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What Fees Do Clothing Resale Apps Charge? A Full Breakdown (eBay, Poshmark, Mercari)

By GradeThread Team · ·9 min read
reseller-financesebay-listing-optimizationcrosslistingfees

What Fees Do Clothing Resale Apps Charge? A Full Breakdown

On a $45 sweater, eBay keeps about $6.26 in fees, Poshmark keeps $9.00, and Mercari keeps roughly $6.11 in combined selling and processing fees — before anyone touches shipping. Clothing resale app fees range from 10% to 20% of the sale price depending on the platform, and payment processing is sometimes bundled in and sometimes billed as a separate line. The commission rate everyone quotes is only part of the story; the rest is buried in how each platform treats shipping.

If you're pricing inventory off a single "platform take-rate" number, you're pricing wrong. Here's what each major platform actually charges, with a worked example so you can see where the money really goes.

Why Comparing Fees Isn't as Simple as the Percentage

Every resale app publishes a headline commission number. What they don't put on the same page is:

Two platforms can advertise similar "take rates" and still leave you with a 6-point difference in net payout on the same item, once shipping treatment is factored in. That gap is where a lot of resellers quietly underprice their inventory.

eBay Selling Fees for Clothing

eBay charges a final value fee (FVF) on the total amount the buyer pays — item price plus shipping — not just the item price. For most clothing categories, that's 13.25% up to $7,500 in a single sale, plus a flat $0.30 per order. Store subscribers get a lower percentage (roughly 12.35% on a Basic Store plan), which matters if you're listing more than a couple hundred items a month.

Payment processing is bundled into that final value fee under eBay's managed payments system — you won't see a separate processing line, but it's priced into the 13.25%. If you use eBay's own shipping labels, the label cost is deducted from your payout automatically; if you buy labels elsewhere, you pay for them out of pocket before they ever touch your eBay balance.

Optional add-ons that change your real fee: Promoted Listings (ad fee, typically 2–10% of the sale if the ad drove the sale), and international fees if a buyer ships outside the US.

Poshmark Fees Explained

Poshmark's structure is the simplest to state and one of the most misunderstood in practice. Sales of $15 or more are charged a flat 20% commission. Sales under $15 are charged a flat $2.95 fee instead of a percentage — which means on a $12 item, Poshmark is effectively taking about 25% of the sale.

Shipping works differently here than on eBay or Mercari: the buyer pays a flat shipping fee (commonly $7.97) directly to Poshmark's shipping partner, separate from the item price. Poshmark provides a prepaid label to the seller at no cost, for packages up to 5 pounds. That means Poshmark's 20% is the whole fee story for a standard-weight item — there's no processing fee line and no shipping deduction from your payout, as long as you stay under the weight limit.

Mercari Fees Explained

Mercari charges a 10% selling fee on the item price, plus a separate payment processing fee of 2.9% + $0.30 per transaction — closer to eBay's structure than Poshmark's in that processing is billed on top of the selling fee rather than folded into one number.

Shipping is seller's choice: you can pass the cost to the buyer as a separate line, or offer "free shipping" and eat a discounted Mercari label cost, which is deducted directly from your payout. Mercari's discounted labels run from roughly $4.85 for a small poly mailer up to $20+ for heavier boxes, scaled by weight.

Fee Comparison Table

PlatformSelling / Commission FeePayment ProcessingShipping Treatment
eBay13.25% of (item + shipping), up to $7,500; +$0.30/orderBundled into final value feeSeller sets price; eBay label cost deducted from payout if used
Poshmark20% flat ($15+ sales); $2.95 flat (under $15)Bundled into commissionBuyer pays flat shipping fee to Poshmark; seller ships free (up to 5 lbs)
Mercari10% of item price2.9% + $0.30 per transactionSeller choice: buyer-paid or seller-paid discounted label, deducted from payout

Worked Example: The Same $45 Sweater on Three Platforms

Say you sourced a sweater for $9, listed it at $45, offered free shipping to the buyer, and paid roughly $5.50 for a standard poly mailer label where the platform requires you to cover it.

Line itemeBayPoshmarkMercari
Sale price$45.00$45.00$45.00
Selling / commission fee−$5.96−$9.00−$4.50
Payment processingbundled abovebundled above−$1.61
Flat order fee−$0.30
Shipping label (seller cost)−$5.50$0 (buyer pays separately)−$5.50
Payout before COGS$33.24$36.00$33.39
Cost of goods ($9)−$9.00−$9.00−$9.00
Net profit$24.24$27.00$24.39

Same item, same price, same cost basis — a $2.76 swing in net profit purely from fee structure and shipping treatment. Multiply that across 200 items a month and it's the difference between a good quarter and a flat one.

How to Calculate Your Real Net Payout

Don't estimate this from memory per platform. Run the same five-step math every time you price an item, and you'll price to actual margin instead of list price:

  1. Start with the sale price the buyer actually pays (item price only, not including any shipping the buyer pays separately).
  2. Subtract the platform's selling or commission fee, calculated on whatever base that platform uses (item price alone, or item + shipping).
  3. Subtract payment processing separately if the platform bills it as its own line (Mercari, most independent processors) — don't assume it's bundled unless you've confirmed it.
  4. Subtract your actual shipping cost — the label you paid for, not the flat rate the buyer was charged, since those two numbers are rarely identical.
  5. Subtract your cost of goods (what you paid for the item, plus any cleaning, repair, or packaging materials).
  6. What's left is net profit per item. Log it against the SKU, not just the sale price, so your P&L reflects reality instead of gross revenue.

Why Tracking Real Net Per Item Is What Actually Matters

Fee percentages are public. What's not public — and what actually determines whether you're profitable — is your net payout after every deduction, averaged across your real platform mix. A seller running 60% eBay, 30% Poshmark, 10% Mercari has a blended fee load that's different from a seller running the reverse split, even if they're sourcing identical inventory.

There's a second cost that doesn't show up in any fee schedule: returns. A buyer who opens a not-as-described case on eBay or a case on Poshmark doesn't just cost you the item — it can cost you the original shipping label, a return label, and the commission you already paid, depending on the platform's policy. Condition disputes are the single most preventable version of this. When a garment is graded and documented consistently — using defined tiers like NWT, NWOT, Excellent, Very Good, Good, Fair, and Poor, backed by specifics on Fabric Condition, Structural Integrity, Cosmetic Appearance, Functional Elements, and Odor & Cleanliness — buyers have less room to argue the item didn't match the listing. Fewer disputes means fewer refunds eating into the net payout you worked out above.

FlipDesk's Reconcile module pulls your actual payouts, fees, and shipping costs per platform and matches them against cost basis automatically, so the net profit number you see is the real one — not the gross sale price sitting at the top of your dashboard. If you're currently eyeballing margin off list price, that's the gap worth closing first.

Try running one week of sales through Reconcile and compare the output to what you assumed your margin was. Most resellers find the real number is a few points lower than they thought — now you'll know exactly where those points went.

Try FlipDesk free →
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