US woman buys a $100,000 pallet of Apple products then realizes the reality of its worth

Published on Jan 27, 2026 at 8:41 PM (UTC+4)
by Daisy Edwards

Last updated on Jan 27, 2026 at 8:41 PM (UTC+4)
Edited by Amelia Jean Hershman-Jones

A US creator thought she had just scored the deal of a lifetime after buying a $100,000 pallet of returned Apple products online.

The listing promised a mountain of premium tech, so she put down $5,700 and hoped the gamble would pay off.

When the pallet arrived, it looked more like a heap of random returns than a treasure chest.

Then she started opening boxes, and tech was revealed, as well as some pull-up diapers for babies, and the reality of its worth set in fast.

EXPLORE SBX CARS – Supercar auctions starting soon powered by Supercar Blondie

She bought a $100,000 pallet of ‘broken’ Apple products

The pallet was advertised with an eye-catching photo of stacked Apple tech and an estimated retail value that felt too tempting to ignore: $100,000.

Once it turned up, the haul included a mix of tablets, laptops, headphones, chargers, and Apple accessories, with plenty of items that were clearly returned for a reason.

A big issue showed up immediately, and it was that many devices had no chargers, which made testing them difficult, and several had notes attached that flat out said they would not charge or power on.

Early unboxes revealed cracked screens, missing parts, and gear that looked dusty and heavily used, even a throwback with a retro iPod Touch.

Things did not improve as the YouTuber unpacked more boxes.

Multiple tablets did not turn on, and even when something showed signs of life, it often had problems like poor responsiveness or shutting itself down.

One iPad that powered on was password-locked, which meant it could not be properly used.

The reality of the pallet’s worth

The biggest hope was the MacBooks.

There were several MacBook Pros that looked almost new and were the main reason she had bought the pallet in the first place.

But after charging attempts, none of them powered on, which instantly wiped out the value she expected to recover.

At one point, she even suspected some devices may have been gutted, leaving shells that looked legit but felt unusually light.

A Mac mini did turn on, but it was activation locked, turning another potential win into a dead end.

In the end, the few items that worked were low value compared to the original claim, and some accessories like wireless chargers and watch bands looked usable, but they did not come close to balancing out the pile of non-functional electronics.

This pallet was clearly for a skilled repair shop and not a YouTuber, and not all the pieces of tech were even Apple products.

The conclusion was brutal: the $100,000 value number did not match the reality, and the pallet felt far more like someone else’s rejected returns than a bargain; it even had a packet of diapers.

DISCOVER SBX CARS: The global premium car auction platform powered by Supercar Blondie

As a Content Writer since January 2025, Daisy’s focus is on writing stories on topics spanning the entirety of the website. As well as writing about EVs, the history of cars, tech, and celebrities, Daisy is always the first to pitch the seed of an idea to the audience editor team, who collab with her to transform it into a fully informative and engaging story.