Real asking prices from 0 active skid steer and compact track loader listings across the U.S. dealer market. Covers Bobcat, Caterpillar, Case, John Deere, and ASV — updated from live inventory data.
Top 5 manufacturers by listing volume. Prices are dealer asking prices from active listings — final sale prices typically come in 5–15% below ask. Check current skid steer listings and auction results to stay informed on market pricing.
| Manufacturer | Listings | Min Ask | Max Ask | Avg Ask |
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Key factors that influence where a used skid steer lands in the price range.
ROC is the key spec. Small-frame units (1,000–1,400 lb ROC) price $15K–$35K. Medium-frame (1,400–2,000 lb ROC) run $25K–$55K. Large-frame machines (2,000+ lb ROC) push $45K–$85K at the upper end.
Compact track loaders (CTLs) command 15–25% premiums over wheeled skid steers. Rubber track condition drives significant price variance — a full undercarriage replacement on a CTL runs $8K–$18K, often making a high-hour tracked unit overpriced vs. a wheeled equivalent.
Skid steers work hard and accumulate hours fast. Units under 1,500 hours are the premium tier — expect 25–40% more than comparable 3,000–5,000-hour machines. Above 5,000 hours, price suppression is significant regardless of brand.
Standard flow vs. high-flow (4,000+ psi) matters for attachment compatibility. High-flow units price 8–15% above standard-flow equivalents — critical for brush cutter, cold planer, and hydraulic hammer buyers.
CEG connects your inventory with buyers actively searching the market right now.
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