Carousell offers optional promotion tools to help your listing stand out. A bump pushes your listing back to the top of search results for a short time, which can be useful for competitive categories or items that sell fast when they’re visible. Spotlight is a more prominent placement that can attract more views over a longer period, and there are other small visibility boosters that appear for specific categories or events. These features usually require Carousell Coins, the in-app currency you can buy in bundles or earn through occasional promotions. Think of promos like ad spend: they don’t guarantee a sale, but they can accelerate it if your photos, pricing, and title are already strong. Before you tap confirm, the app will show the coin cost and duration so you know exactly what you’re spending. If you change your mind, canceling mid-promo generally doesn’t refund the cost, so plan your timing. Use promotions strategically—right after you list, during peak browsing hours, or when you refresh photos and pricing for a second wind.
Carousell Protection is the platform’s built-in checkout that holds the buyer’s payment until the item is delivered or the meet-up is confirmed. It’s designed to reduce risk for both sides, and it can unlock more buyers who prefer a safer, trackable transaction. When you sell through Protection, expect a small processing or service fee to be shown at checkout; buyers see their fee on their end, and sellers see a payout summary that shows what lands in your balance after any applicable fees. The exact structure varies by market and payment method, but the flow is consistent: you accept an offer, you see the net payout estimate, and you decide to proceed or counter. If shipping is part of the flow, you’ll typically choose a courier label or method in-app. Labels and shipping charges may be paid by the buyer or the seller depending on what you chose, and they’re separated from promotion spend. Once the buyer receives and accepts the item—or the hold period passes—Carousell releases the funds to your wallet or linked account according to the local payout schedule.
Before we dive in, a quick grounding note: only Cartier or a qualified jeweler can give you a definitive yes. What you can do at home is stack the odds in your favor by checking details fakes often miss. Gather a few simple tools: a bright desk lamp, a clean microfiber cloth, a strong magnet, a 10x loupe (cheap ones work), and, if you have it, a small digital scale and calipers. Take your time; move slowly and work in good light. You’ll look at the bracelet’s shape, finish, engraving, screws, and any stones, then sanity‑check paperwork. If your piece passes most checks with ease, you’re probably in safe territory—though not guaranteed. If it stumbles on several, that’s your sign to pause before wearing or insuring it. Keep in mind that wear, polishing, and resizing can soften details, especially on vintage pieces. When in doubt, book a boutique appointment; it’s routine, and they’ll see things our eyes miss. With that, let’s go step by step.
Sometimes the real alternative to car28 is not another car at all, but a different mix of wheels. An e-bike obliterates short trips, turns parking from a headache into a hook on your wall, and costs pennies to operate. Add panniers or a small cargo trailer and it becomes a grocery hauler. Transit, where it is decent, can anchor your commute and reduce the miles you need a car. Occasional rentals or rideshares fill the gaps for big-box runs and airport rides.
There are louder destinations. Carna wins by under-promising and over-delivering. It invites you into texture—wind on skin, salt in hair, bright lichen on old stones—and into stories that don’t need big plot twists. You might arrive chasing a photo and leave changed by a conversation, by a laugh at a counter, by the odd comfort of being a tiny human on the lip of a very large ocean. The village doesn’t perform for visitors; it just keeps being itself. That’s the charm.