On the second-hand market, Vinted remains the number one reflex in France. But another platform is making progress, still largely unknown to the general public.
Vinted still largely dominates conversations when it comes to the resale of fashion pieces. The site imposed a simple model: lots of ads, lots of volume, a promise of immediate good deals. But this mechanism also shows its limits. By aggregating millions of very different items, the experience sometimes becomes confusing, particularly for buyers looking for identifiable pieces, a specific universe or sellers capable of highlighting what they are offering. In this context, another platform is gradually establishing itself among a younger and more fashion-oriented audience, with an operation that is more like a commercial social network than a giant wardrobe clearance.
The difference comes first in the way of selling. On this platform, the ad is not just a product sheet with a size, a price and two quickly taken photos. The seller builds a window, displays a style, works on his images, groups together coherent pieces and attracts subscribers, a bit like on Instagram or TikTok. The buyer no longer just goes through the search bar; he can come across a wardrobe, follow a selection, spot a person who regularly sells vintage, streetwear, sought-after brands or Y2K pieces. The site also clearly highlights this fashion and community logic, boasting more than 49 million items for sale and more than 500,000 new listings every day.
Another concrete point: the commercial positioning is not the same. Where Vinted has won over the general public through the breadth of its catalog, this competitor mainly attracts those who want to buy a look, a trend or a more distinctive piece. It is easier to find selections around vintage, sportswear, denim, brand archives or micro-trends that are popular on the networks. The site also emphasizes the security of purchases, specifying that transactions made on the platform are covered by buyer protection. The site in question is Depop France.
Where Vinted has become the second-hand supermarket, this site plays the card of a more editorialized, more visual and more affinity platform. In France, its name remains less known to the general public, but its model meets a very clear expectation among second-hand fashion buyers who want something other than sorting by price and size.
To sell pieces with a strong identity, build a personal mini-boutique and reach a community sensitive to trends, it is today the most credible alternative to the leader.









