Undo the last repricing cycle

How to roll back every price the repricer just changed on eBay in one click, and the one limit to know before you rely on it.

If the repricer just pushed a set of prices you did not expect, you do not need to fix each listing by hand. Undo last cycle restores every price the repricer changed in its most recent run back to what it was before, with a confirmation step so nothing is reverted by accident. This article covers where to find it, what it does, and the one limit worth knowing before you rely on it.

What it does

On the Repricer page, the Undo last cycle control puts back every price the repricer changed on eBay during its most recent run. You are shown a confirmation step before anything happens, so you can back out if you were not actually looking to revert the whole cycle.

How to undo a cycle

  1. Go to the Repricer page.
  2. Find the Undo last cycle control.
  3. Select it, then confirm on the prompt that appears. This is the point to stop if you only meant to check what changed, rather than revert it.
  4. Wait for the rollback to finish. It pushes each restored price back to eBay one by one, so it can take a minute to complete.

Only the most recent cycle can be undone

Undo last cycle rolls back the repricer’s most recent run only. It cannot reach further back to an earlier cycle, so if the repricer has already run again since the change you wanted to undo, this control will not restore prices from before that. It can also take a minute to finish, since each listing’s price is written back to eBay individually.

Why this matters

Repricing rules act on every matching listing at once, so a rule that behaves differently than you expected can move a lot of prices in a single cycle. Having a one-click way to put everything back, rather than correcting each listing manually, gives you a fast way to recover while you check and adjust the rule that caused it.

See the related articles below for more on setting up and checking repricer rules.

Last updated 2026-07-04.

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