Vinted Is Finally Coming for America
For most Americans, Vinted has been easy to miss.
The European second-hand marketplace was downloaded 30M times worldwide in 2025, according to our estimates, but it has technically been available in the US for years with a much smaller footprint. In January, Vinted announced a US expansion push starting with New York, and by April, the downloads followed.
And it seems to be working!

According to Appfigures Intelligence, Vinted was downloaded 1.2M times in the US across the App Store and Google Play in April. In a comparison set that includes fashion resale apps, second-hand marketplaces, and broader shopping apps with resale behavior, only Whatnot, the live-shopping marketplace, was downloaded more.
Vinted finished April ahead of Depop, eBay, Etsy, and most of the resale apps in the chart. That's bigger than a New York campaign. Whatnot is still in a different lane because live shopping stretches well beyond second-hand fashion, but Vinted was already ahead of the apps most shoppers would naturally put in the resale bucket.
Here To Stay?
Vinted isn’t new to the US. The app has been available in the US since 2013, and has been averaging around 500K new downloads a year in the last few years according to our estimates..
The January expansion changed the shape of the business in the US, however, turning Vinted’s small footprint into a true competitor, and the downloads followed.
Our estimates show Vinted got 286K downloads from the US between January and April of 2025. This year, it got 2.6M in the same period. That's an increase of nearly 800%!

April alone brought an estimated 1.2M downloads, up from 793K in March. It also accounted for a little over 20% of Vinted's US downloads since the start of 2017.
Chasing Depop
Whatnot led this group in April with an estimated 2.2M US downloads, but Whatnot is live shopping, collectibles, cards, sneakers, and a lot more. It's useful for scale, while Depop is a direct fashion resale rival because both apps are built around second-hand clothing, younger shoppers, and peer-to-peer selling.
Depop, which is owned by Etsy but was recently sold to eBay, had a strong start to 2026, with an estimated 3.9M US downloads between January and April. That's double its total from the same period last year.

Vinted is still behind Depop for the year so far, but April flipped the monthly comparison after Vinted trailed earlier in 2026. Our estimates show Vinted's 1.2M US downloads beat Depop's 1.1M.
The gap was small, but Depop has been one of the go to names in US fashion resale for years. Passing it in April puts Vinted's US push up against the app most people would compare it to first, not a niche rival.
Poshmark, another major fashion resale marketplace, shows how quickly the rankings can change. It had an estimated 219K downloads in April and 1.5M from January through April, but for Poshmark that means a decline of 28% from the same period last year.
The US Resale Market Has Been Disrupted
The US resale market was already an in-demand category that looked fairly settled, with no new competitors gaining ground, but Vinted's April push is changing that.
Whatnot is winning at the broad marketplace level, Depop is growing fast, and eBay and Etsy remain enormous adjacent destinations, but Vinted is now close enough in US downloads to belong in that conversation.
Vinted's app is for both buyers and sellers, so those downloads give the company more people to seed the US marketplace. April gave Vinted the one thing a marketplace expansion needs first: attention.
Now the question is whether Vinted can keep April from becoming the peak, or turn it into the start of a real US foothold. If it can, the resale market gets a little more uncomfortable for the incumbents.
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All figures included in this report are estimated. Unless specified otherwise, estimated revenue is always net, meaning it's the amount the developer earned after Apple and Google took their fee.