Vintage on Vinted: How to Find Rare Pieces
Vintage is one of the most profitable and rewarding categories on Vinted. A rare 1970s Hermès scarf worth €200 might list for €30. A deadstock 1990s Stüssy hoodie could sell for €150. The deals are out there — you just need to know where to look.
Vintage hunting requires knowledge, patience, and the right tools. In this guide, we'll cover sourcing strategies, authentication, and how to build a profitable vintage reselling business.
Why Vintage Sells Well
- Uniqueness: You can't buy a 1980s Levi's jacket retail anymore. Scarcity drives demand.
- Sustainability: Younger buyers actively seek vintage as an ethical alternative to fast fashion.
- Profit potential: A €5 thrift find can resell for €50–100 if it's rare or desirable.
- Low competition: Most Vinted users focus on new items. Vintage hunters are scarce.
- Cross-generational appeal: Gen Z buys retro fashion. Millennials collect nostalgia. Both pay premium.
Most Profitable Vintage Categories
Designer Handbags (1970s–2000s)
Highest ROI category. Hermès, Louis Vuitton, Chanel bags from past decades command premium prices. A €20 vintage Hermès bag can resell for €300–500.
Profit margins: 400–1000%
Watch for: Counterfeits are rampant. Always verify serial numbers, materials, and construction quality.
Vintage Streetwear (1990s–2000s)
Trend-driven but consistent. Supreme, Stüssy, FUBU hoodies and tees from the '90s-2000s are hugely collectable. A €10 vintage Supreme hoodie sells for €100–200.
Profit margins: 300–800%
Key pieces: Box logos, tag details, and fabric condition matter intensely.
Vintage Denim (1950s–1980s)
Stable demand, loyal collectors. Levi's 501s, 505s, and other heritage cuts from past decades are consistently valuable. A €15 pair of 1970s Levi's 501s sells for €70–120.
Profit margins: 300–600%
Watch for: Verify the tag and care label to confirm era. Reproduction tags exist.
Vintage Band Tees (1970s–1990s)
Niche but profitable. Concert tees from iconic bands (The Grateful Dead, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin) have serious collectors. A €5 original tour tee sells for €50–150.
Profit margins: 600–2000%
Challenge: Authenticity is difficult. Many reproductions exist. Look for fading, tag styles, and aging patterns.
Vintage Sportswear (1970s–2000s)
Consistent and underrated. Vintage Adidas tracksuits, Nike windbreakers, and Puma gear from past decades appeal to sportswear collectors. A €10 vintage Adidas tracksuit sells for €60–100.
Profit margins: 300–700%
Where to Source Vintage on Vinted
Strategy 1: Keyword Hunting
Search for misspelled or vague listings:
- "Vintage bag" (sellers who don't know it's Hermès)
- "Old hoodie" (valuable Supreme/Stüssy mislabeled)
- "Retro clothing" (bulk lots with hidden gems)
Set up CollectAlert with these broad vintage keywords and catch underpriced listings before seasoned hunters find them.
Strategy 2: Era-Specific Alerts
Create alerts for specific decades:
- "1970s" (automatically finds older items)
- "1980s streetwear"
- "90s Adidas"
Strategy 3: Cross-Border Hunting
German and Dutch vintage markets are less developed than France. Hunt there for better prices, then resell in France where demand (and prices) are higher.
Authentication: Knowledge is Power
Vintage authentication requires expertise. Before buying, verify:
Tags & Labels
- Care labels: Font, materials, and construction changed over decades. Compare to period-specific examples.
- Brand tags: Know what authentic tags look like for each era (1970s Hermès ≠ 2000s Hermès)
- Made-in locations: Authentic vintage often has "Made in France," "Made in Japan," etc. Reproductions fake these.
Materials & Construction
- Stitching: Older pieces hand-stitched or had different machine patterns. Know the difference.
- Fabric weight: Vintage fabrics (especially denim) feel heavier. Reproductions use modern thin fabric.
- Hardware: Zippers, buttons, and rivets changed over decades. Authentic pieces match their era.
Age Verification
- Check fading patterns (authentic fades naturally over decades)
- Look for patina and aging (modern fakes try too hard)
- Cross-reference with period photos/documentation
Pricing Strategy
Use Depop, Vestiaire Collective, and eBay sold listings as benchmarks.
- Depop average: €80 → Vinted price: €60–70 (undercut Depop, faster sale, solid margin)
- Vestiaire average: €150 → Vinted price: €110–130 (appeal to Vinted's price-conscious buyers)
Profitability Example
Find: Hermès vintage silk scarf on German Vinted for €15
- Purchase price: €15
- Shipping & cleaning: €5
- Vinted fee (5%): €7
- Resale price on Depop: €140
- Net profit: €140 − (€15 + €5 + €7) = €113 (81% margin)
Find 3–5 similar deals per month = €340–565/month profit. Annual = €4,080–6,780.
Building Your Vintage Brand
- Specialize in 1–2 categories: Become an expert in denim OR designer bags. Deep expertise builds trust.
- Provide detailed condition reports: Vintage buyers want full transparency. Include flaws, aging, and aging patterns.
- Take excellent photos: Natural lighting, flat lays, close-ups of tags/materials. Vintage buyers are detail-oriented.
- Share authenticity details: Mention era, materials, how you verified authenticity. Educational posts attract serious collectors.
Red Flags to Avoid
- Suspiciously cheap designer items: Counterfeit risk is high
- Inconsistent tags/labels: May indicate reproduction or mixing of parts
- Too-perfect aging: Authentic aging looks natural, not like someone tried too hard
- Sellers with no history: First-time sellers selling "rare" vintage is risky
Hunt vintage smarter, not harder
Get alerts for rare vintage pieces before other collectors. Monitor vague listings for hidden gems across 6 countries.
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