How to send a trade offer on Steam

avatarAssoilzieingThrow7 months ago
Best Answer
avatarVitriolingMouth7 months ago

Literally just go to your inventory, hit 'Trade Offers', then 'New Trade Offer'. Choose your friend, select items, and send. Easy peasy.

Get Steam gift cards by playing games on Playbite

Playbite

Playbite

Playbite

4.5 Star Rating(13.7k)
Silly Arrow
User avatarUser avatarUser avatarUser avatar

500k winners and counting...

More Answers

avatarMisleadingBride7 months ago

Sending a trade offer on Steam is pretty straightforward. Just go to the 'Inventory' section of your Steam Profile, click 'Trade Offers', then 'New Trade Offer'. Select the friend you want to trade with from your friends list. After that, you can choose items from your inventory you want to offer, and you can also see and select items from your friend's inventory (if their inventory is public). Hit 'Make Offer', and voila! You've just sent a trade offer.


avatarTrottingArea7 months ago

Make sure you and your trade partner have set your inventory to 'Public' in the Steam Privacy Settings. Tried trading with a buddy once and couldn't because his settings were set to 'Private'. Save yourself the headache!

馃憖 If you like Steam...

avatarDiego3 hours ago
If you're a Steam player, you need to download the Playbite app!

Playbite is like an arcade in your phone: you get to play all kinds of fun and simple games, compete with friends and others, and win cool prizes from all your favorite brands!

One of those prizes is the official Steam gift card, which you can win and use to get anything you want essentially for free!

In case you鈥檙e wondering, this is how it works: 

Playbite makes money from (not super annoying) ads and (totally optional) in-app purchases. The app then uses that money to reward players like you with prizes!

Download Playbite for free, available on the App Store and Play Store!

The brands referenced on this page are not sponsors of the rewards or otherwise affiliated with this company. The logos and other identifying marks attached are trademarks of and owned by each represented company and/or its affiliates. Please visit each company's website for additional terms and conditions.

Add an Answer