.00 by paper for for-profit businesses
Timing First report due two years after formation or registration; then every other year
Who needs it single-member LLC founders

Official INBiz page reviewed on April 27, 2026 says the due date is the month and day the business was formed or registered, with until the end of that month before the report is past due.

Open official link

Source group

Sole Proprietor and Local Name Filings

Indiana Secretary of State FAQ

Sole proprietor baseline

Form / portal County-recorder branch
Fee County-set or none
Timing Before launch
Who needs it Sole proprietors

Official FAQ says to register with the local county recorder.

Open official link

Indiana Secretary of State FAQ

Sole proprietor assumed-name rule

Form / portal County Recorder assumed-name filing
Fee County-set
Timing Before using a trade name
Who needs it Sole proprietors and general partnerships

Official FAQ says sole proprietors and general partnerships file in each county where they are situated.

Open official link

Indiana Secretary of State

Entity assumed-name filing

Form / portal Certification of Assumed Business Name (State Form 30353)
Fee $30.00 per name for for-profit entities
Timing When the entity uses another name
Who needs it LLCs and other state-filed entities

Businesses that file with the Secretary of State do not file entity assumed names at the county.

Open official link

Source group

Federal and State Tax Setup

IRS

EIN overview and online application

Form / portal EIN application
Fee Free
Timing Early in setup
Who needs it LLCs, employers, founders who want an EIN

IRS says you can get an EIN directly from the IRS for free.

Open official link

IRS

EIN paper form

Form / portal Form SS-4
Fee Free
Timing If not applying online
Who needs it Founders using paper, mail, or fax

Official reference page for the current SS-4 form and instructions.

Open official link

INBiz / Indiana DOR

State tax registration

Form / portal Business tax registration / INBiz
Fee RRMC fee varies by need
Timing Before taxable direct sales or other tax registration triggers
Who needs it Businesses needing Indiana tax registration

Official Indiana tax-registration page. Older official Indiana materials still refer to this registration application as BT-1.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

RRMC fee support

Form / portal DOR business FAQ
Fee $25 one-time RRMC fee per location
Timing When RRMC registration is required
Who needs it Retail sellers with an Indiana location or other registration trigger

Current DOR FAQ reviewed on April 27, 2026 still says the RRMC carries a one-time $25 fee per location.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

Remote-seller threshold rule

Form / portal Remote seller guidance
Fee None for the page
Timing Before registration if the seller is out of state
Who needs it Remote sellers

Indiana says the current economic threshold is $100,000 only, effective January 1, 2024.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

Marketplace or platform tax rule

Form / portal Marketplace-facilitator FAQ
Fee None for the page
Timing Before and after launch
Who needs it Marketplace sellers using facilitator channels

Indiana says a seller that only makes sales through a marketplace facilitator is not required to register and file Indiana sales-tax returns for those marketplace-only sales. A previously registered seller may maintain the account, close it, or adjust filing frequency.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

Marketplace account maintenance branch

Form / portal Remote seller FAQs
Fee None for the page
Timing If account status needs to change
Who needs it Remote sellers and marketplace sellers with nexus questions

Indiana says sellers that met only the old 200-transaction threshold may close the sales-tax account in 2024 if they do not meet the $100,000 threshold, while still filing required 2024 returns.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

Resale or exemption certificate

Form / portal Form ST-105
Fee None for the form
Timing After registration if applicable
Who needs it Sellers buying inventory for resale

Indiana also says marketplace facilitators may issue ST-105 with Marketplace Sales completed for marketplace-only sellers.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

Recordkeeping and small-business tax guide

Form / portal Indiana Tax Guide for New and Small Business Owners
Fee None for the guide
Timing Ongoing
Who needs it New businesses

Current DOR handbook reviewed on April 27, 2026 supports the RRMC fee and general tax-registration workflow.

Open official link

Source group

Entity Tax Maintenance

IRS / Indiana DOR

Entity tax treatment

Form / portal Guidance page
Fee None for the page
Timing During planning and annually
Who needs it single-member LLC founders

Default federal treatment is disregarded-entity treatment unless an election changes it.

Open official link

INBiz / Indiana Secretary of State

Recurring entity filing or fee

Form / portal Business Entity Report
Fee $32.00 on INBiz; $50.00 by paper for most for-profit businesses
Timing First report due two years after formation or registration; then every other year
Who needs it Indiana LLCs

Official INBiz page also says filing taxes is not the same as filing the business-entity report.

Open official link

Source group

Federal Reporting

FinCEN

BOI or other federal reporting status

Form / portal FinCEN BOI rule Q&A
Fee None
Timing Check before filing
Who needs it Everyone forming an entity

As of April 27, 2026, domestic entities created in the United States are exempt from BOI reporting under the March 26, 2025 interim final rule.

Open official link

Source group

Employees, Payroll, and Insurance

Indiana DWD

Employer registration

Form / portal ESS / unemployment-employer registration
Fee None for registration
Timing When the employer qualifies
Who needs it Businesses hiring employees

DWD says qualifying employers register through ESS and then receive a SUTA number.

Open official link

Indiana DWD

Payroll start trigger and quarterly reporting

Form / portal Wage-reporting guidance
Fee None for the page
Timing At first payroll and quarterly after
Who needs it Employers with Indiana-covered workers

DWD says issue the first dollar in Indiana payroll before registration and keep filing quarterly wage reports until the account is terminated or inactivated.

Open official link

Indiana DCS

New-hire reporting

Form / portal Indiana New Hire Reporting Center
Fee None for the page
Timing Within 20 days after the employee begins working
Who needs it Employers with Indiana operations

Indiana says all employers must report newly hired employees within 20 days.

Open official link

Indiana Workers' Compensation Board

Workers' compensation

Form / portal Coverage through carrier or approved self-insurance
Fee Premium-based or varies
Timing Before or at hiring
Who needs it Most employers with covered workers

Indiana says most businesses must have workers' compensation insurance.

Open official link

Indiana DOR

Exemption certificate if applicable

Form / portal Worker's Compensation Exemption Clearance Certificate
Fee Varies by application
Timing Only when the facts fit
Who needs it Eligible independent contractors or businesses not required to carry coverage

Not part of the default starter path, but it is an official conditional branch.

Open official link

Source group

Platform Setup

Facebook Help Center

Marketplace access and account eligibility

Form / portal Marketplace access rules
Fee None stated
Timing Before launch
Who needs it All operators on the platform

Public help says Marketplace is for adults with active accounts, uses the seller's main profile, and can be restricted for new, inactive, or policy-violating accounts. Public help also says Marketplace is intended for consumers and that businesses that list there may be blocked or have listings removed.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Listing creation

Form / portal Listing flow
Fee No public listing fee identified on the reviewed page
Timing Before first listing
Who needs it All operators

Public help describes creating an Item for sale listing with photos, item information, and publishing. Direct open may redirect to login or device-specific help.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Selling modes overview

Form / portal Ways to sell
Fee None for the page
Timing Before launch
Who needs it All operators

Public help says you can sell through Marketplace and may be able to offer shipping depending on where you live.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center ; Meta legal page

Shipping and checkout branch

Form / portal Shipping and checkout flow
Fee Public Individual Seller selling fee posture: 5% per transaction with $0.40 minimum for onsite checkout
Timing Only if the feature is available
Who needs it Sellers using shipping and checkout

Public help says shipping and buying or creating prepaid labels are not available to all users. Merchant policies keep the fee and protection wording tied to Individual Sellers.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Policy and restricted-item baseline

Form / portal Commerce-policy help
Fee None
Timing During sourcing and listing
Who needs it All operators

Public help says Marketplace listings must comply with Meta Commerce Policies and Community Standards and gives examples of prohibited items and services.

Open official link

Source group

Fulfillment, Logistics, or Store Operations

Facebook Help Center

Direct local sale flow and safety

Form / portal Local meetup workflow
Fee None
Timing Before local transactions
Who needs it Direct local sellers

Public help says suspicious activity should be reported, and local sales between an individual seller and buyer are transactions between those two parties.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Seller verification for shipping

Form / portal Seller verification and tax-info workflow
Fee None for the page
Timing If using shipping and checkout
Who needs it Sellers using shipped checkout

Public help says shipped selling can require identity, address, and tax-information documents. The page also says shipping is not available to all users.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Listing-volume limit

Form / portal Listing limits
Fee None
Timing Before scaling
Who needs it High-volume operators

Public help says there is a monthly limit of 20 total listings, with narrower limits in some categories.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Shipping performance

Form / portal Shipping performance tools
Fee None for the page
Timing If using shipping
Who needs it Sellers using shipped checkout

Public help says cancellation rate should stay below 10% and that missed standards may result in a temporary loss of shipping.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Returns and refund posture

Form / portal Returns help
Fee None for the page
Timing During setup and ongoing
Who needs it Sellers using checkout and local pickup

Public help says checkout purchases follow the seller's return policy, that individual-seller buyers contact the seller first, and that returns and refunds for local pickup purchases are not available from Facebook.

Open official link

Source group

Insurance Checkpoint

Facebook Help Center

Platform insurance threshold or requirement

Form / portal Marketplace overview
Fee None identified
Timing Re-check before scaling
Who needs it Operators with physical-product risk

No public Facebook Marketplace seller-liability-insurance threshold or universal insurance requirement was identified in the reviewed public help pages on April 29, 2026.

Open official link

Source group

Indianapolis Branch

City of Indianapolis / Marion County

City start page

Form / portal City portal
Fee None for the page
Timing If business is in Indianapolis
Who needs it Indianapolis-based businesses

Official city portal. This packet did not verify one universal retail-business-license page for the standard Facebook Marketplace starter lane.

Open official link

City of Indianapolis / Marion County

City zoning branch

Form / portal Indy zoning browser and map hub
Fee None for the page
Timing Before operating from home or storing inventory
Who needs it Indianapolis-based businesses

Use the actual address. This is the first local check for home-based Facebook Marketplace activity.

Open official link

City of Indianapolis / Marion County

Home-occupation ordinance

Form / portal Home-occupation ordinance PDF
Fee None for the ordinance
Timing Before residential operations
Who needs it Indianapolis-based home businesses

Official ordinance limits the space, staff, traffic, and stock-in-trade footprint for home occupations.

Open official link

Indiana DLGF

Local property reporting branch

Form / portal Personal property reporting
Fee Varies by facts
Timing If the business has local-situs property
Who needs it Indianapolis-based businesses with business property

DLGF says businesses with business tangible personal property may have a filing branch even though inventory is no longer taxed.

Open official link

Source group

Facebook Tax, Payments, and Performance Notes

Facebook Help Center

Ratings and reputation

Form / portal Ratings help
Fee None
Timing Ongoing
Who needs it All operators

Public help says buyer and seller ratings are available and seller ratings become public after 5 or more eligible ratings.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center

Payouts and payment paths

Form / portal Shipping payout flow
Fee No separate public payout fee identified beyond checkout selling-fee rules
Timing If using shipping and checkout
Who needs it Sellers using shipped checkout

Public help shows a feature-gated payout stack and references both PayPal and bank-account update help pages, so this packet keeps payout wording provider-agnostic.

Open official link

Facebook Help Center ; Meta legal page

Chargebacks and disputes

Form / portal Chargeback and protection help
Fee USD 20 chargeback fee if the issuer decides in the customer's favor
Timing Ongoing if using checkout
Who needs it Sellers using shipped checkout

Public help says card issuers decide chargeback outcomes and that customer-favorable decisions can deduct the transaction amount plus a USD 20 fee.

Open official link

Meta legal page

Seller protection and fulfillment window

Form / portal Seller protection, performance, and accountability policies
Fee None for the page
Timing During shipping and checkout setup
Who needs it Sellers using shipped checkout

Public merchant policies say seller protection is currently available only in the US, limited to covered onsite-checkout items priced at $2,000 or less, and that some protection branches depend on using a Meta-generated shipping label.

Open official link