For professional resellers, the best reselling apps and websites depend on what you sell and who already buys it there. Poshmark, Depop, Mercari, eBay, Vinted, Vestiaire Collective, ThredUp, Grailed, Whatnot, and Facebook Marketplace each draw a distinct audience, from designer handbag buyers to streetwear collectors to bargain hunters browsing locally. Below is what each platform actually does well for sellers running a real resale business, not a one-time closet clean. Most professional sellers end up active on four or five at once, which is exactly the workload Oly is built to simplify.
Built for professional resellers
Oly automates crosslisting and inventory sync across every marketplace on this list, so your stock stays accurate everywhere without the manual busywork.
Learn more about OlyPoshmark remains one of the best reselling apps for sellers who want to build a following rather than just list and wait. Its social feed rewards sellers who share often, host Posh Parties, and engage a loyal buyer base that browses by seller almost as much as by item. The platform is limited to the US and Canada following its 2023 market exits, so international sellers should treat it as regional rather than global. Fees run a flat 20% on sales over 15 dollars, with shipping defaulting to USPS Ground Advantage at 6.49 dollars.
Depop is the strongest clothing reselling app for sellers targeting a younger buyer base, with nearly 90% of its users under 34 according to Etsy's own disclosures. Its feed-style browsing rewards distinctive photography and personal styling more than any other major marketplace here. Depop Shipping is now the default fulfillment method, simplifying logistics for sellers juggling several channels. Sellers wanting extra visibility can boost listings for a 12% fee, and eBay's planned acquisition of Depop is still pending UK Competition and Markets Authority review, with a decision expected by August 6, 2026.
Mercari is a dependable choice among reselling apps for sellers who want a straightforward listing experience across categories beyond clothing. It removed its separate payment processing fee in January 2025, simplifying its cost structure to a single selling fee. Prepaid shipping labels are built into the listing flow, useful for sellers who want to batch-ship without pricing out carrier rates each time. Its broad category support makes it a natural second or third channel for resellers who also carry home goods or accessories.
eBay is still the best reselling website for rare, vintage, or hard-to-find pieces, thanks to a search-driven buyer base that actively hunts for specific items rather than browsing casually. Its auction format is unique among major resale platforms and can drive up final prices on pieces with genuine collector demand. Standard fees sit at 13.6% following the February 2025 rate increase, and years of sold-listing data make it a reliable place to research pricing before listing elsewhere. Sellers with authenticated designer pieces often find eBay's audience willing to pay a premium other apps do not match.
Vinted has quickly become one of the best reselling apps for sellers who want to avoid seller fees entirely, since the platform charges buyers instead. It has had a limited US presence since 2013, but a major push into the American market began in January 2026, meaning US sellers are still relatively early to a marketplace that has long dominated resale in Europe. That foothold makes Vinted especially useful for sellers with buyers or sourcing ties across the Atlantic, and its buyer-pays model is worth testing even at lower price points where percentage-based fees elsewhere would eat into margin.
Vestiaire Collective is the clearest choice among reselling websites for sellers focused on authenticated luxury and designer goods. Its in-house authentication process is a genuine trust signal for buyers willing to pay top dollar for verified pieces, and its flat 12% commission is simpler to plan around than the tiered structures sometimes misreported for this platform. Its curated positioning means casual or fast-fashion inventory will not perform as well here, so it works best as a dedicated channel for higher-end pieces. Sellers building a designer-focused catalog will generally find buyers more willing to pay full asking price than on general marketplaces.
ThredUp stands out among reselling sites for sellers who want to move volume without managing individual listings themselves, since its core consignment model has the company handling the listing and selling on the seller's behalf. For sellers who prefer more control, its new Direct Listing beta lets sellers manage their own listings with 0% seller fees, launched June 9, 2026 as a genuinely different option from the traditional consignment path. This makes ThredUp one of the more flexible platforms here, offering a hands-off route for bulk cleanouts or Direct Listing for higher-value pieces.
Grailed is the standout reselling app for sellers focused on menswear, streetwear, and designer archival pieces, with a buyer base that actively searches for specific grails rather than browsing broadly. Its reduced 6% fee tier on sales under 120 dollars, effective since May 2026, makes it noticeably cheaper than general marketplaces for lower-priced menswear pieces. The community skews toward collectors who understand brand history and rarity, rewarding sellers who write detailed, knowledgeable listings rather than generic descriptions. A strong menswear or streetwear catalog will likely find better prices here than on broader platforms.
Whatnot has become one of the fastest-growing reselling apps by combining resale with live video commerce, where sellers host shows and buyers purchase in real time during auctions or fixed-price drops. Commission runs up to 8% depending on category and country, plus a processing fee of 2.9% plus 30 cents, and sellers moving items above 1,500 dollars in eligible categories pay 0% commission on the portion above that threshold. Whatnot builds a direct, repeat-buyer audience that static listings elsewhere cannot easily replicate, making it a strong complement channel for sellers willing to go on camera to sell.
Facebook Marketplace's biggest advantage as a reselling site is sheer reach, putting listings in front of Meta's enormous user base without needing to build a following first. Local pickup sales let buyers and sellers transact directly, appealing to sellers who want to avoid platform fees on bulkier or lower-margin items. For shipped sales through Facebook's own checkout, a selling fee applies, though sellers should confirm the current rate directly in Meta's Commerce Manager since it has been reported inconsistently elsewhere and can change without notice. As a free-to-list, high-traffic channel, it works well as an additional touchpoint alongside more resale-specific platforms.
Most platforms do not require a business license to start selling casually. Sellers who exceed certain thresholds, such as the US 1099-K reporting trigger, should register as a business for tax purposes and to access the seller protections and bulk tools most platforms reserve for professional accounts.
Whatnot generally has one of the fastest payout timelines for US sellers, releasing funds within hours of delivery confirmation. Consignment-based platforms like ThredUp's traditional model can take longer, since the company handles the sale on the seller's behalf before any payout occurs.
Yes, and most professional resellers do exactly this to maximize exposure. The catch is manually removing a sold item from every other platform to avoid double-selling. That coordination is exactly what selling across multiple platforms requires, and what automated multichannel inventory management is designed to solve.
Yes. Vestiaire Collective focuses on authenticated luxury goods and Grailed specializes in menswear and streetwear, so sellers with a category-specific catalog often see stronger results there than on general marketplaces. For more on how platforms verify high-value items, see how reselling platforms verify luxury item authenticity.
Policies vary by platform. Some, like Whatnot, collect and remit sales tax directly in most US states. Others place that responsibility on the seller. It is worth checking each platform's official seller agreement directly rather than assuming tax is handled for you.
Oly automates crosslisting and inventory sync across every platform on this list, so you can focus on sourcing and photographing instead of retyping listings ten times.
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