Crosslist from Misellit to Vestiaire Collective
Push your Misellit listings to Vestiaire Collective's global luxury marketplace with FLUF Connect — auto-relisting, offer management, order sync and sold-out delisting from one dashboard.
- Misellit is a UK peer-to-peer resale app built on escrow and buyer-funded checkout fees, meaning your GBP sale price lands in your pocket with no seller commission deducted.
- Vestiaire Collective is the world’s authentication-first destination for pre-owned luxury, with a member community spanning 70+ countries hunting vetted designer pieces source.
- Where your stock fits: Birkins, quilted-flap handbags, tailored designer outerwear, fine jewellery and prestige watches are the exact inventory Vestiaire Collective shoppers filter for — the premium tail of a Misellit shop finally reaches a paying luxury crowd.
- FLUF Connect mirrors each Misellit listing into a Vestiaire Collective one for you: the title, image set, write-up, brand, size, condition, colour and a matched luxury department, with the GBP price restated in the shopper’s local currency.
- Because this destination is fully wired, FLUF layers bump-relisting, negotiation/offer handling, order sync and mark-as-sold delisting onto your Vestiaire Collective feed — the two growth levers Misellit itself doesn’t surface via FLUF.
- Entry pricing is Growth at £19/month for 500 products; there is no free plan, yet every automation ships inside each tier rather than behind a paywalled upgrade.
Why Sell on Both Misellit and Vestiaire Collective?
Think of Misellit and Vestiaire Collective as two ends of a single pipeline for a UK wardrobe stacked with proper labels. On the near end, Misellit keeps things domestic and frictionless: it quotes everything in pounds, parks the buyer’s payment in escrow until they confirm the parcel arrived, and shifts the platform’s cut onto the buyer at checkout so your headline price is your take-home. It is quick, it is trusted, and it is close — but the pool of shoppers it reaches stops at the UK border. Vestiaire Collective is the far end of that pipe: a curated, authentication-led home for second-hand luxury whose members go looking specifically for designer and prestige pre-owned goods, and who can be browsing from more than 70 countries at any hour source. Bridging Misellit to Vestiaire Collective means you never abandon the safe, familiar domestic sale — you simply add a second, worldwide shop window for the pieces that deserve one.
What makes the pairing click is inventory alignment rather than volume. Vestiaire Collective deliberately refuses to be a jumble-sale catch-all; it curates around handbags, elevated fashion, jewellery, watches and accessories carrying a genuine designer pedigree, and screens out fast-fashion filler source. So if your Misellit rail already holds a structured leather tote, a genuinely-labelled cashmere coat, a pair of Chanel ballet flats or a boxed Tag Heuer, you are already carrying precisely the kind of goods Vestiaire Collective’s audience queries for by name. A handbag that might linger for weeks waiting on the right Misellit shopper drops, on Vestiaire Collective, into a curated inventory numbering roughly six million pieces that luxury buyers scroll through every single day source.
The two platforms even share a philosophy, which smooths the transition. Misellit’s entire promise is confidence-through-escrow — the buyer’s cash sits in limbo until they say the item landed. Vestiaire Collective delivers the same reassurance through a different mechanism: a four-stage vetting funnel — profile monitoring, digital verification, hands-on physical inspection and quality control — with the pricier items routed through regional inspection centres before they ever reach the purchaser source. Both marketplaces are, at heart, selling trust. That means a seller of premium goods is addressing an audience that already anticipates — and is content to pay a premium for — a safeguarded transaction. You are not diluting the trust-led, high-value stance of your Misellit shop; you are exporting it to a global marketplace founded on the very same idea.
| Misellit | Vestiaire Collective | |
|---|---|---|
| Reach | UK peer-to-peer buyers | Millions of members across 70+ countries source |
| Category focus | Broad UK resale, escrow-protected | Luxury & designer only (bags, elevated fashion, watches) source |
| Buyer trust model | Escrow — funds held until delivery confirmed source | In-house authentication, physical inspection of high-value items source |
| Seller fees | No seller selling fee — buyer pays a protection fee at checkout source | 12% selling fee (£83–£16,667 band) + 3% payment processing source |
| Currency | GBP (£) | Buyer’s market currency; GBP fee structure from March 2026 source |
Vestiaire Collective figures come from the sources cited above, including the platform’s own Help Centre. Misellit figures reflect misellit.com and the FLUF sell-on-Misellit guide.
How to Crosslist from Misellit to Vestiaire Collective with FLUF Connect
FLUF Connect acts as the translation layer between your domestic Misellit shop and your Vestiaire Collective storefront, absorbing the duplicate data-entry that usually makes dual-listing luxury such a chore. You compose the item once on Misellit, and FLUF assembles the matching Vestiaire Collective listing around its stricter luxury schema. The wiring is a one-time job; from then on every new piece rides through with a single push.
- Link Misellit. Authenticate into Misellit through FLUF a single time. FLUF then ingests your Misellit catalogue so every item’s title, images, brand, size, condition, colour and price are on hand as source material.
- Link Vestiaire Collective. Attach your Vestiaire Collective seller account inside FLUF. That connection is what lets FLUF publish, bump, negotiate offers on and retire your listings at the destination.
- Bring in your inventory. Import your live Misellit listings into FLUF, or author items directly in FLUF as your master record and radiate them outward in both directions.
- Confirm field and department mapping. FLUF recasts Misellit’s brand, size, condition, colour and category into Vestiaire Collective’s finer-grained, designer-led taxonomy. Eyeball the match once and FLUF banks it for every subsequent push of that type.
- Set your price and currency logic. The GBP figure travels across and displays in the shopper’s local currency wherever the market differs. Since Vestiaire Collective deducts a 12% commission plus 3% processing from the seller source, you can pad the number so your net take matches your fee-free Misellit return.
- Publish to Vestiaire Collective. Send pieces one at a time or in a batch; from here on, freshly-created Misellit listings can auto-forward to Vestiaire Collective without you lifting a finger.
- Leave sync running. The moment an item sells on either side, FLUF flags it sold and pulls it from the other channel within minutes, so a one-off designer piece is never simultaneously live in two shops after it has changed hands.
One quirk unique to Vestiaire Collective is worth designing for up front: authentication is a post-sale event, not a pre-listing hurdle. Once a higher-value piece sells, Vestiaire Collective diverts it through an inspection centre for verification before it is dispatched to the buyer source. FLUF owns everything on either side of that step — composing the listing, keeping it buoyant, fielding offers and yanking it down the second it sells anywhere else. The vetting itself stays firmly in Vestiaire Collective’s hands, and FLUF simply keeps your Misellit twin perfectly synced so two buyers never end up fighting over the same coat.
What Transfers — Fields & Categories
FLUF ports the full data payload that gives a Vestiaire Collective listing credibility in a discerning buyer’s eyes, not just a skeleton record. Each crosspost from Misellit to Vestiaire Collective carries over:
- Title and write-up — reproduced verbatim, so the detail a luxury shopper pores over (materials, provenance, honest flaw notes) rides along with the piece.
- Images — your complete photo set in sequence, keeping your lead shot in pole position. On a designer resale platform, the photography is the pitch.
- Price — ported from GBP and shown in the shopper’s local currency, with whatever margin rule you set to swallow Vestiaire Collective’s cut.
- Brand — dropped into Vestiaire Collective’s designer field, the axis around which almost every buyer search revolves.
- Condition — recast onto Vestiaire Collective’s condition grading, a decisive trust cue and filter for pre-owned luxury.
- Size and colour — matched to Vestiaire Collective’s structured attributes that drive its faceted search.
- Category — your Misellit category is aligned to the nearest Vestiaire Collective department so the piece lands in the right corner of the luxury catalogue.
Department matching warrants a touch more attention here than on a plain fashion-to-fashion hop, because Vestiaire Collective’s taxonomy runs deep and pivots on designer names. The payoff is that precision is rewarded: a correctly-slotted designer bag surfaces in exactly the sub-department a luxury shopper drills into. FLUF performs the translation and memorises your decisions, so you set each category type once and forget it.
| Misellit field | Vestiaire Collective field | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Title | Title | Carried across; keep designer + model in the title for luxury search. |
| Description | Description | Materials, provenance and flaw notes transfer as written. |
| Photos | Photos | Full set, in order; first image stays the hero. |
| Brand | Brand / Designer | Mapped to Vestiaire Collective’s designer field — the primary search axis. |
| Condition | Condition | Translated to Vestiaire Collective’s condition grading. |
| Size / Colour | Structured attributes | Feed faceted search; populate them on Misellit first. |
| Price (GBP) | Price (buyer currency) | Carried across; add margin for the 12% + 3% fees. |
| Category | Category (luxury taxonomy) | Mapped to the closest designer department; remembered per type. |
Three quick examples show how a mapping resolves. A Misellit listing for a designer leather handbag slots into Vestiaire Collective’s Women › Bags › Handbags branch beneath the matching designer — the platform’s most liquid category. A men’s tailored wool overcoat lands in Men › Coats, where the designer and size facets do the sorting. A pair of women’s designer heels falls into Women › Shoes › Heels, the size attribute carried so buyers narrowing by fit still find them. In each case it is the brand field that pulls the item into view, which is why FLUF treats carrying it cleanly as job one.
What Sells Best on Vestiaire Collective (and How Your Misellit Stock Maps)
Vestiaire Collective is not one marketplace but a stack of tightly-defined luxury verticals, and knowing which of your Misellit pieces belong in which vertical is half the battle. The single most liquid corner is iconic handbags — the Hermès Birkin and Kelly, the Chanel Classic Flap and 2.55, the Louis Vuitton Neverfull and Speedy, the Dior Saddle and Lady Dior, the Gucci Marmont, the Bottega Veneta Jodie and Cassette. These are the pieces buyers arrive already searching by name, and a well-photographed example with box, dustbag and — ideally — a date code or serial can command a strong multiple of what it would fetch to a passing Misellit shopper. If your Misellit stock leans handbag-heavy, this is where the crosslist earns its keep first.
Beyond bags, Vestiaire Collective runs deep verticals in fine and costume jewellery (Cartier Love and Juste un Clou, Tiffany & Co., Van Cleef & Arpels Alhambra), watches (Rolex, Omega, Cartier Tank, Tag Heuer — where authentication and paperwork genuinely move the needle), designer ready-to-wear (a Max Mara camel coat, a Burberry trench, a Ganni or Reformation dress in the more accessible tier, an Acne Studios knit), shoes (Manolo Blahnik, Jimmy Choo, Christian Louboutin’s red soles, The Row flats), and small leather goods and accessories (a Hermès belt, a Gucci scarf, an YSL cardholder) that convert fast precisely because they clear the platform’s lower fixed-fee threshold cleanly. British heritage names — Burberry, Mulberry, Vivienne Westwood, Barbour — travel especially well, since international buyers actively seek UK-sourced provenance.
Two behaviours shape how you should list. First, the Vestiaire Collective community loves a “story” and a bargain in equal measure: the platform’s own “negotiate” culture means launch prices sit a little above your floor and offers do the closing, so leave headroom rather than pricing to the penny. Second, Direct Shipping versus authenticated shipping matters — lower-value items may ship straight to the buyer while pricier pieces are routed via a hub for physical inspection, so buyers of your entry-tier accessories get them faster while your Birkin buyer expects and accepts the verification wait. Map your Misellit rail accordingly: send the genuinely-labelled, box-and-receipt pieces that survive scrutiny, keep the unbranded and fast-fashion filler on Misellit where it belongs, and let FLUF’s department mapping drop each qualifying item into the exact designer sub-tree its buyers are filtering into.
What Syncs (and What Doesn’t)
The entire reason to crosslist a one-of-one designer piece is to avoid ever selling it twice. FLUF’s sync is engineered around that single risk, and Vestiaire Collective happens to support the complete automation toolkit through FLUF.
- Mark-as-sold delisting fires in both directions. Sell a handbag on Vestiaire Collective and FLUF flags it sold and strips it from Misellit; sell it on Misellit first and FLUF retires the Vestiaire Collective copy. Both runs complete within minutes, shrinking the oversell window on a costly single item to almost nothing.
- Orders flow back into FLUF. Both Vestiaire Collective and Misellit sales are drawn into FLUF, so you read what sold and where in one view — handy precisely when a Vestiaire Collective sale kicks off the platform’s authentication routing.
- Relisting and offers are live on Vestiaire Collective. Both are surfaced through FLUF at this destination (detailed in the automation section) — a genuine edge, given how clumsy Vestiaire Collective’s own console makes it to freely retire and re-post inventory that has gone stale source.
- What FLUF deliberately does not do: it does not push live stock-count figures — resale is a single-unit world, so the model is mark-as-sold rather than quantity syncing. And relisting plus offer handling are Vestiaire Collective-side capabilities here; Misellit does not expose either through FLUF, so those two levers operate on the destination only.
Before & After: a Real Workflow
Before FLUF. You shoot a Gucci shoulder bag, compose the listing once for Misellit in pounds, then re-shoot or re-upload, rewrite and re-price the identical bag for Vestiaire Collective — wrestling its deeper luxury taxonomy and eyeballing the currency conversion by hand. Because Vestiaire Collective makes self-service delisting and re-posting of tired stock genuinely fiddly source, the listing goes dormant after a couple of weeks with no simple way to bump it. When the bag finally sells on Misellit, you have to remember to strip the Vestiaire Collective copy before a second buyer commits. Multiply that across thirty designer pieces and the double-handling plus oversell exposure becomes a genuine drain — and an oversold luxury item is a costly, reputation-denting mistake, not a shrug.
After FLUF. You list the bag a single time. FLUF constructs the Vestiaire Collective version, files it in the correct designer department, restates the price in the buyer’s currency, and publishes it. FLUF’s relisting keeps it buoyant in the feed, its offer handling runs the haggling, and when the piece sells on either side the twin listing retires itself. Your hours go into sourcing and vetting quality stock instead of retyping the same details into two separate taxonomies.
The gains compound with scale. A seller adding five or ten designer pieces weekly writes, prices and uploads each one once rather than twice, and never has to run a manual sweep to pull sold items off the second channel. Over a month that is dozens of duplicate uploads sidestepped and — the part that matters most for high-value goods — the oversold one-of-one, the let-down luxury buyer, the refund and the reputational ding engineered out of the workflow entirely rather than merely guarded against by memory.
Automation Features for Misellit and Vestiaire Collective Sellers
Here is where the two channels part ways. Misellit through FLUF hands you order sync and mark-as-sold delisting — the guard rails against double-selling. Vestiaire Collective through FLUF stacks two active growth levers on top: bump-relisting and offer handling. It all lives in one dashboard, and it all ships inside every plan.
Bump-relisting on Vestiaire Collective
Freshness is currency on Vestiaire Collective, yet its own console makes hand-delisting and re-posting stale inventory a real slog — sellers report they simply cannot easily revive listings that have gone quiet source. FLUF’s relisting attacks precisely that friction: it cycles your Vestiaire Collective items back to the top automatically, returning dormant high-value pieces to buyers’ feeds without you sparring with the platform’s UI. Misellit does not expose relisting through FLUF, so this is a lever you pick up specifically on the Vestiaire Collective side.
Offer handling on Vestiaire Collective
Vestiaire Collective shoppers haggle, and on pricier designer pieces the accepted offer is usually how the deal actually closes rather than a full-price checkout. FLUF lets you run offers on Vestiaire Collective from the same screen, working the back-and-forth that turns an overseas browser into a committed buyer — even when the offer lands while you are asleep in a different time zone. This is Vestiaire Collective-only through FLUF; Misellit offers are not handled here. On luxury stock, where one sale can be worth several hundred pounds, catching every offer is not a nicety — it is the line between the piece selling and the piece stalling.
Order sync and mark-as-sold delisting (both channels)
The pair of features the two channels hold in common. Orders stream back into FLUF from Misellit and Vestiaire Collective alike, and a sale on either channel retires the item on the other within minutes — the core defence against selling a one-of-one designer piece to two people.
| Feature via FLUF | Misellit | Vestiaire Collective |
|---|---|---|
| Auto-relisting (feed refresh) | ❌ | ✅ |
| Offer management | ❌ | ✅ |
| Order sync | ✅ | ✅ |
| Sold-out delist | ✅ | ✅ |
What’s Different About Selling on Vestiaire Collective vs Misellit
- Audience and geography. Misellit is UK peer-to-peer; Vestiaire Collective is worldwide, with a community of millions spread across 70+ countries source. Your Vestiaire Collective buyer might be tapping “buy” from Paris, Hong Kong or New York.
- Category positioning. Misellit welcomes broad UK resale; Vestiaire Collective is luxury-gated and rewards true designer and prestige pieces over everyday goods source. Route your very best items there.
- Fees. On Misellit the seller pays no commission — the buyer funds a protection fee at checkout source. On Vestiaire Collective the seller absorbs a 12% selling fee on items in the £83–£16,667 band (a £10 fixed fee below it), plus a 3% payment processing fee (minimum £3) source. Price your Vestiaire Collective listings to swallow that.
- Currency. Misellit quotes in GBP; Vestiaire Collective displays prices in the shopper’s local currency, its GBP fee structure taking effect from March 2026 source. FLUF ports the price on push.
- Authentication. Misellit shields the buyer with escrow; Vestiaire Collective shields the buyer with a four-stage vetting process and physical inspection of pricier pieces at regional hubs, adding a post-sale step Misellit simply doesn’t have source.
- Listing upkeep. Misellit is easy to self-manage; Vestiaire Collective’s console makes freely editing, retiring and re-posting stale stock harder source — among the clearest reasons to hand freshness to FLUF’s relisting.
None of these contrasts argues for choosing one channel over the other — they argue for running both and letting a crosslisting layer soak up the friction between them. Currency handling, feed freshness and offer negotiation are all points where a manual two-shop seller bleeds time or money on Vestiaire Collective; they are all points where FLUF simply does the work. Your Misellit shop carries on doing what it does best — trusted, commission-free UK sales in sterling — while Vestiaire Collective does its own thing, parading your designer pieces before a global luxury audience that expects authentication and will happily pay for it.
How Much Does It Cost to Crosslist from Misellit to Vestiaire Collective?
FLUF Connect bills as a flat monthly subscription — your Misellit and Vestiaire Collective marketplace fees are entirely separate and paid to those platforms. Every FLUF plan bundles crosslisting, order and mark-as-sold sync, relisting, offers and bulk tooling across all supported channels, with automation baked into each tier rather than dangled as a paid upgrade.
| Plan | Price | Products | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Growth | £19/month | 500 | Solo UK sellers testing Vestiaire Collective’s global luxury reach |
| Seller | £99/month | 5,000 | Established designer resale shops scaling internationally |
| Super Seller | £299/month | Unlimited, priority sync | High-volume luxury and consignment operations |
There is no free plan. The lowest rung is Growth at £19/month for 500 products, and automation — relisting, offers, sync — comes with every tier rather than as a paid upgrade. For a UK seller the arithmetic is blunt: because Misellit takes nothing from the seller and Vestiaire Collective is where your top-value pieces land, shifting even one or two extra designer items a month that would otherwise have gathered dust repays the subscription several times over — before you tally the hours clawed back from duplicate listing and manual delisting. See fluf.io/pricing for current details.
Start Crosslisting from Misellit to Vestiaire Collective
Hold onto your commission-free UK Misellit shop, open a second front on Vestiaire Collective’s global luxury audience across 70+ countries, and let FLUF Connect shoulder the mapping, price conversion, relisting, offer handling and mark-as-sold sync from a single dashboard — on the web and in the app. List once, sell everywhere. Get started at fluf.io/connect.
Sources & Verification
- Wikipedia — Vestiaire Collective (members, 70+ countries, four-step authentication, regional hubs)
- Vestiaire Collective Help Centre — Seller Selling Fees (12% + 3% processing, GBP from March 2026)
- Statista — Vestiaire Collective statistics & facts (catalogue size, reach)
- Crosslist — Vestiaire Collective review (luxury-only focus, relisting/editing pain points)
- Misellit — official site (UK escrow-protected resale, buyer-funded fees, multi-carrier shipping)
- FLUF Connect — pricing
Last verified 2 July 2026.
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Frequently Asked Questions
FLUF's mark-as-sold delisting works in both directions. The instant a one-off piece sells on either channel, FLUF flags it sold and strips it from the other within minutes, so a single designer item is never left live in two shops after it has changed hands. Orders from both Misellit and Vestiaire Collective are also drawn back into FLUF so you can see what sold where at a glance.
FLUF Connect starts at Growth, £19/month for 500 products. There is no free plan, and every automation — relisting, offer handling, order sync and mark-as-sold delisting — is baked into each tier rather than dangled as a paid upgrade. Your Misellit and Vestiaire Collective marketplace fees are entirely separate and paid to those platforms.
FLUF ports the title, images, write-up, brand, size, condition, colour and price, and files your Misellit category into the nearest Vestiaire Collective designer department. Your GBP price travels across and shows in the shopper's local currency, and you can pad it with a margin rule to absorb Vestiaire Collective's 12% commission plus 3% processing fee.
Yes. Through FLUF, Vestiaire Collective gains bump-relisting (reviving quiet listings that its own console makes fiddly to re-post by hand) and offer handling, alongside order sync and mark-as-sold delisting. Misellit does not expose relisting or offers through FLUF, so those two active levers apply on the Vestiaire Collective side only.
For items in the £83–£16,667 band, the seller pays a 12% selling fee, with a £10 fixed fee below that band, plus a 3% payment processing fee (minimum £3). The GBP fee structure takes effect from March 2026. Misellit, by contrast, deducts no commission from the seller — the buyer funds a protection fee at checkout instead.
Yes — vetting is Vestiaire Collective's own process and happens after a sale, with pricier pieces physically inspected at its regional hubs before dispatch to the buyer. FLUF owns everything around it: composing the listing, keeping it buoyant, running offers and retiring it the moment it sells elsewhere so two buyers never end up chasing the same item.
Iconic handbags lead — Hermès Birkin and Kelly, Chanel Classic Flap, Louis Vuitton Neverfull, Dior Saddle and the like — followed by fine jewellery, watches, designer ready-to-wear and shoes. British heritage names such as Burberry and Mulberry travel especially well internationally. Send your genuinely-labelled, box-and-receipt pieces to Vestiaire Collective and keep unbranded or fast-fashion filler on Misellit; it is a luxury-only marketplace reaching a global crowd across 70+ countries.
