Posted 13 hours ago13 hr comment_12906 We may earn a commission from links on this page.For over a year, I have been on a quest to sell a bunch of my stuff to make room in my closet—and, in the process, earn money for more stuff. I have encountered highs, lows, and many resale apps, some of which are better than others. In addition to making me a little extra money, this endeavor has really helped me reduce my clutter, too: A lot of the popular decluttering techniques ask you to sort your items into three categories—keep, throw, and donate—but by adding the fourth category of things to sell, I've cleared major space in my closet. What's more, I do my best to use my "balance" in each app to buy any new items I want or need, helping me stick to my own version of the "one in, one out" decluttering method. After all these months and dozens of trips to the post office, here's what I've learned about buying and selling online and which apps I recommend most. A few notes on reselling clothing onlineThere are sellers on these apps who do this in a hardcore way, sourcing cool, rare, or expensive items and turning them for a profit. They treat this like a job and, in some cases, it is their job. You don’t have to be like that. Don’t worry about the profiles that feature professional-grade photos and hundreds of listings, because someone out there wants the thing you’re selling and will find it by searching for it—it won’t really matter if you’re displaying the item on a mannequin in studio lighting as long as it’s the right size and price for the buyer. Here are my tips to get you started.Don’t list something unless you’d actually want to get rid of it if it sold. That seems obvious, but this has happened to me: I’ll get a little overzealous, list something I still use, and feel sad when it gets bought sooner than I wanted it to. One safeguard I've employed is listing things I still like to wear at higher prices than they deserve. Interested buyers will still like the listings and may send offers I can consider. If someone actually buys it at the listed price, it was meant to be—and I get extra money to soothe myself through the grief of losing the item.On the other hand, don’t list something if you really want it out of the house. You can’t determine how fast something will sell, even if you undervalue it in price and promote it on the apps every day. If waiting for something to sell impedes your decluttering, consider a brick-and-mortar consignment shop if the item is truly valuable—or just donate it.I still use my items while they’re listed on my apps, but be careful if you choose to do this. If something happens to a bag, like it gets a scuff or a stain, it reduces its value and you’ll have to update the listing at the very least. Don’t try to trick people by showcasing something in perfect condition, then sending it to them in worse shape. They can send it back and this can have an impact on your seller rating. Take a lot of pictures. You don’t need fancy lighting or a backdrop, but I at least try to set my wares on a nice rug and keep other stuff out of the frame. Take pictures from a few angles, close-up photos of any damage, and a shot of the date stamp or serial number if it’s a luxury or high-end piece. Tags, defining features, and details are important to include. (If you don't do this upfront, be prepared for potential buyers to ask for them later.) Be open to offers and respond to inquiries. Most of the time, you won’t get the price you ask for, at least not in my experience, but accepting reasonable offers or being willing to lower the price will help you get the thing out of your house and the money into your account.Always search for the item you’re selling to see what other people are selling theirs for. If yours is of comparable quality, consider listing it for a little less than your competitors to get it sold faster.If you list the same thing on multiple apps, stay on top of what you're doing. A few weeks ago, I sold a wristlet that I accidentally way undervalued on one app a day after listing it for its true value on another. I lost out on good money! Plus, if something sells on one app, you need to immediately remove its listing everywhere else. Otherwise, it could "sell" again, you'll need to cancel that order, and your seller rating may take a hit.Finally, and perhaps most importantly, be wary of scams. This applies more to you if you're buying something than if you're selling, but as a general rule, never communicate with anyone off-app, let alone conduct transactions that way. These apps are reputable and well-run. Anyone claiming they're having trouble with the payment system is almost certainly lying to you. All of the apps I highlight here have quality customer service and are available to help you if you're sold a counterfeit item or encounter a buyer who is lying about the condition of the thing you sold, but you need to conduct your transactions on the app for them to be able to render service. The first app you need is VendooBefore I get into my top apps for buying and selling, I want to highlight one that has made my use of all of them much easier: Vendoo. Essentially, it's a cross-listing app that enables you to create listings for all your sellable possessions, then post them to a variety of marketplaces, including Poshmark, Vestiaire Collective, Depop, Mercari, and more. You can change prices, track sales, and stay much more organized if your goal is to get rid of as much as you can as fast as you can. Having your goods for sale across multiple platforms is helpful because, while there are a lot of shoppers who peruse multiple apps, each one also has a pretty dedicated fanbase that only uses one specific marketplace. By cross-listing, you increase your chances of a potential buyer running across your item. Another app that is really helpful is PrimeLister, but really only if you're selling on Poshmark. This one automates all of the tedious little tasks you can (and should) do to boost your sales, like sharing your listings to landing pages and the homepages of your followers, plus it gives you the option to bulk-complete tasks, like changing prices or sending out discount offers to interested buyers. Vendoo and PrimeLister both cost money—about $30 per month, depending on the services you need—but, in my experience, are worth it for boosting sales and making this process easy.The best apps to sell clothes and accessoriesEven though I only really got into selling about a year ago, I've been buying on these platforms for many, many years and made the sporadic sale here and there back in the day, too. I recommend Poshmark, Vestiaire Collective, TheRealReal, and Depop. To me, these four have the best interfaces and are easiest to use for buying and selling. Let’s go over their details. Poshmark: Best for selling pretty much anythingWhen you sell on Poshmark, you keep 80% of your sales as long as they're over $15. For anything under $15, you pay the app a fee of $2.95. On this app, buyers can offer lower prices than what you’re listing your item for and you’re free to accept or decline their offers. Declining gives you the chance to submit a counteroffer, so you may end up negotiating for a little bit, but the app always notifies you of what, exactly, you’ll make if you sell something at a certain price. The app also allows potential buyers to "like" items, enabling you to send private discount offers to all of a listing’s likers at once. Lowering the price of an item is easy, too, and you can share listings to “parties” that match your item’s description. For instance, Poshmark regularly hosts luxury bag parties, creating a landing page for shoppers looking for those, and I share my listings for bags to those parties when they’re happening. Creating a listing is very easy if you're doing it in-app, not using a third-party service like Vendoo. Upload your photos, fill out a form that includes simple details like size, brand, original price, and asking price, and you're good to go.If there’s a downside to Poshmark, it’s that you do need to be pretty active and engaged. Offers expire after 24 hours, you can only share listings to a party when the party is happening, and users expect timely responses to their comments. Credit: Lindsey Ellefson Like I said, you can put anything on here. You can sell a Louis Vuitton bag or a Nike T-shirt. Some people sell housewares and handicrafts. I’ve bought a few Diptyque candles and once offloaded a Yankees bobblehead I accidentally acquired on a trip to the Bronx. If you want an app where you can sell everything, not just a certain kind of clothing, it should be Poshmark. In my experience, selling higher-end items on Poshmark is hit or miss. Yes, I've done it, but people on there are shopping for all kinds of things. I mostly buy baseball jerseys there and save my own luxury resale browsing for other apps. Poshmark doesn't authenticate designer goods the way other dedicated luxury apps do, so buyers are less confident and more likely to lowball you to make up for their lack of faith in your wares. If you have mid-tier stuff, like Lululemon, Uggs, or Skims, Poshmark is going to be especially handy for you. All that said, Poshmark is by far my most-used resale app and I'd say I conduct over 90% of my business there. The interface is easy to navigate, the variety of listings and diverse user base lend themselves to a surprisingly high amount of sales on even the most random things, and selling is really easy. When I make a sale, Poshmark generates a QR code that I simply have to show to the people at the post office. The shipping fee is paid by the customer and includes a priority box or envelope. I don't have to print a label, buy a box, or do anything but show up at the post office. A day or two after the buyer gets the item, the money appears in my balance. Crucially, Poshmark allows you to use your sales balance to purchase things on the app, which I really love, but you can also very easily transfer it out into your bank account. Read my full Poshmark review here. Vestiaire Collective: Best for higher-end items to maximize profitsVestiaire Collective is meant for higher-end items, which usually means luxury goods, but I’ve seen it include plenty of other quality stuff, like Gymshark. Where this one shines is its authentication process. Much of the time, items you sell will be shipped straight to VC, where a staffer will authenticate them and send them out to the buyer. This extra security is great, especially for really high-ticket items, and VC has low selling fees: You pay 10% on every sale, plus a 3% payment processing fee. You don’t get charged on your first one, either, as long as it’s below $2,000. VC often runs specials, too, where where you'll pay no seller’s fees on certain brands, for example. Like Poshmark, buyers can send offers, but here, you have two days to accept, decline, or counter them, rather than one. One difference that can throw a bit of a learning curveball is that once you accept an offer, the buyer has to make the purchase. On Poshmark, a buyer who sends an offer agrees that if you accept it, their balance or card is charged. On VC, just because you accept the low price does not mean you've made the sale. The buyer then has two more days to decide if they want to go through with it. Selling on VC, in my experience, is a much slower process than other apps, especially because of the extra time required for in-person authentication. Credit: Lindsey Ellefson Overall, I love buying on here because I know I'm always getting high-quality goods, but the slow pace of sales stops me from selling on VC too often. When you make a VC sale, you don't get a handy QR code to ship the item. Rather, you have to print the label, buy a box or envelope, and ship it yourself. It takes a while for the money to get to you, given that the item has to go to VC for authentication before being sent out to the buyer. And when you do get that money, it goes into your Venmo account, not a balance that you can use to make new purchases. It's worth noting that VC is the most global app on my list. People around the world buy and sell on here, which is awesome because it really broadens the market from which you can purchase and the population to which you can sell, but not-so-awesome because global shipping certainly takes a while. If you buy, don't expect your item to come in quickly—and if you sell, don't expect your money to come in quickly.Buyers on here are looking to spend on nice stuff, so you won't get lowballed often and items that wouldn't sell on a more mid-level app get way more attention. Selling on VC requires you to measure your bags, take more specific photos of items (including ones that clearly show brand labeling), identify the material your item is made of, and wait—sometimes, in my experience, up to two or three days—for the photos to be approved by a staffer. Like I said, this is not a fast-money app, but one nice thing is that the app suggests a price for your listing based on prices similar items in similar condition have sold at, so you don't have to guess. For all the extra work you need to do on this one, it does help you out with little features like that—plus, its cut of the profit is lower than competitors', so if you're willing to put in more effort and wait a little longer, you do end up making more money. Read my full Vestiaire Collective review here. TheRealReal: Best for fancier stuff you just want out of your houseTheRealReal is only for designer, luxury items, and it operates more like a consignment store than direct selling. How much you actually make depends on your “loyalty tier” at the time of sale, so if you’re just starting out, you get 55% commission on anything sold for more than $195. If you earn $1,500 in annual net sales, you move up to a new tier and earn more. You can also just fork your goods over to TRR in exchange for site credit and let them sell as they will. I won’t lie: It’s a little confusing, so only go with this one if you have really expensive items to sell that require authentication and can still bring in a hefty chunk of cash, even with fees. I use this app almost exclusively as a buyer, not a seller. Since TRR is in charge of the prices, a lot of really nice things inevitably go on a deep discount if they don't get sold quickly. If you want a quality piece that you can wear for a little and then resell, try looking here. Credit: Lindsey Ellefson Depop: Best for getting rid of anything you have, from mall finds to more luxe itemsDepop is another site where you can sell anything. It can be fancy, it can be basic, it can be handmade—you can sell whatever. You don’t pay a listing fee, but you pay a 10% fee for everything you sell. That’s it. It’s super straightforward, and Depop helps you fill out the listing by populating suggestions based on your pictures and text inputs. This speeds up the process so you’re not spending five minutes on every listing, pulling brand names and sizes from drop-down menus. You can offer likers discounts and, like Poshmark and VC, field offers from potential buyers. Credit: Lindsey Ellefson I've had success with Depop as a seller and a buyer, but it's definitely a crowded marketplace. I think of it more like a thrift store than anything. You can find fancy things, yes, but they're not authenticated and I've seen pages and pages of very obvious fakes (and, likely, less obvious fakes I didn't bother investigating), so beware. (As a side note, if you ever need help determining if a listed luxury product is authentic, you can reach out to me. This is a fun hobby I genuinely enjoy.) Also prominent are truly basic things, like Forever 21 tops. You may not think the fast-fashion, mall-bought shirts clogging up your closet are worth trying to sell, but you'd be very surprised. Someone out there may want them, so try listing them on Depop before donating or tossing them. Set a hard deadline for yourself, though. If it doesn't sell in, say, two weeks, get rid of it another way. Again, selling is awesome, but not if it stops you from effectively decluttering. Read my full Depop review here. Best for set-it-and-forget it sales: MercariI am very new to Mercari, as it's the only app on this list I downloaded just to review and had never used before. That said, I liked what I saw! The process of listing on Mercari is especially simple, so this is a solid entry point if you're new to reselling and want to start with a more manageable experience. Tapping Sell at the bottom of the home screen brings you to a listing creation page that is notably pared down when compared to the other apps on this list. You add your photos, a title, a longer description, up to seven hashtags, a category, a brand, and a condition indicator. You have the opportunity to offer free shipping (which means you pay for it) or make the buyer pay the cost. Then, you set your listing price. That's it.Remarkably, Mercari will even handle your discounting for you, which is something you have to do manually on the other apps or else recruit a third-party service like PoshLister to manage for you. When you finish creating a listing, just toggle on "Smart Pricing," set a minimum you'd be willing to accept for the product, and do nothing else. Over time, if it doesn't sell, Mercari will incrementally lower the price until it hits that minimum you set. Of all the apps here, this one is the most hands-off from beginning to end. Credit: Lindsey Ellefson There is one downside: While all apps take a little cut of your profit in the form of seller's fees, not every app charges buyer's fees, however, which Mercari does as of January 2025: Buyers pay a "Buyer Protection Fee" of 3.6% on Mercari, and that fee is displayed as part of the final price in the item checkout section. Think of it like when you order food off Uber Eats, but only see the true cost, with fees, when you get to the very end.If you're a seller, you might want to keep that in mind and, unfortunately, lower some of your prices to make your wares more appealing in light of these price increases. You also need to keep in mind the fees you'll pay on the sale. Mercari takes a 10% cut of your earnings and, depending on whether you elected to offer "free shipping" to buyers, you'll could also have to pay around $9 for the shipping cost. Some good news is that you can spend your balance in-app, which you know I'm a big fan of. Read my full Mercari review here. Honorable mention: Rent your clothes out on PickleThis list is all about resale platforms, yes, but I have had incredible luck using Pickle, an app that allows me to rent out my accessories and clothes instead of selling them. I've only been using it for two months and few bags in my closet have already been rented multiple times. Theoretically, they can keep generating me money over and over again and I can keep using them myself, neither of which is true when you make a straight-up sale. There are three ways you can rent out your stuff on Pickle: You can arrange a meetup with a renter and hand it off in person, the renter can pay a $3 fee for a courier to transport your item to and from their location, or you can ship your goods wherever the other person is in the country. Meetups really only work in large metro areas, but with the shipping option—and because the courier system runs through established apps like Uber Eats and Doordash—Pickle works surprisingly well even in far-flung areas. During a recent interview, the app's cofounder also let me know that it's hoping to broaden the scope of Pickle's marketplace offerings soon, too, so you could rent out musical instruments, camera equipment, or whatever goods you have lying around. Credit: Lindsey Ellefson I have loved being able to put my goods to work and a few of my handbags and shoes are close to paying themselves off, so to speak. Like other apps, Pickle allows potential renters to send you an offer, which you can accept or decline, and it takes a 20% fee off your profit, but again, you get your stuff back and can rent it out again indefinitely. If you're worried about sending your possessions out, take heart knowing Pickle has a robust customer service team and care policy. If someone damages or fails to return your item, the Pickle team works with you to get you the value of the goods. That's a rarity, though, because the app has a strong community feel to it. Not only have my things always been returned in perfect condition, but they usually come with thank-you notes and, notably, one renter even sent me a thank-you gift. Pickle is really helpful if you're starting to declutter because it is comparable to a purgatory box, or a space you put something if you're not quite sure you're ready to get rid of it. You can experience what life is like without immediate access to that item and you may even find you didn't miss it. In that case, list it on one of the apps above. Notably, Pickle also allows you to sell your stuff. All you have to do is indicate an item is for sale in its rental listing. Read my full Pickle review here. View the full article