Crosslist from Misellit to Facebook Marketplace
Mirror your escrow-backed Misellit listings onto Facebook Marketplace's 1.1-billion-strong local-and-shipping crowd with FLUF Connect — enter it once, sell it in two shops, with automatic sold-out delisting so a one-off never sells twice.
- Misellit is a British-built, phone-first resale app where the seller keeps the whole sale price and a shopper’s payment stays locked in escrow until they tap “delivered” source.
- Facebook Marketplace is a sheer-volume neighbourhood-and-shipping bazaar: upwards of 1.1 billion people browse it monthly across 228 countries, and about 16% of active Facebook users open the app just to shop Marketplace source.
- They fit together because Misellit lands you protected, courier-shipped pounds-sterling orders, whereas Marketplace bolts on a nearby cash-collection crowd plus a posted-delivery crowd for the very same rail of stock.
- FLUF Connect lifts each Misellit listing onto Marketplace — headline, gallery, write-up, label, sizing, wear grade, shade and a matched category — with the pound price ported over.
- On Marketplace, the only thing FLUF runs for you is pulling a piece down once it sells — no auto-renewal, no haggle-handling and no order feed there, and we say so plainly.
- Membership opens at Growth, £19 a month for 500 products; there is no free plan, though every tier bundles the automation rather than charging extra for it.
Why Sell on Both Misellit and Facebook Marketplace?
The reason these two platforms reward being run side by side is that their shoppers arrive by completely different doors. On Misellit you are dealing with a tightly defined British audience that came looking to buy secondhand: the app is phone-first, quotes everything in sterling, and wraps each transaction in escrow, so a buyer’s cash is ring-fenced until they personally confirm the parcel turned up source. That reassurance draws cautious UK preloved-buyers who want a genuine backstop. Marketplace could not be more different in character. It is a giant everything-store stitched into the world’s biggest social platform, where a sale happens because somebody was already thumbing through their feed and stumbled on your item, not because they set out to shop.
The number that dominates the comparison is audience. Marketplace pulls in more than 1.1 billion browsers a month across 228 countries and territories, and roughly one in six active Facebook users fires up the app specifically to poke around Marketplace listings source. No standalone resale app operates at that magnitude. For someone already trading on Misellit, mirroring listings outward means the identical parka, set of boots or bit of kitchenware that is sitting patiently for the right Misellit buyer can, at the very same moment, appear to a neighbour a few roads over who would happily swing by with cash, and to a distant shopper scrolling at home who wants it posted.
That twin local-and-posted split is precisely what a shipping-only resale app cannot give you. An unwieldy or heavy piece — a sofa, a mattress, a mountain bike, a chunky appliance — that would be a headache to courier through Misellit can change hands the same afternoon to somebody nearby, with no bubble-wrap, no printed label and no cut taken, since collection-in-person sales are charged nothing at all by Marketplace source. Your garments and lighter goods, meanwhile, keep the option of a posted Marketplace order layered on top of their Misellit exposure. This was never a decision between an escrow-backed British marketplace and a billion-strong social one — you operate both at once and let the first willing buyer, wherever they come from, walk off with the item.
There is a range argument too. Misellit does a tidy job with fashion and everyday preloved pieces, but Marketplace is unapologetically general-purpose: clothing, sofas, phones, drills, prams, crockery and everything in between all trade briskly there. The moment your Misellit shelf spills past clothing — and most resale hauls do — Marketplace tends to be the better roof for the heavy, collect-in-person, cash-in-hand goods that courier-first apps deal with clumsily.
How to Crosslist from Misellit to Facebook Marketplace with FLUF Connect
FLUF Connect slots in between your Misellit stall and Facebook Marketplace and shoulders the tedious posting graft. Enter an item once and FLUF assembles the Marketplace copy for you. Wiring it up is a single upfront chore; from then on every fresh piece rides the same rail.
- Link Misellit. Log into Misellit safely through FLUF a single time. FLUF then treats your Misellit rail as the master copy of everything you sell.
- Link Facebook Marketplace. Marketplace is an extension-led channel: you hook it up via the FLUF browser add-on, which publishes to Marketplace through your own signed-in Facebook profile, precisely as though you were typing the ad out yourself.
- Bring in or build your stock. Suck your live Misellit listings into FLUF, or draft products inside FLUF and let it stand as the one true record.
- Line up fields and categories. FLUF converts Misellit’s label, sizing, wear grade, shade and category into the boxes Marketplace asks for. Glance over the match once and FLUF keeps it.
- Choose price and hand-over method. Your Misellit pound figure ports straight onto the Marketplace ad; you decide per item whether it is up for local collection, postage, or the pair.
- Publish to Marketplace. Fire items up one at a time or in a batch through the add-on. Because posting runs on your own profile, the ads read as ordinary seller listings, never as some outside feed dump.
- Leave the sold-out check running. The instant a piece sells on either side, FLUF flags it gone and strips it off the other so one solitary item can never sell to two people.
The hook-up method is where Marketplace parts ways most sharply from an API-fed channel, and it repays a moment’s understanding. Marketplace publishes no public seller API for one-off ads, so FLUF operates through a browser add-on that steers your real Facebook profile. That keeps it all legitimate — you are posting as you — but it also means the browser itself is doing the labour, so the richer Marketplace tricks an API would unlock (renewal, haggling, order feeds) simply are not on offer through FLUF. What the add-on nails is the bit that counts most for a many-channel trader: hoisting the ad up, and yanking it down the very minute the piece sells somewhere else.
What Sells Best on Facebook Marketplace (and How Your Misellit Stock Maps)
Marketplace rewards a different kind of inventory than a fashion-led resale app, and knowing the pattern lets you point the right Misellit pieces at it. The reliable movers split cleanly into a collect-locally lane and a post-it-out lane, and where your Misellit item lands decides how it behaves once it is live.
The local-pickup champions are the bulky and the low-margin-to-post: sofas, dining sets, wardrobes, mattresses, garden furniture, exercise bikes, cots and prams, lawnmowers, fridge-freezers and building leftovers like paving slabs or timber. These fly on Marketplace precisely because a neighbour can drive over, load up and pay cash — no courier ever touches them, so they dodge fees entirely. If your Misellit haul strays into house-clearance or homeware territory, these are the items to prioritise on the Marketplace side, since Misellit’s postal rails simply cannot carry them economically.
The posted-out movers map far more neatly onto a typical Misellit rail: streetwear and branded trainers (Nike, Adidas, Carhartt, The North Face), women’s occasion and vintage clothing, kids’ clothing bundles, phones and games consoles, small electricals, trading cards and collectibles. These are the pieces you already photograph and describe for Misellit, so mirroring them onto Marketplace as postable listings is almost free effort once FLUF has ported the data.
Buyer behaviour on Marketplace is its own beast. Shoppers browse by proximity — Marketplace defaults to a radius around their postcode and lets them widen or tighten it — so location, not just keywords, decides who sees you. That geography-first discovery is why a well-priced local sofa can shift within the hour while an identical listing 200 miles away sits ignored. Buyers also expect to haggle: the “Is this still available?” opener followed by a lowball counter in Messenger is a Marketplace ritual, so pad a little wiggle-room into the price you carry over from Misellit. Because Marketplace has no escrow on cash collections, trust is earned through your profile, mutual friends, response speed and clear photos rather than a payments backstop — a genuine shift in mindset from the protected Misellit checkout.
A few FB-native quirks are worth pricing in. Meetups are usually arranged for a public spot or a doorstep, “porch pickup” is common, and no-shows happen, so keep the item live until money changes hands. Marketplace’s search leans hard on the title and your locality, and its category tree is wide but shallow, so a plain, keyword-heavy title (“Ercol sideboard oak vintage, collection Leeds”) outperforms clever ones. None of this maps onto Misellit’s app-search, escrow, courier-first world — which is exactly why running both, with FLUF absorbing the duplication, beats picking a side.
What Transfers — Fields & Categories
FLUF ferries across the details that turn a naked post into an ad shoppers actually tap. On every crosspost from Misellit to Facebook Marketplace it moves the items below, slotting each one into its nearest Marketplace counterpart.
| Misellit field | Lands on Facebook Marketplace as | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Title | Ad title | Ported directly; load it with keywords because Marketplace search is title-first. |
| Description | Ad description | Reproduced in full, primed for both collectors and postal buyers. |
| Photos | Ad gallery | Your whole image set, in sequence, so the opening frame stays your lead shot. |
| Price (£) | Price | Ported in sterling; Marketplace displays a shopper’s own currency where it applies. |
| Brand | Brand attribute | Filled in wherever the Marketplace category makes room for a label field. |
| Condition | Condition (New / Used) | Folded into Marketplace’s blunter condition scale. |
| Size & colour | Variation / attribute fields | Mapped wherever the picked Marketplace category surfaces them. |
| Category | Marketplace category | Misellit’s category is matched to the closest node in the Marketplace tree. |
Category matching is where a catch-all venue like Facebook Marketplace behaves unlike a fashion-only app. Since Marketplace stretches from frocks to angle-grinders, most Misellit pieces find an obvious berth, but its tree is broad rather than deep, so FLUF settles on the nearest sensible node instead of a flawless fashion sub-category. Three worked examples:
- A vintage denim jacket filed on Misellit under Women’s / Jackets lands in Marketplace’s Women’s Clothing & Shoes bucket, with label and sizing pushed into the attribute boxes where they exist.
- A pair of trainers (Footwear on Misellit) drops into Marketplace’s Shoes node, sizing mapped so buyers filtering by size still turn them up.
- A bookcase or similar homeware piece — exactly the sort of heavy thing Misellit’s couriers grumble at — heads to Marketplace’s Home & Garden / Furniture bucket, where a local, fee-free collection is often the quickest result source.
Two mapping habits earn their keep on Marketplace in particular. Its discovery leans heavily on title wording and locality, so the descriptive headline (label, item type, shade, size) FLUF drags over from your Misellit listing carries much of the findability load. And because condition on Marketplace shrinks to a coarse tier, keep your Misellit write-ups candid and precise about wear — the nuance Misellit’s structured grade captures ought to live in the free-text description, so Marketplace buyers, who have no escrow to fall back on, still believe in the piece.
What Syncs (and What Doesn’t)
We are deliberately straight-talking here, because Marketplace is the thinnest of FLUF’s channels and overselling is the blunder that empties a seller’s pocket. Through FLUF, Facebook Marketplace carries sold-out delisting and nothing else. That lone automation is the one that shields you from double-selling; the rest genuinely are not on the table for this channel.
- Sold-out delisting fires. Sell a piece on Misellit and FLUF whisks it off Facebook Marketplace within minutes; sell it on Marketplace and, once that sale is logged, FLUF flags it gone and lifts it from Misellit. This is the barrier that keeps one solitary item from lingering live in two places after it has vanished.
- No renewal on Marketplace. FLUF will not auto-refresh, bump or delete-and-repost your Marketplace ads. Keeping stale ads breathing on Marketplace stays a hand-cranked job (the automation section spells out why that stings there).
- No haggle-handling on Marketplace. Marketplace’s Messenger-based bartering is not steered through FLUF; you field offers yourself inside Facebook Messenger.
- No order feed from Marketplace. FLUF does not draw Marketplace orders back into its dashboard. Your Misellit orders do flow into FLUF (Misellit supports order sync), but Marketplace order details stay parked in Facebook.
The candid verdict is that FLUF handles Facebook Marketplace as a reach-and-safety outpost: it plants your Misellit stock before a billion-strong crowd and it stops you overselling, yet the daily grind of renewing, bartering and order-wrangling on Marketplace stays with you. If full two-way automation is what you’re after, that lives on FLUF’s API-fed channels — on Marketplace the payoff is publishing plus the sold-out backstop.
Before & After: a Real Workflow
Before FLUF. You shoot a preloved coat, write the listing once for Misellit, then hop into Facebook, tap through the Marketplace posting flow, re-upload those same photos, re-key the title and blurb, and hand-pick a category. When the coat sells on Misellit, you have to remember to dive back into Marketplace and kill the ad before some nearby buyer messages to collect a thing that’s already left the building. Repeat that across forty pieces and the double-keying — plus the low-grade dread of an oversell — turns into a genuine tax on your evenings.
After FLUF. You enter the coat once in FLUF. The add-on posts it to Facebook Marketplace with your photos, blurb, price and matched category already slotted in. The moment it sells on either side, the twin comes down by itself within minutes. You still answer Marketplace messages and offers in person, and you still pick when to freshen a Marketplace ad — but the two jobs most likely to catch you out, duplicate keying and the forgotten takedown, have evaporated.
The snowball effect sits in the delisting. A seller posting ten fresh pieces a week across both venues sidesteps twenty-odd separate manual moves — ten Marketplace posts folded into batch pushes, and ten manual Marketplace deletions that never need doing because sold-out sync eats them. More to the point, the single priciest Marketplace slip-up — a local buyer driving round to collect something that already sold on Misellit — is engineered out rather than merely guarded against by your memory.
- One entry, two stalls: FLUF’s add-on posts your Misellit piece to Marketplace with no re-keying or re-uploading.
- No forgotten takedown: sold-out sync yanks the Marketplace twin down by itself when the piece sells on Misellit.
- Fewer oversells: one solitary item can’t stay live on both after it’s gone — the one automation Marketplace truly needs.
Automation Features for Misellit and Facebook Marketplace Sellers
Because Marketplace is the leanest of FLUF’s channels, this section is brief and to the point. There is exactly one automation FLUF drives on Marketplace, and it is the crucial one; the rest of what you might wish for on Marketplace is manual, and we lay out why.
Sold-out delisting on Facebook Marketplace
This is the automation that makes crosslisting onto Marketplace safe. Sell a piece on Misellit and FLUF strips the matching Marketplace ad within minutes; register a Marketplace sale and FLUF flags the item gone and lifts it from Misellit. For one-off resale stock this is non-negotiable — without it, the surest route to a sour review and a refund is a nearby buyer rocking up for something you already sold and shipped through Misellit. FLUF seals that gap on its own.
What FLUF does not automate on Marketplace — and why
FLUF does not renew, refresh, handle offers or feed orders on Facebook Marketplace. The cause is structural: Marketplace exposes no seller API for individual ads, so FLUF leans on your own browser profile, which suffices to publish and to delist but not to run dependable, unsupervised renewal or haggling flows without endangering your account. That ceiling bites hardest on renewal. Marketplace’s own bump is feeble — an ad can be renewed roughly once every seven days for a few cycles before it drifts into “zombie” mode and all but vanishes from the feed, and the community fix is to delete and repost from scratch, which nobody relishes doing for ten pieces every week source. FLUF does not automate that shuffle on Marketplace, so it stays a hand job — one of the frank trade-offs of an add-on-driven channel.
Where the fuller automation lives
If you want auto-renewal, offer handling and order sync humming end to end, those run on FLUF’s API-fed channels rather than on Marketplace. The workable model is to cast Marketplace as your reach-and-local outpost — publish far and wide, sell safely, delist automatically — while your fuller-automation channels shoulder the renew-and-haggle workload. Misellit itself, via FLUF, supplies order sync and sold-out delisting; renewal and offers are not surfaced for Misellit either, so on this precise pairing the shared, reliable automation is the sold-out backstop on both ends.
What’s Different About Selling on Facebook Marketplace vs Misellit
- Audience and scale. Misellit is a compact British resale app; Facebook Marketplace touches over 1.1 billion monthly browsers across 228 countries and is the runaway leader in social commerce source.
- Fees. Misellit takes nothing from the seller — the shopper covers a protection charge at checkout, from £0.50 on orders up to £20 climbing to £7.50 on orders above £150.01 source. Facebook Marketplace levies nothing on local-collection sales, and a 5% selling fee on posted orders (a flat $0.40 on items of $8 or under), covering processing and purchase protection source.
- Buyer protection. Misellit’s escrow keeps a shopper’s money frozen until delivery is confirmed, stronger than most resale apps source. Marketplace cover applies only to posted purchases paid through checkout — cash meetups carry no built-in safeguard either way.
- Delivery. Misellit is courier-first with baked-in multi-carrier labels and tracking spanning EVRi, DPD, Yodel, FedEx UK, Parcelforce and GlobalPost source. Marketplace forks between local collection (thrashed out in Messenger, usually cash) and posted orders, so heavy items can move nearby with no postage whatsoever.
- Discovery. Misellit floats items via in-app search and browsing; Marketplace discovery is proximity-weighted and title-led, unfolding inside a social feed people already thumb through daily.
- Listing longevity. Misellit listings park in a resale catalogue; Marketplace ads need re-bumping to stay in view and postage-only ads lapse after 30 days by design source — which is why hands-on attention counts for more on the Marketplace side.
None of these gaps argues for picking one channel over the other; they argue for running both and letting a crosslisting layer soak up the awkward parts. Misellit hands you escrow-backed, seller-fee-free British sales with proper posting; Facebook Marketplace hands you a billion-strong crowd and a fee-free local route for the heavy stock Misellit can’t readily post. FLUF’s remit on this pairing is narrow but worthwhile — get the ad onto Marketplace, and make certain it never outlives the sale.
How Much Does It Cost to Crosslist from Misellit to Facebook Marketplace?
FLUF Connect is a flat monthly membership — your Misellit and Facebook Marketplace selling costs are separate and paid to those platforms (Misellit charges sellers nothing; Marketplace is free on local collection and 5% on posted orders source). Every FLUF tier bundles the crosslisting and the sold-out sync that keeps you from overselling across all supported channels.
| Plan | Price | Products | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Growth | £19/month | 500 | Solo sellers bolting Marketplace reach onto Misellit |
| Seller | £99/month | 5,000 | Established shops scaling across channels |
| Super Seller | £299/month | Unlimited, priority sync | High-volume multi-channel operations |
There is no free plan. The cheapest way in is Growth at £19/month for 500 products, and the automation — the sold-out delisting on Marketplace and Misellit’s order sync — comes bundled in every tier, never sold on the side. See fluf.io/pricing for the current details.
Start Crosslisting from Misellit to Facebook Marketplace
Hang on to your escrow-backed Misellit stall, park the same stock in front of Facebook Marketplace’s billion-strong crowd, and let FLUF Connect shoulder the posting and the sold-out backstop so you never oversell a one-off. Get going at fluf.io/connect and publish to Marketplace through the FLUF app and browser add-on — enter it once, sell it everywhere.
Sources & Verification
- Capital One Shopping — Facebook Marketplace statistics (1.1B+ monthly shoppers, 228 countries, share of active users)
- Voolist — Facebook Marketplace fees 2026 (local collection free, 5% posted / $0.40 flat under $8)
- CLOSO — Marketplace renewal limits, “zombie” listings and the delete-and-repost workaround
- Misellit — official site (UK resale, escrow, buyer-funded fees, multi-carrier shipping)
- FLUF Connect — pricing
Last verified 2 July 2026.
Related guides
Frequently Asked Questions
Link Misellit to FLUF Connect with a secure sign-in, then hook up Facebook Marketplace through the FLUF browser add-on, which posts using your own logged-in Facebook profile. Bring your stock into FLUF or draft it there, glance over the field-and-category match once, and publish items to Marketplace one at a time or in a batch. FLUF ports the title, photos, description, brand, size, condition, colour and a matched category, with your pound price carried straight over — and you choose per item whether it's for local collection, postage, or both.
No — that is precisely what FLUF's sold-out delisting exists to stop. Sell a piece on Misellit and FLUF strips the matching Facebook Marketplace ad within minutes; log a Marketplace sale and FLUF flags the item gone and lifts it from Misellit. For one-off resale stock this is the backstop that stops a nearby buyer driving over to collect something that already sold on the other side.
FLUF Connect is a flat monthly membership opening at Growth, £19/month for 500 products. There is no free plan, and the automation is bundled into every tier rather than sold on the side. Marketplace and Misellit selling costs are separate: Misellit charges sellers nothing, while Facebook Marketplace is free on local collection and takes a 5% fee on posted orders (a flat $0.40 on items of $8 or under).
No. On Facebook Marketplace, FLUF runs sold-out delisting only. It does not renew, refresh, handle offers, or feed orders there, because Marketplace exposes no seller API for individual ads and FLUF works through your own browser profile. Renewing tired ads, replying to Messenger offers and handling orders stay manual on Marketplace, or run on FLUF's API-fed channels instead.
No. FLUF does not draw Facebook Marketplace order details into its dashboard. Your Misellit orders do flow into FLUF, but Marketplace orders and the Messenger back-and-forth stay inside Facebook. On Marketplace, the automation FLUF gives you is publishing the ad and delisting it by itself when the item sells elsewhere.
Marketplace shines for bulky, collect-in-person goods that dodge fees entirely — sofas, wardrobes, mattresses, prams, garden furniture, appliances — plus posted movers like branded trainers, women's and vintage clothing, phones and consoles. Misellit is courier-first and best for lighter fashion and preloved pieces. Mirroring the same stock onto both, with FLUF absorbing the duplication, lets the heavy items sell locally while your clothing also reaches Marketplace's posted buyers.
Yes, because the two crowds barely overlap. Misellit gives you escrow-backed, courier-first UK sales, while Facebook Marketplace reaches over 1.1 billion monthly browsers and offers a fee-free local-collection route that suits heavy items Misellit's couriers handle poorly. Listing the same stock on both simply lets whichever buyer turns up first — the neighbour with cash or the shopper who wants it posted — walk off with it.
Yes. Facebook Marketplace is an extension-led channel, so FLUF publishes through its browser add-on using your own Facebook profile. That keeps your ads reading as ordinary seller listings, but it is also why Marketplace supports sold-out delisting rather than the fuller API-fed automations available on other channels.
