Second-hand price check
Turn a retail price into a sensible Vinted budget — with a great-deal line, a walk-away line, and the alert cap that does the waiting for you.
Give me the retail price and I’ll turn it into a second-hand budget — including the price that means walk away.
How the estimate works
Second-hand prices cluster around a fraction of retail, and that fraction moves with the brand: high-street pieces typically hold around 30% of their retail price, premium labels around 40%, designer around 55%. The tool starts there, then adjusts for the condition you’d accept and how urgently you want the piece — patience earns a lower sensible ceiling, urgency an honest premium.
The reason to run this before you open Vinted: anchoring. Once you’re scrolling, every listing is “only €5 more” than the last one, and your maximum quietly becomes whatever the nicest photo costs. A ceiling decided calmly, in advance, is the cheapest self-discipline there is — and it converts directly into a saved-search cap that filters temptation out before you see it.
And the honest frame: these are planning numbers from typical retention patterns, not live market data. Condition descriptions vary between sellers, regional prices differ, and rare pieces ignore retail maths entirely. Use the range to decide your budget — then let the listing’s photos and measurements decide the purchase.
Questions
Is this real market data?
No — and it doesn't pretend to be. The numbers come from typical second-hand price retention by brand tier, adjusted for condition and urgency. It's a planning estimate that gives you a defensible starting point, not a report of what listings are actually selling for today.
Why does urgency change the number?
Because patience is a discount. A patient buyer can wait for the underpriced listing that appears eventually; someone who needs it this week pays for immediacy. Urgency doesn't change the market — it changes what a sensible ceiling is for you.
What about rare or collector pieces?
Different market, different rules. Discontinued, archival, and hype pieces trade on scarcity rather than retail retention, so the estimate gets less useful the rarer the item. For those, browse what's actually listed and asked for, and treat this tool's numbers as a floor rather than a guide.
The honest bit: Vinted Finder is an independent app that helps you search for second-hand listings on Vinted. It is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or supported by Vinted. You browse and buy on Vinted itself. Listings change fast — price, condition, and availability live on Vinted, and exact matches are never guaranteed.
Guides that pair well
More tools
The app runs this from a screenshot
Everything this tool does, Vinted Finder does automatically — plus it watches Vinted and tells you when a stronger match appears.
Free to try · iOS · you buy on Vinted, not in the app