FLUF Connect

Crosslist from Depop to Grailed — Move Your Streetwear to Serious Buyers with FLUF Connect

Move your best Depop streetwear and designer pieces to Grailed's brand-literate US buyers. Photos, designer and category transfer automatically; you add measurements and a USD price. Inventory stays manageable across both.

19 marketplaces, one dashboard Auto inventory sync WhatsApp, email & in-app support

Key Takeaways

  • Depop and Grailed look similar — mobile-first, fashion-led, offer-driven — but their audiences are opposites: Depop skews Gen-Z, womenswear and Y2K; Grailed skews 25–34, male and serious about designer menswear and streetwear (Top Bubble Index).
  • The reason Depop streetwear sellers add Grailed is a higher price ceiling: a Supreme, Rick Owens or archival piece that gets lowballed by Depop’s budget crowd reaches buyers on Grailed who already know its worth (Closo).
  • FLUF Connect generates a Grailed-ready listing from your Depop item — designer, category path, colour trait and measurement scaffolding — and pushes it through a secure browser extension, because Grailed has no public listing API.
  • Grailed’s 2026 seller commission is 9% on items $120+ (6% under $120) plus processing, and it charges no commission on shipping when you use a Grailed Label — a structural edge over typical resale fees (Grailed support).
  • The honest catch: Grailed prices in USD only, demands your own in-hand photos, and wants real measurements — so a naive copy of a Depop listing arrives incomplete and risks removal (Grailed support).
  • Crosslist the pieces Grailed wants — streetwear, designer, archive — and keep women’s fast fashion and trend basics on Depop where they sell. FLUF Connect starts at £19/month (Growth, 500 products); automation is included in every plan, not a paid add-on.

Why Crosslist from Depop to Grailed?

If you sell streetwear or designer menswear on Depop, you have almost certainly watched a genuinely good piece — a Supreme box logo, a Rick Owens jacket, an archival Raf Simons tee — sit unsold while the offers that do come in are insultingly low. That is not a flaw in your listing. It is the audience. Depop, owned by Etsy, is the home of Gen-Z resale and skews heavily toward womenswear, Y2K and trend-led fashion at accessible price points (Top Bubble Index). It is a brilliant marketplace for what it is. It is the wrong room for a $500 grail.

Grailed is the right room. Its audience is roughly 69% US-based, around 58% male and concentrated in the 25–34 bracket — a brand-literate buyer who arrives already knowing what your piece is worth (Similarweb). Sellers routinely report that a rare piece which sat for weeks elsewhere draws serious offers within hours on Grailed because the right people are actively hunting those brand pages (Closo). You are not abandoning Depop — you are putting your best inventory in front of the audience built to pay for it, while your everyday pieces keep selling where they belong.

Dimension Depop Grailed
Core audience Gen-Z, womenswear, Y2K, trend 25–34, male-led, designer menswear & streetwear
Geography UK and US heavy ~69% United States
Price ceiling Lower — budget-driven buyers Higher — collectors pay for grails
Currency Local (GBP/USD) USD only
Commission on shipping Typically included in fees None when using a Grailed Label
Curation Open Curated — non-designer items removable

The Reality Check — Read This First

Grailed is more demanding than Depop, and pretending otherwise sets you up to fail. Three things will trip up a careless crosslist:

  • Your own photos are mandatory. Grailed scans for duplicated stock images and mismatched branding and flags them; a single catalogue photo carried over from Depop is the most common cause of a removed Grailed listing (OneShop). If you shot your Depop listing yourself, in-hand, you are fine — those transfer. If you used a stock image, reshoot.
  • Measurements matter more here. Grailed has dedicated measurement fields and listings with them convert far better. Depop does not capture structured measurements, so this is the field you will most often complete by hand after crosslisting.
  • USD and self-shipping for non-US sellers. You list in dollars, and if you are outside the US you self-ship internationally rather than using a prepaid label (Grailed support). Price that in.

And the guardrail that saves your account: only crosslist what Grailed wants. Women’s fast fashion, unbranded basics and trend-led cheap clothing perform poorly and are subject to removal under Grailed’s curation policy (Grailed Listing FAQ). Keep that inventory on Depop. Send Grailed the grails.

How to Crosslist with FLUF Connect

FLUF Connect imports your Depop catalogue and lets you select exactly which pieces deserve a Grailed listing. For each one it builds a Grailed-ready draft — resolving the designer name, mapping to Grailed’s dotted category path under the menswear or womenswear department, setting the colour trait Grailed requires, and scaffolding the measurement fields for you to confirm. Because Grailed has no public listing API and is hostile to crude automation, FLUF pushes the listing through a secure browser extension that drives the real Grailed listing flow, including photo upload, rather than hitting an endpoint that does not exist. You review the draft, fill in measurements, confirm your photos are your own, and publish — to Grailed and to any of the 16 other marketplaces FLUF supports in the same action.

Step by Step: From Depop Listing to Live Grailed Listing

The crosslist itself takes minutes once your account is connected. The work that matters is the handful of Grailed-specific touches that separate a listing that sells from one that gets buried or removed:

  1. Connect Depop and Grailed to FLUF. Import your Depop catalogue and install the FLUF browser extension that drives Grailed’s listing flow.
  2. Select the right pieces. Filter your Depop inventory down to the streetwear, designer and archival items Grailed’s audience actually wants. Leave the trend and womenswear stock on Depop.
  3. Confirm the designer and category. FLUF resolves the designer and maps to Grailed’s dotted category path; sanity-check both, because a wrong or missing designer is the fastest route to a removed listing.
  4. Verify your photos are your own. If your Depop shots were taken by you, in hand, they carry over cleanly. Anything that was a stock image must be reshot before it goes live on Grailed.
  5. Fill in the measurements. This is the single most valuable manual step — Grailed buyers filter and decide on measurements, and Depop never captured them.
  6. Set a deliberate USD price. Price for the US collector market with room to negotiate, not a blind currency conversion of your Depop price.
  7. Publish to Grailed and your other channels in one action, then delist the winner wherever it sells.

Field and Category Mapping

Here is how a Depop listing translates to Grailed, field by field:

Field Depop Grailed Notes
Title Free text Free text Transfers; tighten to “Designer — Item — Key Detail” for Grailed search
Photos Your uploads Your uploads (own photos required) Transfer only if they are your own in-hand shots, not stock
Brand / designer Tag Designer (effectively required) FLUF resolves the designer; no-designer items risk removal
Category Depop category Dotted category path FLUF maps to the nearest Grailed path; confirm department
Colour Free / optional Required colour trait FLUF maps to Grailed’s colour set automatically
Size Size tag Size + measurements Size transfers; add measurements by hand for best results
Condition Depop condition Grailed condition Maps cleanly; be honest — expert buyers
Price Local currency USD Set a deliberate USD price; do not just convert blindly

Grailed Fees — a Worked Example

Because Depop’s and Grailed’s fee structures differ, it helps to see the maths on a real piece rather than trade percentages in the abstract. Take a $300 archival jacket sold to a US buyer by a Stripe-onboarded seller. Grailed’s 2026 commission on an item over $120 is 9%, or $27, and the payment-processing fee is 3.49% + $0.49, about $10.96 — so you net roughly $262 before shipping, and crucially Grailed takes no commission on the shipping the buyer pays when you use a Grailed Label (Grailed support).

Line item $300 sale
Sale price $300.00
Seller commission (9%) −$27.00
Payment processing (3.49% + $0.49) −$10.96
Commission on shipping $0.00
You net (before postage) ≈ $262.04

The lesson for a Depop seller is twofold. First, Grailed’s all-in cut on a high-value piece is competitive, and the no-fee-on-shipping detail genuinely helps on heavier or boxed items. Second, the fixed $0.49 plus the minimum $1.99 commission on sub-$120 items means cheap stock is inefficient here — which is exactly why you crosslist your grails to Grailed and keep your £8 trend tops on Depop.

Who Should Crosslist Depop to Grailed (and Who Shouldn’t)

This is for you if a meaningful slice of your Depop inventory is genuine streetwear, designer or archival menswear — Supreme, Palace, Stüssy, Rick Owens, Raf Simons, Margiela, Comme des Garçons, Japanese labels, premium denim or high-end footwear — and you are tired of those pieces being lowballed by a Gen-Z, trend-driven audience that does not value them. If you photograph your own items and can write an honest, detailed description, you already meet Grailed’s bar.

This is not for you if your Depop shop is built on women’s fast fashion, Y2K trend pieces, unbranded basics or cheap high-volume stock. That inventory sells brilliantly on Depop and would be removed or ignored on Grailed, whose curation policy explicitly filters out non-designer goods (Grailed Listing FAQ). The honest answer for most Depop sellers is “some of my inventory, not all of it” — and FLUF is built to let you crosslist selectively rather than dumping everything everywhere.

Common Mistakes Depop Sellers Make on Grailed

  • Carrying over a stock photo. If your Depop listing used a borrowed image, Grailed will flag it — reshoot the actual item in hand.
  • Listing the whole shop. Pushing trend and womenswear stock to Grailed gets it removed and dents your account standing; crosslist only the grails.
  • Skipping measurements. Depop never asked for them, but Grailed buyers decide on them — empty measurement fields kill conversion.
  • Converting your Depop price blindly. Grailed is USD and US-market; set a deliberate dollar price with room to negotiate.
  • Editing mid-negotiation. Editing a live Grailed listing voids active offers, so settle them first.
  • Assuming auto-delist. Grailed delist-on-sale is not yet automated — close a sold Grailed listing yourself to avoid double-selling.

What Syncs (and What Doesn’t)

This is where FLUF chooses honesty over marketing. Crosslisting to Grailed — creating, updating and deleting listings — runs through the browser-extension bridge and works today. What is still maturing is automatic cross-channel delist for Grailed: FLUF does not yet automatically end your Grailed listing the instant the same item sells on Depop. For channels like Depop, eBay and Vinted, FLUF’s inventory sync is two-way and mature; for Grailed, that auto-delist is on the roadmap but not live, so the safe practice is to delist a sold Grailed item yourself as part of your routine. For a one-of-one grail, that small manual step is the difference between a clean sale and an awkward double-sale refund — we would rather you knew. Edits and new listings, by contrast, are fully handled through FLUF.

One Grailed-specific gotcha to remember: editing a live Grailed listing voids any active offers on it (Grailed support). If a piece has offers in play, finish negotiating before you push an edit from FLUF.

Before and After — a Day in the Life

Before: You list a grail on Depop, get three lowball offers in a week, and either accept too little or let it sit. Your best inventory underperforms because it is in front of the wrong buyers.

After: You shoot the piece once, list it on Depop for the trend crowd and push a properly mapped, measured Grailed listing in the same action through FLUF. The Grailed listing reaches US collectors who pay closer to what it is worth; offers come from people who know the brand. You delist the winner from the other channel when it sells. Same photos, same effort, two audiences — and the grail finally clears at a real price.

Automation for Depop and Grailed

Beyond the initial crosslist, FLUF Connect handles the repetitive work that keeps a multi-channel resale business running: bulk listing, relisting where the channel supports it, and offer management on the platforms that allow it. Depop benefits from FLUF’s full automation suite; Grailed benefits from automated listing creation and updates via the extension bridge, with the deliberate human-in-the-loop step on delist described above. The point is to do the listing work once and surface it everywhere it sells, without overstating what Grailed’s platform permits.

Pricing

FLUF Connect starts at £19/month for the Growth plan, covering up to 500 active products, and scales with catalogue size from there. Every plan includes the same automation toolkit — crosslisting, the browser-extension bridge for Grailed, relisting and offer management — with no features gated behind upgrades. Automation is included in every plan, not a paid add-on, and the 500 on Growth is a paid product cap. For a seller whose grails are stuck underselling on Depop, a single correctly priced Grailed sale typically covers the subscription outright.

The Bottom Line

Crosslisting from Depop to Grailed is one of the highest-leverage moves a streetwear or designer-menswear seller can make, precisely because it is not a like-for-like swap. Depop’s Gen-Z, trend-led audience and Grailed’s older, brand-literate, US-centric collectors want different things — and your best pieces have been undervalued by the former when they belong in front of the latter. FLUF Connect makes the crosslist a few minutes of work: it builds the Grailed-ready draft, resolves the designer and category, and pushes it through the browser-extension bridge that Grailed’s lack of a public API requires. Your part is the handful of touches that matter — your own photos, real measurements, a deliberate USD price — and the discipline to send Grailed only the grails. Do that, keep your trend stock earning on Depop, and remember to delist a sold Grailed listing yourself for now, and you turn a pile of lowballed inventory into sales at prices the right buyers are happy to pay.

Related Guides

Sources & Verification

Coming from another platform? See eBay to Grailed for sneaker and hype sellers, or Vinted to Grailed for EU sellers reaching the US market.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. FLUF Connect imports your Depop catalogue, lets you select the pieces suited to Grailed, and builds a Grailed-ready draft — resolving the designer, category path and required colour trait and scaffolding measurements. Because Grailed has no public API, FLUF pushes the listing through a secure browser extension that drives the real Grailed flow, including photo upload.

Grailed requires your own in-hand photos and scans for duplicated or stock images, flagging them as potential scams. If your Depop listing used your own shots they transfer fine; if it used a stock or catalogue image you must reshoot the actual item before it will survive on Grailed.

Grailed's 2026 seller commission is 9% on items $120+ (6% under $120) plus processing, and crucially it charges no commission on shipping when you use a Grailed Label. The bigger difference, though, is the audience: Grailed's brand-literate US buyers tend to pay more for designer and streetwear than Depop's budget-driven crowd.

No. Crosslist only the pieces Grailed wants — streetwear, designer and archive. Women's fast fashion, trend basics and unbranded items perform poorly on Grailed and risk removal, so keep that inventory on Depop where its audience and price expectations match.

Not yet — automatic cross-channel delist for Grailed is still being rolled out. Crosslisting, edits and deletes to Grailed work today through the extension bridge, but you should delist a sold Grailed item yourself for now to avoid double-selling. Depop, eBay and Vinted already have mature two-way inventory sync.

It is strongly recommended. Grailed has dedicated measurement fields and listings with full measurements convert far better. Depop does not capture structured measurements, so FLUF scaffolds the fields and you complete them by hand — it is the single highest-leverage edit on a crosslisted Grailed draft.

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