Sometimes the decision is upheld, either for a fixed period or permanently. If that happens, focus on closing the loop responsibly. Check any pending transactions and follow the platform instructions on deliveries or refunds. Keep your shipping receipts, chat screenshots, and payment confirmations organized in case a buyer or bank dispute pops up. If there is a seller wallet or balance, read the notice carefully; funds can be held temporarily to cover disputes, and you will usually get guidance on what happens next. If you believe the decision is a misunderstanding, you can submit one concise follow up with any new evidence, but avoid daily appeals with no fresh information. Consider requesting a copy of your data or chats if that is offered in the Help Center, so you have records for tax or warranty purposes. Resist the urge to open a new account using alternate details. Ban evasion often triggers wider blocks and can spill over to related devices or numbers. It is better to exit clean and keep your reputation intact.
Make policy literacy a habit: skim the prohibited items, listing rules, and payment guidelines quarterly so you are aligned with current standards. Keep everything on platform: chats, invoices, and payments. Off platform shortcuts are the fastest way to look risky. Use your own photos, ideally in natural light, with close ups of logos, serials, and flaws. Write condition notes like you are helping a friend decide: precise, not salesy. Pace your relisting and messaging to avoid spam patterns. Never ask for positive only feedback; ask for honest feedback and act on it. For ID checks, make sure your profile details match your documents, and use a consistent device and network when verifying. Store proof of authenticity and shipping for at least a few months. If you lead a team, create a simple pre list checklist: Is the item allowed? Are photos original? Is the description accurate? Is price realistic? After reinstatement or on a new start, rebuild trust with a small batch of safe, fast moving items and ship promptly. Good habits are your long term suspension shield.
Try-on time matters. Book an appointment and bring the rings you already wear so you can test real-world fit and stacking. Check widths side by side and move your hands as you would at a keyboard or gym; you will learn fast which profiles feel natural. Ask about lead times for special orders and engraving, especially if you are close to your wedding date. For sizing, a comfortable snugness that resists a quick tug but slides with a twist is a good baseline. Fingers change through the day, so test morning and evening if you can.
For most Carousell exchanges in Hong Kong, SF Express and similar local couriers are a sweet spot. You get solid tracking, predictable delivery times, and multiple handoff methods: door-to-door, service points, and widespread lockers. That flexibility matters when the buyer can’t sit at home waiting or when buildings have tricky access rules. Parcels generally move fast within the city, and the tracking updates help both sides stay calm if there’s a weather delay or a driver running behind schedule.
If you want to keep shipping costs low, Hongkong Post’s local services are hard to beat. Ordinary mail is cheapest but carries the most risk (no tracking), so it’s best saved for low-value, non-fragile items where both sides accept the trade-off. Registered mail adds tracking and a receipt, which dramatically reduces disputes and guesswork for a small premium. When speed matters more, consider faster postal tiers—still often economical—while keeping in mind cut-off times and weekend schedules.
Start with the nouns you’ll see everywhere. Car is 汽车 (qi4che1); EV is 电动车 (dian4dong4che1), and the broader “new energy vehicle” you’ll see in headlines is 新能源车 (xin1 neng2 yuan2 che1). Model and trim live under 车型 (che1xing2) and 配置 (pei4zhi4). Under the hood, engine is 发动机 (fa1dong4ji1), horsepower 马力 (ma3li4), and torque 扭矩 (niu3ju4). For EVs, battery pack is 电池包 (dian4chi2bao1) and range 续航 (xu4hang2); fast charging is 快充 (kuai4chong1). Around the cabin, seat is 座椅 (zuo4yi3), steering wheel 方向盘 (fang1xiang4pan2), seatbelt 安全带 (an1quan2dai4). Outside: tire 轮胎 (lun2tai1), wheel 轮毂 (lun2gu3), trunk 后备箱 (hou4bei4xiang1), hood 引擎盖 (yin3qing2gai4), windshield 挡风玻璃 (dang3feng1 bo1li2). A few verbs unlock headlines: 加速 (jia1su4, to accelerate), 刹车 (sha1che1, to brake), 续航提升 (xu4hang2 ti2sheng1, range improvement). Get these into muscle memory and spec sheets go from soup to readable in a week.