Depop Fee Calculator

See your real take-home after Depop's payment processing fee and optional boosted listing charge. 2026 US rates.

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Depop Fee Calculator — FAQs

How can I calculate Depop fees?
Use the Depop fee calculator above: enter your sale price and item cost, and it instantly shows your net payout after Depop's payment processing fee. If you use Depop's boosted listing feature, toggle that option to see the additional 12% charge factored in. The calculator always reflects current 2026 US rates.
How much fees do you pay on Depop?
For US sellers, Depop no longer charges a selling commission. Instead, you pay a payment processing fee on each transaction (a percentage plus a fixed per-transaction charge). If you opt into Boosted listings, an additional 12% fee applies on top. Standard sales without boosting have significantly lower fees than the old 10% model for higher-value items.
Is the Depop fee 10%?
Not anymore. Depop removed its 10% seller commission for US (and UK) sellers. The current model charges a payment processing fee per transaction instead — no flat percentage selling commission. The 10% figure applies to older guides or sellers outside the US/UK. The calculator on this page uses the correct 2026 US fee structure.
How much does Depop take if I sell a shirt for $120?
On a $120 sale with standard (non-boosted) selling, Depop deducts only the payment processing fee — roughly 3–4% depending on the exact transaction rate, leaving you with approximately $115–$116 before your item cost. If you used a Boosted listing, the additional 12% ($14.40) brings the total deduction higher. Run $120 through the calculator above for a precise figure.
What happens if you sell over $600 on Depop?
If your total Depop sales exceed $600 in a calendar year, Depop (like all US marketplaces) is required to issue you a 1099-K tax form and report your earnings to the IRS. This is an IRS rule, not a Depop policy. You are responsible for reporting this income on your tax return. The $600 threshold applies to gross sales — fees and COGS are deductible expenses, not subtracted from the threshold automatically.