The same item, live on both marketplaces, without getting yourself in trouble. Here's the manual method done properly — and then the way that doesn't eat your weekend.
Save the original photos from each Depop listing at full size. Poshmark allows up to 16 photos, square (1:1) — your first photo (the 'covershot') can be styled. If your Depop shots are cropped differently, re-crop rather than letting Poshmark auto-crop them.
Poshmark titles work best structured: brand first, then item type, color, size keywords. Don't paste your Depop title verbatim — Depop is Gen-Z, trend- and aesthetic-driven; lowercase casual titles and niche tags work, while Poshmark is social selling: shares, offers to likers, and bundles drive sales.
Category trees, size charts and condition labels don't map one-to-one. Set Poshmark's own category, size and condition fields by hand — listings with complete details rank and convert better.
Marketplace fees and shipping structures differ, and so do buyer price expectations. Check Poshmark's current fee schedule and set the price so your payout stays where you want it, leaving room for offers if Poshmark buyers expect to negotiate.
Keep a simple inventory note of where each item is listed. This is the step everyone skips — and the reason step 6 exists.
The cardinal sin of crosslisting is the double-sale: it sells on one app while still live on the other, you cancel, and your seller metrics take the hit. When something sells, delist it on the other marketplace immediately — same day is not fast enough during a sale spike.
Vylist pulls your live Depop listings in as inventory — photos, titles, prices, nothing retyped — and cross-lists them to Poshmark (plus eBay, Poshmark, Depop and Mercari), keeping delisting in sync when something sells. New items skip the typing entirely: film one video of your closet and the listings are written for you.
The manual method above is 5–12 minutes per item. This is one afternoon for the whole closet.
Import my Depop closet free →Yes — no major marketplace prohibits selling the same item on multiple platforms. The obligation is yours: delist everywhere the moment it sells anywhere, so you never sell an item twice.
No — reusing your own photos across marketplaces is normal and expected. What matters is meeting Poshmark's format: up to 16 photos, square (1:1) — your first photo (the 'covershot') can be styled.
Usually not exactly. Fees, shipping structures and buyer expectations differ — set each price from your target payout, not by copying the number across.