// GUIDE

Cross-Marketplace NFT Relisting: List Bot-Bought NFTs on Any Venue (2026)

A normal NFT AMM pool sells what it buys right back onto the same marketplace, at the same flat price, rare or not. Chadbot breaks both limits: relist on the venue you choose, and filter by rarity before you list. Here's how — and why it matters.

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Quick answer
On Chadbot, when a bot or AMM pool buys an NFT for you, you choose which marketplace to relist it on — Tensor or Magic Eden — independently of where it was bought, and you can apply a trait/rarity filter before listing. Traditional AMM pools can't: they relist only on the venue they bought from, at the pool price, treating a rare grail the same as a floor piece. Chadbot fixes both — sell where demand is, and stop dumping rares at floor.
post-buy relist · your venue + rarity filter
#1337 bought 1.20 ◎
rank #42 · top 1%rarity filter
relist on Magic Eden1.85 ◎your choice
buy venue ≠ sell venue · price above floor by rarity
Traditional AMM pools relist only on the venue they bought from, at floor. Chadbot lets you relist on the marketplace you pick — and filter/price by rarity first.
// Key takeaways
  • Traditional AMM pools have relist lock-in: buy venue = sell venue, always.
  • Chadbot decouples buy venue from sell venue — relist on Tensor or Magic Eden by choice.
  • A pre-listing rarity/trait filter lets you hold or price rares above floor instead of dumping them.
  • Sell where liquidity and price are best right now, not where the pool happened to buy.
  • One active listing per item — you're routing each NFT to its best venue, not double-listing.

The limitation in a normal AMM pool

A standard NFT AMM pool is a closed loop: it buys an NFT on the marketplace it runs on, then relists that same NFT back onto the same marketplace at its curve price. Two consequences fall out of that:

  • Venue lock-in. If demand (or the better ask) is on the other marketplace, you can't follow it — the pool only sells where it bought.
  • Rarity blindness. The pool relists every NFT it accumulates at the same price. Buy a 1-of-1 grail and a floor common in the same pool, and both get listed at the same flat number — so you effectively floor your rares.

How Chadbot decouples buy venue from sell venue

Chadbot separates the buy venue from the sell venue. An NFT your bot accumulated on Tensor can be relisted on Magic Eden — or vice versa — because the resale venue is a choice you make, not a property inherited from the purchase. You point each item at whichever marketplace gives you the best shot at a sale, then price it there.

Rarity & trait filter before listing

Before anything is relisted, Chadbot lets you apply a rarity or trait filter, so accumulated NFTs aren't all treated identically. Rare pieces can be held back or priced above floor by their rank; common pieces can be flipped at the floor-undercut. The pool stops being a blunt instrument that dumps everything at one price.

Traditional AMM vs Chadbot

Traditional AMM poolChadbot
Resale venueLocked to the buy venueYour choice — Tensor or Magic Eden
Rarity awarenessNone — every NFT relisted the sameTrait/rarity filter before listing
Rare piecesDumped at the flat pool priceHeld or priced above floor by rank
Following demandCan't — sells where it boughtRelist where buyers/price are best

Why it matters

  • Sell into liquidity. Route resales to whichever venue has the buyers right now instead of being stuck on the buy side's marketplace.
  • Protect rare upside. A rarity filter means a grail you accidentally accumulated doesn't get relisted at floor — it's priced for what it's worth.
  • One strategy, both venues. Accumulate wherever it's cheap; distribute wherever it sells best.
Let rares skip the pool price
Set the rarity filter so anything in the top band is excluded from the flat relist and routed to a manual or above-floor listing. The common pieces keep cycling at the pool's undercut; the rares get the premium they deserve — instead of being the cheapest grail on the board.
Point resales at the hot venue
Use the screener to see which marketplace a collection's volume is concentrated on, then relist there. Buying where it's cheap and selling where it's liquid is exactly the spread the venue lock-in normally costs you.

Set it up

  1. Run a buy bot or [AMM pool](/nft-amm-bidding) to accumulate NFTs.
  2. Set the relist venue — Tensor or Magic Eden, independent of where it bought.
  3. Apply a rarity/trait filter for how rares vs commons are handled.
  4. Set the resale price — by rarity / above floor, not the flat pool price.
  5. Let it list from the bots page.

FAQ

What does cross-marketplace relisting mean on Chadbot?

When an automated bot or AMM pool buys an NFT for you, Chadbot lets you choose which marketplace to relist it on for resale — Tensor or Magic Eden — independently of where it was bought. The buy venue and the sell venue are decoupled.

Why can't a normal AMM pool do this?

A standard NFT AMM pool relists the NFTs it buys back onto the same marketplace the pool runs on, at the pool's curve price. It can't route a buy from one venue to a sale on another, and it has no notion of an item's rarity — every NFT it buys is relisted the same way.

How does the rarity filter before listing help?

Without it, a pool relists a rare grail at the same floor-ish price as a common piece — leaving money on the table. Chadbot's trait/rarity filter lets you treat rares differently: hold or price them above floor by rarity instead of dumping them at the pool price.

Why relist on a different marketplace than I bought on?

Liquidity and prices differ by venue and by moment. If a collection's buyers (or better asks) are on Magic Eden right now but your pool accumulated on Tensor, being able to relist on Magic Eden means you sell where demand actually is, instead of being locked to the buy venue.

Do I still avoid double-selling?

Yes — each NFT is relisted on the single venue you route it to, so there's one active listing per item. You're choosing the best venue per item, not duplicating the listing everywhere.

This is the sell side of automation — pair it with an AMM pool or auto-bidding to accumulate, rarity bidding to target the good pieces, and the screener to time the venue.

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