Top 30 Marketplaces for Selling Fashion Accessories

Top 30 Marketplaces for Selling Fashion Accessories

Marketplaces for selling fashion accessories are online platforms where you list belts, bags, jewelry, scarves, watches, and similar items alongside thousands of other sellers and reach an existing audience of shoppers. Some of the largest options sellers reach for are Amazon, eBay, Zalando, bol.com, and Etsy. To sell on them you usually register a seller or partner account, list your products with photos and structured details, agree to the platform fees, and then handle shipping yourself or through the marketplace's own fulfilment service. Each platform has a different audience, fee structure, and product focus, so the right mix depends on where your buyers already shop and which categories you carry.

The list below pulls together the marketplaces and retail platforms cited in our original article. Some are open seller marketplaces, others are curated partner programs or single retailer storefronts where placement depends on the platform accepting your brand. We have noted which is which so you can judge fit before you invest time.

Marketplaces and retail platforms for fashion accessories

See every marketplace integration e-tailize supports.

Amazon

Learn how to start selling on Amazon with e-tailize.

Amazon is a global ecommerce platform with a strong European footprint. A unified account lets you sell across the UK, Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, and you can reach further countries such as the Netherlands, Sweden, and Poland through its global selling program. The broad reach and shared logistics make it a common first marketplace for accessories.

eBay

eBay operates across many European countries and lets you list both new and used items. It supports several selling formats, including auctions, fixed price, and best offers, and its global shipping program can route orders to international buyers. That flexibility suits sellers with mixed inventory or one off accessory pieces.

Zalando

Learn how to start selling on Zalando with e-tailize.

Zalando is a large online fashion platform in Europe that focuses on clothing, shoes, and accessories. Through its partner program you can sell directly on the Zalando website and app and draw on its marketing, logistics, and customer service. Expect a fashion focused audience and a curated brand environment.

ASOS Marketplace

Learn how to start selling on ASOS Marketplace with e-tailize.

ASOS Marketplace is a platform for independent and vintage fashion sellers, hosting boutiques from around the world. It offers editorial and social media support alongside access to the wider ASOS audience. Our source listed a monthly fee and a commission rate, so confirm the current terms with ASOS before committing.

INNO

Learn how to start selling on INNO with e-tailize.

INNO is a Belgian department store with physical stores and an online shop that delivers to Belgium, Luxembourg, and France. It carries a wide product mix, from fashion and beauty to home and electronics. Placement here works as a retail partnership rather than an open marketplace.

Afound

Learn how to start selling on Afound with e-tailize.

Afound is a Swedish online marketplace for discounted fashion and lifestyle products from established brands. Part of the H&M Group, it operates in Sweden, Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands. It suits sellers comfortable in an off price, discount led setting.

bol.com

Learn how to start selling on bol.com with e-tailize.

bol.com is a large online retailer in the Netherlands and Belgium with a broad catalogue spanning books, electronics, fashion, and beauty. Its marketplace program lets you sell on the website and app and lean on its traffic and fulfilment services. For accessories aimed at Dutch and Belgian buyers, it is a natural choice.

Cdiscount

Learn how to start selling on Cdiscount with e-tailize.

Cdiscount is a major online retailer in France with a wide, price sensitive catalogue that runs from appliances and furniture to clothing and accessories. Its marketplace program gives sellers visibility and logistics support in the French market. Value positioned accessories tend to fit its audience.

Anthropologie

Learn how to start selling on Anthropologie with e-tailize.

Anthropologie is an American lifestyle brand selling women's clothing, accessories, home decor, and beauty, with stores in several European countries. It is a curated retailer rather than an open marketplace, so any placement depends on the brand accepting your products. Treat it as a partnership route for distinctive accessory ranges.

Åhléns

Learn how to start selling on Åhléns with e-tailize.

Åhléns is a Swedish department store carrying fashion, beauty, home, and children's products, with stores in Sweden and online delivery across the Nordics. Like other department store names on this list, it operates as a retail partner rather than a self serve marketplace. It fits brands looking for a Nordic retail presence.

Atlas for Men

Learn how to start selling on Atlas for Men with e-tailize.

Atlas for Men is a French online retailer specialising in outdoor clothing and accessories for men, operating across several European countries. Its catalogue is narrow and category specific, so it is most relevant if your accessories suit an outdoor, value focused audience. Distribution here is via the retailer rather than open listings.

Venca

Learn how to start selling on Venca with e-tailize.

Venca is a Spanish online retailer selling fashion, home, and beauty for women, men, and children across Spain, Portugal, France, Italy, and Belgium. It leans toward discounts and flexible payment options. Consider it for accessories targeting southern European value shoppers.

Urban Outfitters Group

Learn how to start selling on Urban Outfitters Group with e-tailize.

Urban Outfitters Group is an American fashion and lifestyle company that owns several brands, including Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie, Free People, BHLDN, and Terrain, with stores across Europe. Reaching it means working with one of its retail banners rather than a public marketplace. It suits design led accessory brands.

Secret Sales

Learn how to start selling on Secret Sales with e-tailize.

Secret Sales is a UK based online marketplace selling designer fashion, beauty, and homeware at a discount, operating in the UK and Ireland. Its flash sale model rewards sellers who can offer clear markdowns. Read the membership and discount expectations before listing premium accessories.

Showroomprivé

Learn how to start selling on Showroomprivé with e-tailize.

Showroomprivé is a French online marketplace selling fashion, beauty, and lifestyle products at discounted prices across many European countries. It runs on a flash sale format with its own delivery and customer service. It works best for brands with stock to move at sale prices.

Privalia

Learn how to start selling on Privalia with e-tailize.

Privalia is a Spanish online marketplace selling fashion, beauty, and lifestyle products at a discount, operating in Spain, Italy, Brazil, and Mexico. Daily deals and secure payment sit at the centre of its model. It is another option for off price accessory sales in southern Europe and Latin America.

The Bay

Learn how to start selling on The Bay with e-tailize.

The Bay is a Canadian department store selling fashion, beauty, home, and kids products, with stores in Canada and online delivery to Canada, the US, and Europe. Placement runs through its retail buying process rather than open seller registration. It suits brands seeking North American department store reach.

Printemps

Learn how to start selling on Printemps with e-tailize.

Printemps is a French department store known for luxury fashion, beauty, and lifestyle products, with stores in France and online delivery to France, Belgium, Luxembourg, and Monaco. It offers a premium retail environment with exclusive brands. This is a partnership route for high end accessory labels.

TheMarket

Learn how to start selling on TheMarket with e-tailize.

TheMarket is a New Zealand online marketplace selling fashion, beauty, home, and lifestyle products from local and international brands, operating in New Zealand and Australia. It hosts a large merchant base and offers shipping, returns, and customer service support. Use it to reach buyers in Oceania.

Outletinn

Learn how to start selling on Outletinn with e-tailize.

Outletinn is a Spanish online retailer selling sports clothing, accessories, and equipment at discounted prices across several European countries. Its catalogue runs from clothing and accessories to bikes and skis. It is a fit for sport and outdoor accessory ranges sold at value prices.

BrandAlley

Learn how to start selling on BrandAlley with e-tailize.

BrandAlley is a UK based online marketplace selling fashion, beauty, and home products at a discount, operating in the UK and Ireland. Its flash sale model and membership base reward sellers with clear markdowns. Confirm the current terms before listing.

Dressinn

Learn how to start selling on Dressinn with e-tailize.

Dressinn is a Spanish online retailer selling fashion, beauty, and accessories for women, men, and children across several European countries. It offers a straightforward online shopping experience with reliable delivery. It suits broad accessory ranges aimed at European value shoppers.

Etsy

Etsy is an online marketplace for handmade, vintage, and craft items, with buyers in many countries. It is well suited to jewelry, accessories, clothing, and home decor from independent makers. Our source listed a per item listing fee and a transaction fee, so check Etsy's current rates before you open a shop.

Vinted

Vinted is a platform for buying and selling secondhand clothing, shoes, and accessories, active across many European countries. It carries no listing or selling fees for sellers and charges a small service fee to buyers. It is built for peer to peer resale rather than bulk new stock.

Depop

Depop is a social shopping app for buying and selling fashion, with a focus on streetwear, vintage, and unique styles, and a young, engaged community concentrated in the UK, US, and Italy. It rewards sellers who build a recognisable brand and presence. Distinctive, style led accessories perform well here.

Farfetch

Farfetch is a platform for luxury fashion that connects boutiques and brands with customers in many countries. Its range spans designer clothing and accessories through to fine jewelry and watches, and its partner program offers global reach, marketing, and customer service. It targets a high end, affluent audience.

Notonthehighstreet

Notonthehighstreet is a platform for creative and original products, featuring small businesses from the UK and beyond. Its curated selection runs from jewelry and accessories to homeware and gifts, supported by a partner program with marketing and editorial help. It suits distinctive, gift worthy accessory ranges.

La Redoute

Learn how to start selling on La Redoute with e-tailize.

La Redoute is a French online fashion and home retailer with customers across many countries. Its marketplace program lets you sell on the website and app and draw on its traffic and logistics. It carries a broad mix from clothing and accessories to furniture and decor.

Allegro

Learn how to start selling on Allegro with e-tailize.

Allegro is a leading online marketplace in Poland with a very large catalogue. It supports new and used listings and several selling formats, including auctions, fixed price, and smart offers, plus a fulfilment service for storage and shipping. It is the route to reach Polish shoppers at scale.

OTTO

OTTO is a large online retailer in Germany focused on fashion, lifestyle, and home products. Its partner program lets you sell on the website and app with support for marketing, logistics, and customer service. For accessories aimed at German buyers, it is a strong destination.

How do you choose the right marketplace for accessories?

Start with where your buyers already shop and which categories each platform handles well. Open marketplaces such as Amazon, eBay, bol.com, Allegro, and Etsy let most sellers register and list directly, so they are the quickest to test. Curated partner programs and department store names, including Zalando, OTTO, Farfetch, Printemps, and Anthropologie, decide which brands they accept, so plan for an application step. Match your price positioning too: flash sale and outlet platforms such as Showroomprivé, Privalia, BrandAlley, and Afound expect clear markdowns, while resale apps like Vinted and Depop are built for secondhand and individual pieces rather than bulk new stock.

What do you need before you list on these platforms?

Before you list, get your product data, photography, and fulfilment plan in order, because most marketplaces rank and display listings based on the quality of that information. Each platform wants structured details such as titles, attributes, sizes, materials, and category specific fields, and the same accessory often needs reformatting per channel. You will also need to confirm current fees and commissions, since these change and our source figures may be out of date. Finally, decide how you will ship: self fulfilment, the marketplace's own service such as Amazon or Allegro fulfilment, or a third party. Getting these basics right once makes adding each new marketplace far less work.

Frequently asked questions

Which marketplaces let me start selling accessories the fastest?
Open marketplaces are usually the quickest to start with because most sellers can register and list directly. Amazon, eBay, bol.com, Allegro, and Etsy all fall into this group. You still need quality listings and a shipping plan, but you do not have to wait for brand approval the way curated partner programs require.
What is the difference between an open marketplace and a partner program?
On an open marketplace, such as eBay or Etsy, almost any seller can register and list products once they accept the fees and rules. A partner program or curated platform, such as Zalando, OTTO, or Farfetch, decides which brands it accepts, so you apply and get reviewed before you can sell. Department store names like Printemps and Anthropologie work the same way, as retail partnerships rather than self serve listings.
Do these marketplaces charge fees to sell accessories?
Most charge some combination of listing fees, sales commission, or subscription costs, and the exact structure varies by platform. Our original article listed specific figures for a few platforms, but fees change over time, so confirm the current rates directly with each marketplace before you commit. Resale platforms such as Vinted can differ by charging buyers a service fee rather than the seller.
Can I sell the same accessory listings across several marketplaces at once?
Yes, but each platform wants its own format for titles, attributes, images, and category fields, so the same product usually needs reformatting per channel. Keeping inventory and orders in sync across platforms by hand becomes time consuming as you add more. Many sellers use a central tool to manage listings, stock, and orders across multiple marketplaces from one place.
Are resale apps like Vinted and Depop suitable for a business seller?
They are built mainly for peer to peer and secondhand selling, with a focus on individual pieces, vintage, and unique styles rather than bulk new stock. Depop in particular rewards sellers who build a recognisable brand and an active social presence. If you carry new inventory at volume, open marketplaces and partner programs will usually fit better.
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