Vessor
06.30.2026ConsignPro service has officially ended. MyResaleWeb went dark July 1. What to do tonight →
The register for resale

The resale POS that sells everywhere your buyers are.

The register on your floor, the consignor books, and an online store that reaches real marketplaces — one system for consignment and resale shops. Clothing, records, furniture, and whatever one-of-a-kind thing you sell.

Switching from ConsignPro? →
Intake · Clothing & AccessoriesItem A-0427
1990s quilted caviar leather flap bag, black with gold hardware

AI MATCHED · ’90s quilted leather bag · 8 of 8 · 2.1s

Whatever you sell

Built for how you sell, not just what you sell.

Items carry a common backbone — barcode, price, lifecycle, photos — plus a per-vertical attribute template: size and designer for clothing, artist and pressing for records, maker and period for furniture. Templates are data, not code.

  • Structured camel leather designer handbag with gold hardware
    Clothing & Accessories
  • Estate jewelry in a velvet-lined wooden tray — emerald ring, pearl brooch, gold chain
    Jewelry & Watches
  • Vinyl LP sliding out of a psychedelic printed sleeve
    Records
  • 1960s Danish rosewood credenza
    Furniture
  • 1960s 35mm rangefinder camera in chrome and black
    Collectibles
  • Framed 19th-century oil portrait in an ornate gilt frame
    Art

Most shops sell across categories. Items carry their own templates — your store doesn’t have to pick one.

How it works

Getting online is a photo, not a project.

01

Bring your data

Upload your old system's database or a CSV export from anything else. You see your entire shop imported in a sandbox, with a plain-English migration report, before anything cuts over — and your old barcode tags keep scanning, because your item numbers are preserved.

02

Run the register

Ring sales by scanning the tags you already have. Markdowns are recorded with who and why, manager approval gates the sensitive actions, and every line lands in one ledger. Cash, card, account credit, split tender.

03

Reach every buyer

Photograph a piece and Vessor drafts the listing — then publishes it to the marketplaces your category actually sells on. The moment it sells, on the floor or online, it's delisted everywhere else. One item, many listings, one source of truth.

A shop employee photographing a folded vintage denim jacket on the counter with a phone
Photo in, listing outshoot · publish · done
One-of-a-kind means one chance

Never sell the same piece twice.

A floor sale delists the item from every channel in under a minute. An online sale hard-stops the register and queues a floor pull. This is the reason shops that never dared to sell online finally can.

Vintage couture champagne-gold beaded evening gown on a dress form — one of a kind
Item #10247 · On the floor$84.00
Event logOne sale · live
  • 14:02:11REGISTER · SALEitem #10247 · $84.00
  • 14:02:12DELIST · EBAYconfirmed
  • 14:02:12DELIST · ETSYconfirmed
  • 14:02:13LEDGER · SPLIT 50%consignor #0312 +$42.00
  • 14:02:14STATEon_floor → sold
Sold on the floor at 2:02 — off eBay and Etsy by 2:03. No double sales, no refund-and-apologize.
The reach

Every marketplace your category sells on.

Built on official marketplace APIs only — never ToS-violating browser extensions. Your storefront included.

Launch channels
eBeBayEtEtsyDcDiscogsSpShopify
In review
DpDepop · partner approval pending
Exploring next
ChChairishRvReverb1D1stDibsWnWhatnot
Emerald quilted leather designer handbag with a gold chain strap, studio photographed
One bag · four listingsone source of truth
Consignment shops

The consignor books are built in — splits, payouts, check runs.

The whole consignment story →
A rack of vintage garments, each with a kraft-paper hang tag
Case study · Migration № 001

A 40-plus-year consignment shop, migrated whole.

Every item, every consignor, every sale line — imported from their old system and re-derived until the books matched. The shop stays anonymous until they choose otherwise; the numbers don’t.

in business
40+ years
items
100,000+
captured
Every sale
ledger verified
To the cent
Questions, answered straight

Built for shops. Not for hobbyists.

Who is Vessor for?

Resale shops with a physical location — consignment or buy-outright — in clothing and accessories, jewelry and watches, records, furniture, collectibles, and art. Not for solo closet resellers; not for big-box.

How is Vessor different from other resale POS software?

Most resale POS systems treat online as an afterthought — at best, your own webstore that buyers have to find. Vessor lists your inventory on the marketplaces buyers already search — eBay, Etsy, Discogs — with double-sale prevention running in both directions, and a migration that keeps your complete history. Named comparisons live on the Why Vessor page.

How is Vessor different from crosslisting apps?

Those are crosslisting tools for solo resellers working from home. Vessor is a point of sale for shops — staff accounts, intake stations, tag printing, a register — with marketplace publishing built on official APIs, never browser extensions.

Will my old barcode tags still scan?

Yes. The importer preserves your item numbers, so the tags already hanging on your merchandise keep scanning on day one. No re-tagging weekend.

Can I keep my current register?

Yes. The Online plan leaves your register alone and runs the online side — listings, delisting, double-sale prevention. When you're ready for one system, the Register plan replaces it.

When can I use it?

Vessor is onboarding founding shops now. Start your trial and tell us about your shop — a real person has you set up within a day, and early shops shape the product and get a white-glove migration. Start your trial →

Bring your shop over whole.

Wherever your records live today — a legacy install, a cloud POS, a spreadsheet — Vessor starts by importing them whole, and proves the books match before anything cuts over.

A warm vintage resale shop interior — garment racks, a wooden counter with a brass register, afternoon window light