If you’ve ever had items sat on Vinted for weeks with barely any views, you’ll know how frustrating it can feel. You list something with high hopes, maybe even check back a few times a day at first… and then nothing. No likes, no offers, just silence.
At that point, it’s really easy to think “right, I’ll just donate it to the charity shop and be done with it.”
But here’s the thing. Most items don’t sell because they’re bad. They don’t sell because they’re not being seen.
So before you bag everything up and drop it off at your local charity shop, let’s talk about how long you should realistically give an item on Vinted, what’s actually happening behind the scenes, and when it really is time to let it go.
Learn more from me
I’ve made over £10,000 on Vinted with more than 2,000 sales, and I’ve poured everything I’ve learnt into two resources to help you sell with confidence.
Vinted Sales Planner – perfect for keeping track of your listings, sales, offers, postage and profit.
Make Money Selling on Vinted book – a friendly, step-by-step guide packed with real tips and strategies I use myself.
How long do items take to sell on Vinted?
There isn’t one single answer here, which I know is slightly annoying, but it really does depend on what you’re selling.
Some items will sell within hours. Trendy pieces, in-demand brands, or things priced really well can disappear almost instantly. Other items can take weeks or even months.
From my own experience selling on Vinted, most “normal” items fall somewhere in the middle. If something is priced well and photographed properly, you’ll usually start to see activity within the first few days. That might be likes, questions, or offers.
If you’ve had absolutely nothing after a week, that’s usually your first sign that something needs tweaking.
Not donating. Not giving up. Tweaking.
Why items sit on Vinted (and it’s not what you think)
A lot of people assume that if something hasn’t sold, it must not be desirable. In reality, it’s usually much simpler than that.
Vinted heavily rewards new listings. When you upload an item, it gets a little boost in visibility. It’s shown to more people, appears higher in search results, and has a better chance of being seen.
After that initial boost, it naturally drops down.
So if your item hasn’t sold in those first few days, it can quickly become buried under newer listings. It’s still there… just much harder for buyers to find.
That’s why items can sit for weeks without selling, even if they’re perfectly good.
How long should you leave something listed before donating?
If you’re listing items once and leaving them, you might feel ready to donate after two or three weeks.
But if you’re actively managing your listings, you can realistically keep items in rotation for much longer.
Personally, I wouldn’t even consider donating something until I’ve given it at least 4 to 6 weeks of proper effort.
And by “proper effort”, I mean:
You’ve relisted it multiple timesYou’ve reviewed and improved the photosYou’ve adjusted the price if neededYou’ve checked your description is actually helping it show up in search
If you haven’t done those things, then the item hasn’t really had a fair chance.
I’ve had items sit there doing nothing, then suddenly sell within hours of being relisted. Same item, same price, completely different result.
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The relisting trick that changes everything
Relisting is one of the most powerful things you can do on Vinted.
When you relist an item, you’re essentially resetting that “new item” boost. It goes back to the top, gets fresh visibility, and starts being shown to buyers again.
This is why so many experienced Vinted sellers don’t just list once and hope for the best. They cycle their items.
Without relisting, your items slowly disappear into the background.
With relisting, they keep getting new chances to sell.
The problem is, doing this manually is an absolute pain. If you’ve got more than a handful of items, it quickly becomes time-consuming and honestly quite boring.
I love using tools like DOTB to relist my Vinted items.
Using DOTB to keep your items selling
Before I started using DOTB, I was manually relisting items one by one. It worked, but it took ages, and I definitely wasn’t consistent with it.
Now, I can relist in bulk, target specific items, and keep everything moving without it taking over my day.
What I like most is that you can:
Relist older items that have gone staleSearch for specific categories like “dresses” or “kids clothes” and relist thoseKeep your wardrobe active without constantly babysitting it
This is honestly one of the biggest shifts that helped me move from occasional sales to consistently hitting around £200 a week on Vinted.
And that’s the difference. Not better items. Not luck. Just visibility.
A realistic timeline before donating
If you’re using relisting properly, your timeline before donating should look very different.
Week 1: List the item and see how it performsWeek 2: Relist and tweak anything that isn’t workingWeek 3: Relist again, possibly adjust the price slightlyWeek 4+: Continue rotating and relisting
During this time, you’re giving your item multiple chances to be seen by new buyers.
Only after this point would I start asking whether it’s worth keeping.
Because by then, you’ve actually tested it.
Signs it might be time to donate
There does come a point where holding onto something just isn’t worth it anymore.
If an item has been relisted multiple times over several weeks and still hasn’t had any interest, that’s when I start to question it.
It might be:
Out of seasonA less popular styleA brand that doesn’t have much demandSomething that just isn’t photographing well
At that stage, you’ve got a few options.
You can drop the price quite aggressively and try to shift it quickly. You can bundle it with other items. Or you can decide your time and storage space are worth more than the potential sale.
That’s usually when donating makes sense.
The “quick flip” vs “long game” mindset
One thing that really changed how I approach Vinted is understanding that not everything needs to sell immediately.
Some items are quick flips. Others are slow burners.
If you treat everything like it needs to sell within a week, you’ll end up donating loads of perfectly sellable items.
But if you’re willing to play the long game, especially with relisting, you’ll squeeze a lot more money out of your wardrobe.
I’ve had items sell after weeks of nothing, simply because they finally reached the right buyer at the right time.
When donating actually makes sense
There are definitely times when donating is the right choice.
If something is very low value, bulky, or just not worth the effort of storing and relisting, it can be better to let it go.
The same goes if you’re doing a big clear-out and your priority is space rather than profit.
There’s no point holding onto bags of clothes for months if it’s stressing you out or cluttering your home.
Vinted is a brilliant way to make extra money, but it shouldn’t feel like a burden.
Getting the balance right
The sweet spot is somewhere in the middle.
You don’t want to give up too early and miss out on sales, but you also don’t want to cling onto items forever “just in case”.
For me, the rule is simple.
Give each item multiple chances to sell through relisting. Actively manage your wardrobe rather than leaving it to sit. And only donate once you’re confident it’s had a fair shot.
Because most of the time, the difference between an item that “won’t sell” and one that does… is just visibility.
And once you understand that, you start to approach Vinted in a completely different way.

