Hi, I am selling a defective (the shutter needs to be replaced) Sony a6100 camera BODY with ONE kit lens the Sony 3.5-5.6/16-40, and ONE Sony battery (basically unused, I use a dummy battery).
NO chargers, camera strap, memory cards, or original box included.

This model is also known as the ILCE-6100.

More details below:
This is a Sony a6100 body, with kit lens and a singly batter with broken shutter that needs to be replaced.
Otherwise, it's a great and solid camera.
You can see one of the silver "fingers" of the shutter mechanism in the photo showing the shutter of the camera.

This was my first mirrorless camera, and has been awesome as a webcam for podcasts, high stakes Zoom calls, recorded video and livestreaming.

It's only been used indoors, for video, in a non-smoking setting.

Last week, it stopped functioning as usual, and started displaying the "Camera error. Turn power off and on." error.
After talking to 2 local stores, that error means that the shutter needs to be replaced.

I am not a repair person, so I haven’t made any attempts to fix this beyond turning it off and on, doing a factory reset when I could get it to work at all, and turning it upside down to tap the camera to attempt to gently dislodge the jammed shutter mechanism. I have not taken the camera apart, it's beyond my skill level to try that kind of fix.

My understanding from the camera stores is that this is an hour or two of work to take the camera apart to get to the shutter mechanism, replace, test, and re-assemble. There are YouTube videos showing how to do this, and replacement shutters seem to be available for $50-100.

If you are handy with sensitive electronics, it seems pretty straightforward.
The single semester of electrical engineering that I did 30+ years ago is definitely not enough for me to feel comfortable fixing this myself.

No returns, and no guarantee of any sort, strictly listed as for parts/not working.
That said, until the shutter jammed, I had no issues at all with this camera over the last 3 years, using it maybe 5-10 hours a week, maximum.