FLUF Connect

Crosslist from Misellit to Depop

Push your escrow-protected Misellit listings onto Depop's global Gen-Z fashion feed with FLUF Connect — one listing, two shops, no double-selling.

26 marketplaces, one dashboard Auto inventory sync WhatsApp, email & in-app support
Key Takeaways — Misellit to Depop Crosslisting

  • Misellit is a UK-only resale app where the buyer covers the fees and every payment is held in escrow until the parcel is confirmed delivered; Depop is the worldwide, Gen-Z-driven fashion marketplace with around 56.3 million registered users and more than 68 million items live source.
  • Vintage, streetwear, y2k, sneakers and preloved designer are the beating heart of Depop’s search feed — the exact stock UK Misellit sellers already carry — so the two shops line up on category with almost no rework.
  • FLUF Connect rebuilds each Misellit listing on Depop automatically: the title, image set, description, brand, size, condition, colour and a matched Depop category, price included.
  • Because Depop is a full-capability channel in FLUF, you get auto-relisting, offer management, order sync and sold-out delisting on the Depop side — all four levers, not a subset.
  • The moment a piece sells on either shop, FLUF flags it sold and pulls the twin listing down within minutes, so a single one-of-one garment can never be bought twice.
  • Pricing opens at Growth, £19/month for 500 products — there is no free plan, and every automation ships inside each tier rather than as a paid add-on.

Why Sell on Both Misellit and Depop?

Selling preloved fashion, vintage, trainers or designer on Misellit means your inventory is already Depop-ready — what a Misellit-only shop lacks is reach, not the right product. Misellit is deliberately domestic and phone-native, and it wins on reassurance: a buyer’s payment stays locked in escrow until they tell the app the item landed, and the seller never pays a listing or selling fee because that cost is folded into the buyer’s checkout protection charge. That reassurance converts nervous UK shoppers beautifully. What it can’t do is send your rail of jackets abroad. Pushing the same rail onto Depop solves exactly that gap: you keep the trusted Misellit sale and simultaneously open a listing to a young, style-led international crowd that a single UK app will never put in front of you.

Scale is the entire case. Depop’s own newsroom puts the community at around 56.3 million registered users, more than 68 million items for sale and up to 600,000 fresh listings a day, with over $6 billion of goods sold to date source. And that crowd is unusually young: roughly 90% of Depop users are under 25, with Gen-Z steering what gets bought and what gets resold source. That is the demographic powering the whole secondhand surge, and it is precisely who a well-shot Carhartt Detroit jacket or a clean pair of Air Force 1s should be landing in front of. Left on Misellit, that jacket waits for one right UK buyer; dropped onto Depop, it enters a feed that millions of fashion scrollers pull-to-refresh every single day.

Geography seals it. Depop’s strongest markets run United States first, then the United Kingdom, followed by Australia and Italy source. For a British seller that spread is close to free money: your Misellit listings are written in English and already priced against a Western resale market, so extending onto Depop reaches American, Australian and Italian buyers with no re-translation and no re-shoot. This is not swapping one shop for another — it is handing every garment a second, far bigger window and letting whichever market wants it most check out first. The slow, escrow-safe UK sale and the fast, global Depop sale complement each other; they don’t compete for the same buyer.

How to Crosslist from Misellit to Depop with FLUF Connect

FLUF Connect slots between your two shops and shoulders the repetitive part. You list — or import — a piece once, and FLUF assembles the Depop version for you. The wiring is a one-off; from then on each new garment can travel to Depop on its own.

  1. Link Misellit. Sign in to Misellit through FLUF a single time. That connects your escrow-backed UK shop so FLUF can read your catalogue and catch sale notifications the instant something moves.
  2. Link Depop. Connect your Depop shop through FLUF’s in-app authorisation. Depop becomes the outbound channel FLUF publishes your listings to.
  3. Bring in your stock. Import your live Misellit catalogue into FLUF, or build items in FLUF as the single master record so both shops stay perfectly in step.
  4. Confirm the field and category match. FLUF converts Misellit’s brand, size, condition, colour and category into Depop’s own structure. Check the mapping once; FLUF reuses it on every future push.
  5. Set the Depop price. Your Misellit GBP figure carries straight over. Add a margin rule if you want to absorb Depop’s payment processing, an optional Boost, or the courier cost on an overseas order.
  6. Publish to Depop. Send items over one at a time or in a bulk sweep. After this, new Misellit listings can auto-post to Depop with no further clicks.
  7. Switch on the automation. Turn on auto-relisting and let sold-out sync run — pieces bump themselves up the Depop feed and vanish the second they sell on either shop.

The connection stage is where most crosslisting tools quietly fall apart, so it’s worth spelling out what FLUF actually asks. Linking Misellit is one secure sign-in; linking Depop is one in-app authorisation. You are not stuck nursing an open browser tab or re-logging every morning to keep listings alive. Once the two channels are joined, the whole Misellit-to-Depop pipeline runs from one dashboard — and that same dashboard is where you’ll later approve Depop offers and schedule relists, instead of bouncing between two apps. For anyone currently retyping every listing by hand, that is the gap between crosslisting being a task you keep putting off and a background job you forget is even running.

What Transfers — Fields & Categories

FLUF moves the data that actually makes a Depop listing sell, not just a stripped-back minimum. On every crosspost from Misellit to Depop it carries the fields below, slotting each one into Depop’s native structure:

Field From Misellit To Depop
Title Listing title Depop title — primed for Depop’s hashtag-and-keyword search habits
Description Full item description Carried over and formatted for Depop
Photos Your complete image set, in sequence Same sequence, so your styled hero shot stays frame one
Price GBP price Carried across, with any margin rule you’ve set
Brand Brand field Mapped to Depop’s brand attribute for brand-name search
Size Size attribute Mapped to Depop’s structured size field
Condition Condition Translated onto Depop’s condition scale
Colour Colour attribute Mapped to Depop’s colour filter
Category Misellit category Matched to the nearest Depop category

Since Misellit and Depop overlap so tightly on preloved fashion, the category match is nearly always clean — you rarely hit a Misellit fashion category with no obvious Depop equivalent. Three quick illustrations show how it resolves: a vintage band tee from Misellit drops into Depop’s Tops / T-shirts with its brand and size intact, so it turns up in both keyword and filtered searches; a pair of Nike Air Max lands in Depop’s Shoes / Trainers with the UK size mapped across, so buyers filtering by size genuinely see them; a designer handbag maps to Depop’s Bags & Purses with the brand attribute preserved, which is how it appears the moment a shopper searches that specific label.

A handful of mapping habits pay off specifically for Depop. Depop buyers hunt by brand and by era at least as much as by garment type, so populate your Misellit brand field before you push — FLUF forwards it faithfully, but it can only map what you actually entered. Feed the colour and size attributes too: Depop’s filtered browse runs on structured attributes, and a properly mapped listing surfaces for someone narrowing by size or colour in a way a free-text-only post simply won’t. And because Depop leans so heavily on hashtags, a title and description that already read naturally for search will pull harder the moment they arrive — the text transfers word for word, so the care you put into the Misellit copy is exactly the care Depop inherits.

What Sells Best on Depop (and How Your Misellit Stock Maps)

Depop is not a general marketplace with a fashion corner — it is a fashion-first discovery app whose feed is tuned to specific looks, and knowing those looks tells you which of your Misellit pieces to prioritise pushing over. The reliable sellers cluster around a few recognisable lanes. Y2k and 90s vintage moves fast: baby tees, low-rise denim, mesh and slip dresses, and slogan tees all ride the nostalgia cycle that Depop’s under-25 base drives. Streetwear and skate is a permanent fixture — think Carhartt, Dickies, Stüssy, The North Face and Ralph Lauren, especially graphic sweats, workwear jackets and cargos. Sneakers and trainers are their own economy on Depop, with Nike (Air Force 1, Dunk, Air Max), adidas Samba and Sambas-adjacent silhouettes, and New Balance 550s among the most searched. Designer and archive pieces — a Coach or Prada nylon bag, vintage Burberry check, or a Stone Island badge — sell on the strength of the brand attribute alone if you’ve mapped it. And a growing gorpcore, coquette and grunge aesthetic layer means the search terms buyers type are as much mood-words as garment-words.

That maps cleanly onto a UK Misellit rail. The vintage band tee you’d list on Misellit is a Depop Tops search staple; the Carhartt Detroit or a barn jacket is core Depop workwear; UK-sized trainers, priced in GBP, sit exactly where British Depop buyers browse. The one habit worth building is Depop-native: because discovery here is hashtag- and keyword-led, buyers find things by typing combinations like “y2k baby tee”, “vintage Nike windbreaker” or “coquette lace top” rather than clicking category trees. So when FLUF carries your Misellit title and description across verbatim, the listings that already read like a Depop search — brand plus era plus garment plus vibe — convert hardest. Depop also skews toward lower average price points than a designer resale site and rewards fast, chatty communication and offer-friendly pricing, so a US or Australian buyer scrolling at 2am will often open with an offer rather than buy outright. Prioritise pushing your on-trend, sub-£60, brand-named pieces first, keep the hero photo styled and bright, and let the auto-relist keep them circulating — that’s the combination Depop’s feed rewards, and none of it needs new photography beyond what your Misellit shop already holds.

What Syncs (and What Doesn’t)

The whole reason to crosslist one-of-one fashion is so a single garment never sells twice, and FLUF’s sync is engineered around that promise. Depop is a full-capability channel in FLUF, so all four automations are live on the Depop side.

  • Sold-out delisting is bidirectional. Sell a jacket on Depop and FLUF flags it sold and strips it off Misellit; sell it on Misellit first and FLUF removes it from Depop. Both directions are covered, and both fire within minutes.
  • Orders flow back into FLUF. Depop and Misellit orders are both pulled into FLUF, giving you one screen for what sold where — while Misellit’s escrow-held payment still settles inside Misellit exactly as it always did.
  • Relisting runs on Depop. FLUF can bump your Depop items so they resurface in the feed (detailed below). Misellit doesn’t expose relisting through FLUF, so this is a lever you pick up specifically on the Depop side.
  • Offer management runs on Depop. FLUF handles the Depop offer back-and-forth for you. Misellit offers aren’t managed through FLUF.
  • What FLUF won’t do: it doesn’t broadcast running stock-count numbers, because resale is single-item by nature — the model is mark-as-sold, not quantity syncing. Through FLUF, Misellit contributes order sync and sold-out delisting only, while Depop brings the complete set.

Before & After: a Real Workflow

Before FLUF. You shoot a vintage Levi’s trucker, write the listing once for Misellit, then re-upload the photos, retype the description and re-enter the price on Depop by hand. Every week or two you crawl back into the Depop app and manually relist your older pieces one by one — saving the photos, copying the text, deleting the stale post and reposting it — because Depop’s feed buries anything that’s been sitting still. When the trucker finally sells on Misellit, you have to remember to open Depop and pull it down before a second buyer taps buy. Stretch that across fifty items and the double-handling, the relist grind and the oversell risk turn into a genuine tax on your week.

After FLUF. You list the trucker once. FLUF builds the Depop version and posts it. Auto-relisting keeps it near the top of the feed with no input from you, offer management handles the haggling with interested buyers, and the instant it sells on either shop the other listing disappears on its own. Your hours go to sourcing and shipping instead of copy-pasting and reposting.

The payoff compounds with volume. A seller adding ten pieces a week writes, prices and uploads each listing once rather than twice, never runs a manual Depop relist sweep, and never has to remember to yank a sold item off the second channel. Across a month that’s dozens of duplicate uploads and relists spared — and, more valuably, an entire class of error engineered out: the oversold one-of-one, the let-down second buyer, the refund and the bad review are prevented by the structure of the system rather than caught by your memory.

Automation Features for Misellit and Depop Sellers

Depop is one of FLUF’s full-capability channels, so all four automations run on the Depop side: auto-relisting, offer management, order sync and sold-out delisting. Through FLUF, Misellit supplies the two safety rails — order sync and sold-out delisting — while the active growth levers sit on Depop. Everything below lives inside one dashboard.

Auto-relisting on Depop

Depop’s ranking favours freshness: newly posted and refreshed listings climb higher, so a piece that’s been static for weeks effectively drops out of sight. Sellers know it, which is why manual relisting — saving the photos, copying the text, deleting and reposting — is one of the most draining parts of running a Depop shop, each relist eating several minutes and needing repeating often source. FLUF’s auto-relisting takes that off your plate, lifting your Depop items back up the feed automatically and putting stale stock in front of buyers again with zero re-uploads. Misellit doesn’t expose relisting through FLUF, so this is a purely Depop-side win.

Offer management on Depop

Depop buyers expect to haggle, and offers are a core part of how pieces actually move. FLUF lets you handle Depop offers from the same dashboard, working the back-and-forth that turns a browser into a buyer. This is Depop-only — Misellit offers aren’t managed through FLUF. It counts for more than it seems: Depop’s top markets are the US, UK, Australia and Italy source, so an American buyer can drop an offer while you’re asleep in Britain. Automating the reply means the sale doesn’t stall until you wake up.

Order sync and sold-out delisting (both channels)

These are the two features Misellit and Depop share through FLUF. Orders stream back into FLUF from both shops, and a sale on either one delists the item on the other within minutes — the guardrail that stops a one-of-one piece from selling twice across a UK escrow sale and a global Depop sale at once.

What’s Different About Selling on Depop vs Misellit

  • Audience and geography. Misellit is UK-bound and reassurance-led; Depop is worldwide and tilts hard toward Gen-Z fashion, with roughly 90% of users under 25 and its biggest markets in the US, UK, Australia and Italy source.
  • Who pays the fees. On Misellit the seller pays no selling fee — the buyer funds a protection charge at checkout Misellit. Depop’s model varies by market: since March 2024, UK sellers selling in GBP pay zero selling fee, and the buyer instead pays a Marketplace fee of up to 5% + up to £1 brought in during April 2024 source. Payment processing (about 2.9% + £0.30 in the UK) still falls on the seller source.
  • Selling abroad. If your Depop buyer is outside the UK, the older seller-side model applies — historically a 10% selling fee plus processing of around 3.3% + $0.45 on US sales source — so price cross-border listings with that in mind.
  • Paid visibility. Depop sells Boosted Listings that add a fee only when the item sells through the boost source — a promotion lever Misellit doesn’t offer.
  • Buyer protection. Misellit parks the buyer’s money in escrow until delivery is confirmed; Depop runs its own Depop Protection, funded by the Marketplace fee source. Both shield the buyer, but through different mechanics.
  • Discovery culture. Misellit leans on search, offers and messaging inside a tight UK app; Depop is hashtag-fuelled, aesthetic-driven and curation-heavy, so styled photos and on-trend tags carry noticeably more weight there.
  • Shipping. Misellit prints multi-carrier UK labels with live tracking across EVRi, DPD, Yodel, FedEx UK, Parcelforce and GlobalPost Misellit; on Depop you arrange postage per sale, and an international Depop order means factoring cross-border courier cost into the price.

None of these contrasts argues for picking one channel over the other — they argue for running both and letting a crosslisting layer soak up the friction. Fee models, feed freshness and offer handling are all points where a manual two-shop seller bleeds time or money, and all points FLUF quietly covers. Misellit keeps doing what it’s best at — trusted, escrow-backed UK sales — while Depop does what it’s best at: dropping your stock in front of a young global audience that buys fast and buys often.

How Much Does It Cost to Crosslist from Misellit to Depop?

FLUF Connect is a single flat monthly subscription. Your Misellit and Depop marketplace charges are separate and paid to those platforms — on Misellit the buyer funds the fees, and on Depop your costs hinge on the market as set out above. Every FLUF plan bundles crosslisting, order and sold-out sync, relisting, offers and bulk tools across all supported channels; automation is included in every tier, never a paid add-on. Pricing opens at Growth, £19/month for 500 products. There is no free plan. The arithmetic is simple: if crosslisting onto Depop’s roughly 56-million-strong audience shifts even a few extra pieces a month that would otherwise have gone stale on Misellit alone, the subscription has already paid for itself — and the hours you win back from duplicate listing, manual relisting and delisting sit on top of that. See fluf.io/pricing for current details.

Start Crosslisting from Misellit to Depop

Hold onto your escrow-protected Misellit shop, tap Depop’s global Gen-Z audience, and let FLUF Connect run the field mapping, relisting, offers and sold-out sync from a single dashboard — on the web and in the app. List once, sell everywhere. Get started at fluf.io/connect.

Sources & Verification

Last verified 2 July 2026.

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Frequently Asked Questions

You link both accounts to FLUF Connect once, then FLUF rebuilds each Misellit listing on Depop — title, photos, description, brand, size, condition, colour and a matched Depop category, with the GBP price carried across. After setup, new Misellit listings can post to Depop automatically.

No. FLUF's sold-out delisting is bidirectional: sell a piece on Depop and FLUF flags it sold and removes it from Misellit, and the reverse too, usually within minutes. Resale is a one-of-one world, so this mark-as-sold sync exists specifically to stop a single garment being oversold across the two shops.

FLUF Connect is a flat monthly subscription opening at Growth, £19/month for 500 products. There is no free plan, and automation — crosslisting, relisting, offers and sync — ships inside every tier rather than as an add-on. Your Misellit and Depop marketplace charges are separate and paid to those platforms.

Yes. Depop is a full-capability channel through FLUF, so it supports auto-relisting (lifting items back up Depop's freshness-driven feed), offer management, order sync and sold-out delisting. Relisting and offers are Depop-side levers — Misellit does not expose them through FLUF.

Depop's fastest lanes are y2k and 90s vintage, streetwear and skate (Carhartt, Dickies, Stüssy, The North Face), sneakers (Nike Air Force 1 and Dunk, adidas Samba, New Balance 550) and archive designer. A UK Misellit rail of preloved fashion, vintage tees and UK-sized trainers maps onto these directly, so most pieces need no rework — just push your on-trend, brand-named items first and let auto-relist keep them circulating.

For UK sellers selling in GBP, Depop scrapped its 10% selling fee in March 2024; instead the buyer pays a Marketplace fee of up to 5% + up to £1, introduced in April 2024. Sellers still pay payment processing of about 2.9% + £0.30 in the UK. Non-UK sales use the older seller-side model (historically a 10% selling fee plus processing), and Boosted Listings are an optional extra fee charged only when the item sells via the boost.

Depop reports around 56.3 million registered users, more than 68 million items for sale and up to 600,000 new listings a day, with a heavily Gen-Z base (roughly 90% under 25) concentrated in the US, UK, Australia and Italy. Misellit is a UK-only, escrow-protected marketplace, so crosslisting to Depop stacks a large international audience on top of your domestic UK buyers.

Yes. Misellit sales keep settling through Misellit's escrow, where the buyer's money is held until delivery is confirmed. FLUF only syncs orders and sold-out status between the shops — it never changes how either platform handles payment or buyer protection.

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