FLUF Connect

Crosslist from Misellit to WooCommerce (WordPress) with FLUF Connect

Push your Misellit listings to your own WordPress store, keep stock in sync, and never sell the same one-of-one twice.

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

  • Misellit is a UK peer-to-peer resale app where the buyer funds a checkout protection fee and money sits in escrow until delivery is confirmed, so the seller banks the full sale price; WooCommerce is the open-source WordPress e-commerce plugin behind roughly a third of the world’s online shops — a store you host and own, with no marketplace clipping each order.
  • Category fit: a WordPress shop is category-agnostic, so whatever you sell on Misellit — womenswear, trainers, tech, kitchenware, vinyl — drops into a matching WooCommerce product category without hitting a “nowhere to file this” wall.
  • The FLUF Connect plugin for WooCommerce rebuilds each Misellit listing as a native WordPress product: title, image set, body copy, brand, size, colour, condition and a mapped category, with the GBP price carried across.
  • On the WooCommerce side FLUF runs two safety rails only — order sync and sold-out delisting through the stock field. A self-hosted shop has no feed to bump and no offer inbox, so there is no relisting or offer automation to add here.
  • Sell on either side and FLUF flips the twin to sold within minutes, so a one-of-one item is never bought twice across your Misellit account and your WordPress store.
  • Pricing opens at Growth, £19/month for 500 products — there is no free plan, and every tier bundles the automation rather than gating it behind an upsell.

Why Sell on Both Misellit and WooCommerce?

WooCommerce is the e-commerce plugin for WordPress: switch it on and any WordPress website becomes a fully transactional shop. It is the most-installed store software on the open web, powering more than 32% of all online shops and upward of four million live stores by Store Leads’ count source. That single fact defines this pairing. Misellit hands you a ready-made pool of buyers inside its app; WooCommerce hands you the deeds to a shop on your own domain — your branding, your checkout, your mailing list, and no third party skimming a fee off the top of every order.

Misellit is a mobile-first UK resale marketplace trading under the promise “Buy & Sell with Confidence” source. Its pull for sellers is where the fees land: the seller is charged nothing to sell, because the buyer picks up a protection fee at the till — starting at £0.50 on baskets up to £20 and climbing to £7.50 once an order tops £150.01, covering secure payments, escrow and buyer protection source. The buyer’s cash is ring-fenced in escrow until they confirm the parcel arrived, a tighter guarantee than most resale apps bother with. Misellit also folds in multi-carrier despatch — prepaid labels and live tracking across EVRi, DPD, Yodel, FedEx UK, Parcelforce and GlobalPost source — so the marketplace shoulders the fiddly logistics on your behalf.

What no marketplace can hand you is premises of your own. Inside an app you jostle in one shared feed, you obey the platform’s rules, and the shopper belongs to the platform rather than to you. A WordPress store inverts every one of those constraints: because WooCommerce is free, self-hosted open-source code, you pay no platform fee and surrender no share of revenue — the WooCommerce pricing page spells this out as “no platform fees, no revenue share” and “0% revenue share” source. You keep the whole margin bar your payment processor, you own the shopper’s email and order history, and you can layer on abandoned-cart emails, coupon codes and loyalty flows that a marketplace will never surrender to you. Crosslisting Misellit to WooCommerce splits the labour cleanly: Misellit sources the buyers while your WordPress store compounds a brand — and FLUF Connect keeps both ledgers matched so no unit ever sells on two fronts at once.

How to Crosslist from Misellit to WooCommerce with FLUF Connect

Because WooCommerce lives inside your own WordPress site rather than behind a hosted login, wiring it up is a plugin activation, not an OAuth handshake — you do it once, and from then on every fresh Misellit listing can pour into the store on autopilot.

  1. Install the FLUF Connect plugin for WooCommerce. Open your WordPress admin, head to Plugins, add and activate the FLUF Connect plugin, then link the store to your FLUF account. That WP-admin path is what bolts your WooCommerce catalogue onto the FLUF dashboard.
  2. Link your Misellit account. Sign in to Misellit through FLUF to authorise the connection — a secure sign-in, no browser extension needed.
  3. Nominate source and destination. In FLUF, set Misellit as the source channel and WooCommerce as a destination, sitting beside any other marketplaces you already run.
  4. Bring in your inventory. Import your live Misellit listings into FLUF, or build products directly in FLUF and treat it as the master record every channel reads from.
  5. Confirm the field and category mapping. FLUF recasts Misellit’s brand, size, condition, colour and category into WooCommerce’s product schema. Check it once — FLUF retains the mapping for every listing after that.
  6. Publish to WooCommerce. Push one listing or a whole batch; going forward, new Misellit listings can be despatched to your WordPress store without you touching them.
  7. Let sync do the housekeeping. The moment a unit sells on either channel, FLUF flags it sold and pulls it down on the other inside a few minutes.

The plugin architecture deserves a second look, because it is precisely what sets WooCommerce apart from every hosted destination. A marketplace connection rides on an access token that can lapse; the FLUF Connect plugin for WooCommerce executes inside your own WordPress installation, so the pipe between FLUF and the store is as durable as the site hosting it. With the plugin live, pushing a Misellit listing mints an actual WooCommerce product — a real product page on your domain, dressed in your theme, running your checkout and your chosen gateway — rather than an entry marooned in someone else’s app. You carry on selling on Misellit exactly as before while a branded shopfront quietly assembles itself in parallel.

What Transfers — Fields & Categories

FLUF ports across the data that promotes a Misellit listing into a fully-formed WooCommerce product, not merely a headline and a figure. Each crosspost carries:

Misellit field WooCommerce field Notes
Listing title Product name Reproduced word-for-word as the WooCommerce product title.
Description Product description The whole body carried into the WordPress product editor.
Photos Product gallery Your complete image set, in sequence, first frame set as the featured image.
Price (GBP) Regular price Carried straight across; recalculated to your store’s display currency if it isn’t sterling.
Brand Brand attribute / taxonomy Mapped so branded pieces stay filterable across the shop.
Size & colour Product attributes / variations Landed as WooCommerce attributes, which feed variable products and faceted search.
Condition Attribute / short description Preloved grading shown on the product page as a trust cue.
Category Product category Misellit’s category matched to the nearest WooCommerce category you’ve defined.

Three worked examples show how tidily the mapping resolves. A women’s vintage denim jacket listed on Misellit files under a Clothing > Jackets category in your store, brand, UK size and colour riding along as attributes. A refurbished set of wireless earbuds slots into an Electronics > Audio category with its condition surfaced up front on the page. A hand-thrown ceramic vase settles into a Home & Living category — and because a WordPress shop will stock any product type going, none of these trips the “no sensible destination category” snag that fashion-only marketplaces throw up.

The stand-out WooCommerce mechanic here is the variable product. WooCommerce permits unlimited product variations source, so wherever a Misellit item bundles size or colour choices, FLUF can render those as WooCommerce attributes that power a genuine variation selector on the product page. Most preloved inventory is single-unit, but the second you list multiples or several graded conditions of one item, the WordPress product model absorbs it natively — something a one-listing-per-item marketplace simply can’t. Fill in your Misellit brand, size and colour fields before you push: FLUF forwards whatever you’ve entered, yet it can only map attributes that already exist on the source listing.

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

WooCommerce isn’t a niche resale feed with a fixed taxonomy — it is a blank shop you shape, so the “best sellers” are whatever you position and market well. Store-tracking data shows WooCommerce concentrated in fashion and apparel, health and beauty, home and garden, and food and drink, with apparel one of its single largest verticals source — which lines up almost exactly with the preloved clothing, homeware and accessories that fill a typical Misellit account. The practical implication: your Misellit rails translate directly into the WooCommerce categories that already convert for millions of WordPress merchants.

Because you’re building on WordPress, the store itself becomes a discovery engine your Misellit profile can’t be. A WooCommerce product page is indexable by Google and editable via SEO plugins like Yoast or Rank Math, so a preloved Carhartt WIP jacket or a vintage Le Creuset casserole can rank for its own long-tail search term rather than being buried in an in-app feed. That rewards specific, keyword-rich titles carried over from Misellit, and it rewards clean product categories — Clothing, Footwear, Bags & Accessories, Home & Living, Electronics — that double as browsable shop sections and as URL structure.

A few WordPress-native quirks are worth knowing before you scale. WooCommerce distinguishes a simple product (one SKU, one price — how most one-of-one Misellit finds arrive) from a variable product (parent product with child variations for size or colour), and FLUF maps to whichever fits. Stock is governed per product by WooCommerce’s own inventory engine, with a Manage stock toggle and an out-of-stock status — the exact field FLUF drives when a Misellit sale lands. And unlike a marketplace, you own the merchandising: featured products, related-product blocks, on-site coupons and cross-sells all live in WP-admin, so a shopper who arrived for one preloved piece can be steered toward the rest of your rail. None of that exists inside Misellit’s app; it is the upside of turning a marketplace catalogue into a WordPress storefront.

What Syncs (and What Doesn’t)

Crosslisting one-of-one stock is only defensible if the two channels tell each other the truth. FLUF’s Misellit-to-WooCommerce sync is engineered around that, and it is scoped tightly to what each side can actually do.

  • Sold-out delisting runs both ways through the stock field. Sell on Misellit and FLUF drops the matching WooCommerce product’s stock to zero — WooCommerce flips it to out of stock and blocks further purchase. Sell first on the WordPress store and FLUF marks the Misellit listing sold. Because WooCommerce is a real inventory-managed shop, this rides its native stock-status behaviour rather than bolting anything on.
  • Orders flow back into FLUF. Sales from Misellit and from your WooCommerce store are both drawn into FLUF, giving you one screen that shows what sold and where it sold.
  • What FLUF deliberately doesn’t do on this pair: there’s no relisting and no offer management. Relisting (nudging a listing back to the top of a feed) and offer handling are marketplace levers — they exist on channels like eBay, Depop and Vinted, but a WordPress shop has no feed to bump and no offer inbox to police, and Misellit exposes neither relisting nor offers through FLUF. Here FLUF’s remit is order sync plus keeping stock exact, so a unit can never linger live on your store after Misellit has already sold it.

Before & After: a Real Workflow

Before FLUF. You shoot a preloved coat, write and price it once on Misellit, then open your WordPress admin, rebuild the same product in WooCommerce, re-upload every photo, retype the description, set the category and attributes, and hit publish. When the coat sells on Misellit, you have to remember to go back into WordPress and toggle the product out of stock — miss that step and someone buys it on the store as well, and now you’re issuing a refund and writing an apology. Holding stock in sync across two systems by hand quietly becomes its own part-time job source.

After FLUF. You list the coat a single time. FLUF spins up the WooCommerce product, carries the photos, description, price and attributes, and publishes it to your WordPress store. When it sells on either side, its counterpart comes down by itself — the WooCommerce product falls to zero stock, or the Misellit listing is stamped sold. Your hours go on sourcing and packing, not on retyping the same product between an app and a WordPress dashboard.

The payback grows with volume. A seller adding ten pieces a week builds each product once rather than twice and never has to run a manual pass to zero out stock the store has already sold elsewhere. Across a month that’s dozens of duplicate builds skipped and, more to the point, the oversold one-of-one — the refund, the let-down buyer, the bruised reputation — engineered out of the process instead of being caught by memory.

Automation Features for Misellit and WooCommerce Sellers

This pairing is about accuracy, not gaming a feed. WooCommerce is your own shopfront, so the automation FLUF contributes is the pair of guardrails that keep a self-hosted store truthful against a fast-moving marketplace — order sync and sold-out delisting via stock. Both live in the one dashboard.

Sold-out delisting via stock on WooCommerce

When something sells on Misellit, FLUF sets the paired WooCommerce product’s stock to zero, and WooCommerce’s own inventory logic marks it out of stock so it can’t be bought again. For a self-hosted seller this is the single most valuable safeguard: no marketplace referees your WordPress store, so nothing bar accurate stock stops it re-selling a one-of-one you’ve already moved elsewhere. FLUF holds that stock figure correct automatically, in both directions, within minutes.

Order sync across Misellit and WooCommerce

Orders from both channels feed back into FLUF, so WooCommerce sales and Misellit sales surface in one place. There’s no need to cross-check a WordPress orders screen against a separate marketplace app to work out what has genuinely sold.

What this pair does not automate

Plainly and honestly: the Misellit-to-WooCommerce pair carries no auto-relisting and no offer management. Those are marketplace levers — you unlock them by crosslisting Misellit to a channel like eBay, Depop or Vinted, not to your own WordPress store, which owns neither a feed to bump nor an offer inbox. On this pair FLUF is intentionally confined to sync and stock, which is exactly the toolkit a self-hosted store actually needs.

What’s Different About Selling on WooCommerce vs Misellit

  • Owned vs rented. WooCommerce is a self-hosted, open-source WordPress plugin — your shop, your domain, your customer records source. Misellit is a marketplace where the shopper is Misellit’s customer and you post into a shared app.
  • Fees. On Misellit the seller pays nothing to sell — the buyer covers a protection fee at checkout instead source. WooCommerce levies no platform fee and takes no revenue cut source; your only per-order cost is your own gateway (roughly 2.9% plus a fixed fee through Stripe or WooPayments, for instance source). Both models leave more of the sale with you, though on WooCommerce you also fund WordPress hosting and any extensions.
  • Audience. Misellit delivers UK buyers with escrow trust baked in; a fresh WooCommerce store arrives with no audience of its own — you feed it traffic through SEO, ads and your Misellit brand — but each sale thickens a customer list you keep.
  • Product types. Misellit is a resale marketplace; WooCommerce sells any product type at all, including variable products with unlimited variations source, digital downloads and bundles.
  • Trust and payments. Misellit parks buyer money in escrow until delivery is confirmed source; on your WooCommerce store you write your own returns, payment and trust policies.
  • Shipping. Misellit bundles multi-carrier labels and tracking source; on WooCommerce you set your own shipping zones and carriers through WordPress plugins.

None of these gaps argues for one channel over the other — each argues for running both. Misellit does the audience and buyer-protection graft; your WooCommerce store banks the margin, the brand and the returning shopper. A crosslisting layer swallows the distance between a marketplace listing and a self-hosted product, and holds stock honest so one sale can never quietly become two.

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

FLUF Connect is a flat monthly subscription — kept separate from your WooCommerce hosting and payment-processing bills, and separate again from Misellit, where the seller pays no selling fee. Pricing opens at Growth, £19/month for 500 products. There is no free plan, and the automation — crosslisting, order sync and sold-out delisting — ships inside every tier rather than sitting behind a paid add-on. For anyone running a WordPress store alongside Misellit the sum is straightforward: if crosslisting shifts even a handful of extra items a month, or heads off a single oversold-item refund, the subscription has already earned its keep, and the hours clawed back from duplicate product entry stack on top. See fluf.io/pricing for the current line-up.

Start Crosslisting from Misellit to WooCommerce

Carry on selling to UK buyers on Misellit, grow a branded shop you actually own on WooCommerce, and let FLUF Connect ferry every listing across and hold stock in lockstep so nothing sells twice. Install the FLUF Connect plugin for WooCommerce, connect Misellit, and list once to sell everywhere. Get started at fluf.io/connect — the FLUF app drives your entire crosslisting pipeline from one dashboard.

Sources & Verification

Last verified 2 July 2026.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The FLUF Connect plugin for WooCommerce installs straight from your WordPress admin and runs on any self-hosted WordPress site with the WooCommerce plugin active. You activate it, link the store to FLUF, then set Misellit as a source and WooCommerce as a destination. Because WooCommerce is the open-source WordPress e-commerce plugin, everything executes inside your own site rather than a hosted marketplace.

Yes. WooCommerce handles unlimited product variations, so where a Misellit item carries size or colour options FLUF maps them to WooCommerce attributes that can drive a variable product with a variation selector on the product page. Most preloved stock arrives as a simple, single-SKU product, but if you list multiples or graded conditions the WordPress product model takes it in its stride.

When a unit sells on Misellit, FLUF drops the paired WooCommerce product's stock to zero, so WooCommerce marks it out of stock and blocks the purchase. Sell it first on your WordPress store and FLUF stamps the Misellit listing sold. This sold-out delisting fires in both directions within minutes, so a one-of-one can never stay live on both channels once it has gone.

FLUF Connect opens at Growth, £19/month for 500 products. There is no free plan, and the automation — crosslisting, order sync and sold-out delisting — is bundled into every tier rather than sold as an add-on. That sits separately from your WordPress hosting and payment-processing costs, and from Misellit, where the seller pays no selling fee because the buyer funds a protection fee at checkout.

No. WooCommerce is free, open-source software you self-host on WordPress, and it levies no platform fee and takes no revenue share — its pricing page states a flat 0% revenue share. Your only per-order cost is your own payment gateway, such as Stripe or WooPayments at roughly 2.9% plus a fixed fee. You do cover WordPress hosting and any extensions you add.

No. Relisting and offer management are marketplace mechanics — a WooCommerce store is your own WordPress site, with no feed to bump and no offer inbox — and Misellit exposes neither through FLUF. On this pair FLUF is scoped to order sync and sold-out delisting via the stock field. You gain relisting and offers by crosslisting Misellit to channels such as eBay, Depop or Vinted instead.

FLUF carries the title, description, full photo set, GBP price, brand, size, colour, condition and a mapped category from each Misellit listing into a real WooCommerce product on your WordPress store. You confirm the field and category mapping once and FLUF remembers it, so later Misellit listings can flow into the store automatically.

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