How to run a silent auction: 7 steps
From first idea to final thank-you, here's the whole process — simple enough for a first-timer, complete enough to raise real money.
Free to start · No credit card · No app to download
To run a silent auction: (1) set a fundraising goal, (2) gather donated items, (3) set up bidding (online or on paper) with starting bids and a closing time, (4) promote it widely, (5) run the auction and keep bidders engaged, (6) close bidding and collect payment, and (7) thank everyone. With online software the setup, notifications, and checkout are largely automated — you can launch a free auction in minutes.
The 7 steps, explained
Set your goal
Decide how much you want to raise and what it funds. A specific goal guides every later decision — see setting fundraising goals.
Gather items
Solicit donations from local businesses, supporters, and board members. Use a donation request letter and aim for a mix of price points. Need inspiration? See item ideas.
Set up bidding
Create your auction, add each item with a photo, description, fair market value, starting bid, and increment. Online, 32auctions can suggest starting bids and generate descriptions for you.
Promote it
Announce early and often by email, social, and text. Follow a promotion plan — reaching more people is the biggest lever on your total.
Run the auction
Open bidding and keep energy up with outbid and 'closing soon' notifications. Online, these send automatically; a live leaderboard fuels competition.
Close & collect
At closing time the highest bids win. Let winners pay online instantly to skip the checkout line and avoid unpaid items.
Thank everyone
Report your total and thank bidders, donors, and sponsors. Good stewardship builds the audience for next time.
A simple planning timeline
| When | Focus |
|---|---|
| 8–12 weeks out | Set the goal, recruit a small committee, start soliciting items |
| 4–6 weeks out | Finalize items, build the auction, write promo emails and posts |
| 1–3 weeks out | Announce, preview best items, open early online bidding |
| Event / closing | Run bidding, drive urgency, close and collect payment |
| After | Thank everyone, report results, review what sold for next year |
Want a checklist version? See the silent auction planning checklist.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Setting starting bids too high, which prevents the first bid.
- Under-promoting — if people don't know, they can't bid.
- Listing items with no photos or descriptions.
- No urgency at the close, so the final-hour surge never happens.
- A slow, painful checkout that leaves items unpaid.
Key takeaways
- Seven steps: goal, items, setup, promotion, run, close & collect, thanks.
- Start 8–12 weeks out and follow a simple timeline.
- Online software automates setup, reminders, and checkout.
- Avoid high starting bids, weak promotion, and a slow checkout.
Put the plan into action — free
Create your auction, add items, and share a link in minutes. 32auctions handles bids, notifications, and checkout. No credit card, no app for bidders.
Common questions
How to Run a Silent Auction FAQs
How do I run a silent auction step by step?
Set a goal, gather donated items, set up bidding with starting bids and a closing time, promote it widely, run the auction with outbid reminders, close and collect payment, then thank everyone. Online software automates most of the work.
How long should a silent auction run?
In person, the bidding window is usually a couple of hours during an event. Online auctions often run several days to a week or more, which gives more people time to bid and typically raises more.
How early should I start planning?
Begin 8–12 weeks out: set your goal, recruit a small committee, and start soliciting item donations early, since gathering good items takes the most lead time.
Do I need special software to run a silent auction?
No, but it helps a lot. Online software automates starting-bid suggestions, item descriptions, outbid and closing alerts, and checkout — and lets supporters bid from anywhere. 32auctions is free to start.
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