Crosslist from Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective — Sell Designer Globally
Take your branded Wallapop items to Vestiaire Collective’s global luxury buyers automatically. Inventory stays in sync across all 19 channels.
- Wallapop: ~19M monthly active users, but around 80% are in Spain and there is no luxury authentication.
- Vestiaire Collective: 23M+ members in 70 countries for pre-owned luxury, with built-in authentication that lets unknown sellers move high-value designer pieces.
- Why pair them: keep Wallapop’s local reach, and sell authentic designer items to global luxury buyers who pay more.
- Fields that transfer: title, description, images, price, brand, condition, size, colour.
- Inventory sync: a sale on either channel delists the item on the other, within minutes.
- Cost: from £19/month, with no per-sale fee added by FLUF.

Why crosslist from Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective?
Wallapop is brilliant for selling locally in Spain, but it’s a bargain-led, hyper-local marketplace with no luxury authentication — which caps what your designer pieces can fetch. Vestiaire Collective is a global pre-owned luxury marketplace where authenticated designer items reach buyers worldwide who expect to pay premium prices. Crosslisting from Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective lets you keep Wallapop’s local reach while putting your branded inventory in front of a global luxury audience.
The audiences barely overlap, which is the point. Following Naver’s 2025 acquisition, Wallapop was reported to have around 19 million monthly active users, about 80% of them in Spain — a strong domestic base, but a domestic one, oriented to bargain hunting. Vestiaire Collective reports over 23 million members across 70 countries, with GMV approaching €1 billion in 2024. For an authentic Chanel bag or a pair of designer boots, that global pool of buyers — actively shopping for pre-owned luxury — is where the value is.
Authentication is the real differentiator. Vestiaire Collective’s physical authentication service routes sold items through expert verification before they reach the buyer, which is precisely what lets an unknown seller move a high-ticket item that a buyer would never risk on an un-vetted local listing. Wallapop sellers of genuine designer goods have repeatedly run into counterfeit-dispute friction; Vestiaire Collective’s model removes that doubt and, with it, the discount buyers demand for the risk.
Who should crosslist Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective?
This pairing is for Wallapop sellers who hold genuine designer and premium items — handbags, shoes, ready-to-wear and accessories from recognised luxury houses — rather than general second-hand goods. If your Wallapop inventory is mostly everyday clothing, electronics or furniture, Vestiaire Collective is not the right destination, because it only accepts approved luxury and premium brands. But if you have authentic designer pieces that under-sell to bargain-minded local buyers, a global luxury audience is exactly what they need.
It also suits sellers who are tired of proving authenticity to sceptical local buyers. On Vestiaire Collective, the platform’s own experts do that job, so your reputation is not the thing standing between a buyer and a high-value purchase. That shift — from “trust me” to “the platform verified it” — is what unlocks higher prices.
How to crosslist from Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective with FLUF Connect
- Connect Wallapop. Wallapop is extension-first, so you sign in to Wallapop in your browser with the FLUF extension installed.
- Connect Vestiaire Collective. Vestiaire Collective is also extension-first; sign in the same way. Crosslisting traffic for both runs from your browser session.
- Import your Wallapop listings. FLUF reads titles, descriptions, photos, prices, brands and sizes into one dashboard.
- Pick the designer pieces. Only branded, accepted items qualify on Vestiaire Collective, so select your genuine designer inventory.
- Map, review and publish. FLUF maps each listing to Vestiaire Collective’s taxonomy and brand field; you review and publish. Inventory and orders then stay in sync.
Sell your authentic designer pieces to a global luxury audience — while keeping your Wallapop listings live.
What transfers from Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective
Vestiaire Collective is brand- and detail-driven, so accurate brand and condition data matters more here than on a general marketplace. FLUF maps your Wallapop listing across:
| Field | Wallapop (source) | Vestiaire Collective (destination) | How FLUF handles it |
|---|---|---|---|
| Title | Free text | Structured title | Transfers |
| Description | Free text | Description | Transfers in full |
| Images | Multiple | Up to 10 | Transfers |
| Price | EUR | EUR / local currency | Transfers; mind the minimum listing price |
| Brand | Optional text | Accepted-brand list (required) | Matched to an accepted brand; rejected if not on the list |
| Condition | Condition field | Condition grade | Mapped |
| Size / colour | Optional | Structured attributes | Mapped where present |
| Category | Wallapop categories | Vestiaire taxonomy | Mapped to the closest category |
The honest limitation is brand gating: Vestiaire Collective rejects mass-market and fast-fashion labels. If a Wallapop item isn’t a recognised designer brand, FLUF will flag that it can’t be listed there — which is a feature, not a bug, since it stops you wasting effort on items that wouldn’t sell anyway. For accepted brands, the better-structured your Wallapop listing is, the cleaner the Vestiaire Collective listing that comes out the other side.
Inventory sync and order tracking
Both channels expose the signals FLUF needs for full two-way sync, so this pair behaves the way crosslisting should: sell once, delist everywhere.
| Behaviour | Supported for Wallapop → Vestiaire Collective? |
|---|---|
| Sells on Wallapop → delisted on Vestiaire Collective | Yes |
| Sells on Vestiaire Collective → delisted on Wallapop | Yes |
| Orders ingested into one dashboard | Yes (both channels) |
| Offer management on Vestiaire Collective | Yes |
| Relisting on Vestiaire Collective | Yes |
Vestiaire Collective is one of FLUF’s fullest-featured channels: it supports order sync, offer management, buyer-seller messaging and relisting. So beyond just crosslisting your Wallapop items, you can negotiate offers and re-promote stale listings on the Vestiaire Collective side, all from the same dashboard. Remember the seller dispatch window — Vestiaire Collective requires you to ship within 7 days of a sale or the order auto-cancels — and that for authenticated shipping the item goes via a Vestiaire Collective hub before reaching the buyer.
What to expect selling on Vestiaire Collective
Vestiaire Collective is a premium experience for buyers, and that shapes the seller experience too. Reviews are genuinely mixed — Trustpilot shows a score around 4.2 from over 100,000 reviews, but with a fifth of them one-star — and the recurring seller complaints are slow payouts (because payment is held until the authentication and quality check pass) and the occasional authentication dispute. Those are the trade-offs for the trust the platform builds with buyers.
The practical reading for a Wallapop seller is that Vestiaire Collective is not a fast-flip channel; it is a higher-value, slower-cadence one. You list authentic designer pieces, accept a 7-day dispatch discipline and a verification step, and in return reach a global audience that pays luxury prices. Keeping the same items live on Wallapop via FLUF means you still capture quick local sales while the Vestiaire Collective listing works the premium market.
Fees: Wallapop vs Vestiaire Collective
Wallapop is cheap to use: listing is free, local in-person sales carry no fee, and the platform earns mainly from buyer-paid shipping protection and optional promotion. Designer sellers, though, get no authentication for that price — and counterfeit disputes are a known pain point that depresses prices on high-value goods.
Vestiaire Collective charges more because it does more. Its selling fees are a flat $10 on sales under about $83, 12% on most sales above that (with a cap on very high-value items), plus a 3% payment-processing fee; listing is free and the $15 authentication fee is paid by the buyer. A worked example: on a €600 authenticated handbag, roughly 12% plus the 3% processing comes to about €90 — but the same bag typically realises a markedly higher price on Vestiaire Collective’s luxury audience than it would to a bargain-led local buyer, so the commission usually pays for itself. FLUF adds no per-sale fee on either channel.
Feature comparison: Wallapop and Vestiaire Collective in FLUF
| Feature | Wallapop | Vestiaire Collective |
|---|---|---|
| Crosslisting | Yes | Yes |
| Inventory sync (mark as sold) | Yes | Yes |
| Order sync | Yes | Yes |
| Auto-relisting | No | Yes |
| Offer management | No | Yes |
| Bulk operations | Yes | Yes |
| Browser tab required for traffic | Yes | Yes |
Manual crosslisting vs FLUF
Listing a Wallapop item on Vestiaire Collective by hand means re-photographing or re-uploading, rewriting the listing to Vestiaire Collective’s structured format, finding the right accepted brand and category, grading condition, and then policing both listings so a sold piece comes down everywhere. FLUF imports your Wallapop catalogue, pre-fills the Vestiaire Collective listing, flags any brand that won’t be accepted, and keeps both sides in sync automatically — so you spend your time on the designer pieces that are worth listing, not on data entry.
A worked walkthrough: from a Wallapop listing to a live Vestiaire Collective listing
Say you have an authentic Gucci shoulder bag listed on Wallapop for €450. Locally, bargain-minded buyers haggle it down and some doubt it’s genuine, because Wallapop offers no authentication to reassure them. In FLUF Connect you open your imported Wallapop catalogue, select the bag, and crosslist it to Vestiaire Collective. FLUF carries the photos and description across, matches “Gucci” to Vestiaire Collective’s accepted-brand list, maps the category and grades the condition. You review and publish, and the bag is now in front of a global audience that actively shops authenticated pre-owned luxury — and expects to pay for it.
If the bag sells on Vestiaire Collective, the sold item is routed through authentication before it reaches the buyer, and FLUF marks it sold and delists it on Wallapop; if a local Wallapop buyer takes it first, the Vestiaire Collective listing comes down instead. You keep Wallapop’s instant local reach while giving your genuine designer pieces a shot at the higher prices a trusted global luxury platform commands.
How Vestiaire Collective authentication and Direct Shipping work
Authentication is the heart of the Vestiaire Collective experience. With Authenticated Shipping, a sold item ships first to a Vestiaire Collective hub, where experts check materials, stitching, hardware, serial numbers and documentation; only if it passes does it go on to the buyer. If it fails, the order is cancelled and the buyer fully refunded — which is exactly the reassurance that lets an unknown seller move a four-figure bag. The buyer pays a $15 authentication fee for this service, not the seller.
There is also a Direct Shipping option on some items, where the piece goes straight from seller to buyer without the hub step and without authentication — faster, but without that verification layer. Either way, you must dispatch within seven days of a sale or the order auto-cancels, and your payout is released after the relevant checks or the buyer’s confirmation. For a Wallapop seller, the trade-off is clear: a little more process and a slower payout in exchange for buyer trust that supports a higher price.
How Wallapop’s shipping and protection work
On the Wallapop side, the model is lighter and faster but less suited to high-value goods. Listing is free, and you can sell locally in person (“cara a cara”) with no fee, or ship through Wallapop Envíos, where the buyer pays a Protección Wallapop fee and the platform holds payment until delivery and gives the buyer a window to open a dispute. That protection is fine for everyday second-hand goods, but it offers no luxury authentication — which is precisely why designer sellers run into counterfeit disputes there and why a high-value bag often under-sells on Wallapop.
The two channels therefore play complementary roles. Wallapop captures quick, local, low-friction sales of your general stock; Vestiaire Collective is where your authenticated designer pieces reach a global audience willing to pay a premium. Keeping the same items live on both via FLUF means a piece can sell wherever the right buyer appears first, without you managing two listings by hand.
Common mistakes when crosslisting Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective
The biggest mistake is trying to crosslist non-designer stock. Vestiaire Collective only accepts approved luxury and premium brands and rejects fast fashion, so everyday Wallapop items simply won’t list — FLUF flags this up front so you don’t waste effort. The second is under-pricing out of Wallapop habit: Vestiaire Collective buyers expect to pay luxury prices for authenticated goods, so price for that audience rather than copying your bargain-led Wallapop figure. The third is missing the seven-day dispatch window — Vestiaire Collective auto-cancels orders you don’t ship in time, which dents your standing. Treat Vestiaire Collective as the considered, premium channel it is, keep Wallapop for fast local turnover, and let FLUF keep the two in sync.
Building a designer resale business across local and global channels
Sellers who handle genuine designer pieces quickly hit a ceiling on a local marketplace. Wallapop is superb for turning over everyday second-hand goods fast and locally, but its bargain-led, Spain-centric audience and its lack of authentication mean a real Saint Laurent bag or a pair of designer boots routinely sells for less than it is worth — and sometimes not at all, because cautious buyers discount for the risk of a fake. The fix is not to abandon Wallapop; it is to give those specific high-value pieces a second home built for them.
Vestiaire Collective is that home. Its global membership actively shops authenticated pre-owned luxury, its brand gating concentrates demand by filtering out fast fashion, and its hub authentication converts buyer caution into buyer confidence — which is what supports a higher realised price. Run the two together and you get the best of both: Wallapop clears your general stock quickly and locally, while your designer pieces work a worldwide premium audience on Vestiaire Collective. FLUF is the connective tissue, importing your Wallapop catalogue, flagging which items qualify for Vestiaire Collective’s accepted brands, and keeping inventory and orders in sync so nothing sells twice. Over time that is how a casual Wallapop seller becomes a deliberate cross-market resale business: local volume on one channel, global value on the other, managed from a single dashboard.
How much does it cost to crosslist from Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective?
| Plan | Price | Products | Includes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Growth | £19/month | 500 | All automation features |
| Seller | £99/month | 5,000 | All automation features |
| Super Seller | £299/month | Unlimited | Priority sync |
Every plan includes crosslisting, inventory sync, relisting where the channel supports it, offer management and bulk operations across all 20 supported marketplaces — not just the two on this page. Automation is included in every plan, not a paid add-on. Plans start at £19/month (Growth — 500 products); there is no free plan, and the 500 in the Growth tier is a paid product cap rather than an allowance. See the full pricing page for details.
Getting started with Wallapop to Vestiaire Collective
Start by connecting both channels in FLUF Connect and importing your Wallapop catalogue, then identify the genuine designer pieces in it — the items from recognised luxury houses that under-sell to local bargain hunters. Crosslist those to Vestiaire Collective first; FLUF will flag any that fall outside the accepted-brand list before you waste effort on them. Price the accepted pieces for a luxury audience rather than copying your Wallapop figure, and be ready to dispatch within seven days of a sale. Keep your general stock turning over locally on Wallapop, let your designer pieces work the global premium market on Vestiaire Collective, and let FLUF keep both sides in sync so nothing ever sells twice.
Related guides
See the sell on Wallapop and sell on Vestiaire Collective overviews, or related routes such as Wallapop to Vinted and Vestiaire Collective to Vinted.
Sources & verification
- Wallapop scale — Korea Herald (Naver acquisition)
- Vestiaire Collective scale — InternetRetailing
- Vestiaire Collective fees — selling fees
- Authentication, accepted brands & sentiment — shipping with authentication, brands not accepted, Trustpilot
Marketplace fees and policies change; the figures above were verified in June 2026. Vestiaire Collective fees shown in USD — confirm your currency on the fees page.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plans start at u00a319/month (Growth u2014 500 products). There is no free plan. Every plan includes crosslisting, inventory sync, relisting, offers and bulk operations across all 20 supported marketplaces, so Wallapop and Vestiaire Collective are covered alongside every other channel you connect. Automation is included in every plan, not a paid add-on.
Yes. When an item sells on Wallapop, FLUF marks it sold and delists it on Vestiaire Collective, and when it sells on Vestiaire Collective the matching Wallapop listing is removed u2014 usually within minutes, so a one-off designer piece is never sold twice.
Wallapop is hyper-local u2014 around 80% of its users are in Spain u2014 and offers no luxury authentication. Vestiaire Collective is a global pre-owned luxury marketplace with 23M+ members and built-in authentication, so authentic designer pieces reach more buyers and often command higher prices.
Vestiaire Collective charges a flat $10 fee on sales under about $83, 12% on most sales above that, plus a 3% payment-processing fee. Listing is free and the buyer pays the $15 authentication fee. Check the current fees page for your currency.
No. It maintains an accepted-brands list and rejects mass-market and fast-fashion labels. Only genuine designer and premium items qualify, so your Wallapop fashion needs to be the branded kind to crosslist successfully.
Yes. Both Wallapop and Vestiaire Collective are extension-first channels, so you sign in to each in your browser with the FLUF extension installed, and crosslisting traffic runs from that session.
Yes. Vestiaire Collective supports offer management, messaging and relisting inside FLUF, so you can negotiate and re-promote listings there. Wallapopu2019s side focuses on crosslisting and order sync.
For authenticated shipping, the sold item ships to a Vestiaire Collective hub where experts verify it before it reaches the buyer; if it fails, the order is cancelled and the buyer refunded. This trust step is exactly why high-value designer pieces sell well there.
