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Head to head

House Of Resell vs Reseller Paradise: two UK reselling groups, compared

Last updated

AHouse Of Resell logo

House Of Resell

UK reselling community with the widest category coverage we've seen, from sneakers to whisky investments.

£34.99/month
BReseller Paradise logo

Reseller Paradise

UK-based community with the fastest Vinted monitors on the market and broad category coverage.

£24.99/month

TL;DR
House Of Resell stretches wider across emerging categories at £34.99/month; Reseller Paradise focuses on faster Vinted monitors and a documented 1,000+ member community at £24.99/month.

Side-by-side

 House Of ResellReseller Paradise
Monthly price£34.99 /month£24.99 /month
Annual priceNot offeredNot offered
Trial / entryNoneNone
CategoriesReselling · Sneakers · TCG · Price ErrorsReselling · TCG · Sneakers · Price Errors
Retailer focusNot disclosedVinted, Argos, Currys, Tesco, Smyths, John Lewis
FoundedNot disclosedNot disclosed
MembersNot disclosed1,000+
ScorePendingPending

Which one should you choose?

A

Choose House Of Resell if…

  • You want the widest range of categories, alongside reselling and TCG, House Of Resell explicitly covers NFTs, stocks, crypto, matched betting, and whisky.
  • Mainstream credibility matters to you, the group has been featured on BBC Radio 4 with 5-star Trustpilot reviews.
  • Price-error alerts are a meaningful part of your workflow, House Of Resell promotes exclusive price-error and flip notifications.
  • You want a discount-code generator alongside restock alerts and deal monitors.
B

Choose Reseller Paradise if…

  • Vinted is a major part of your sourcing, Reseller Paradise's Vinted monitors are documented as 4-7 seconds faster than the app itself.
  • You're price-sensitive, at £24.99/month, Reseller Paradise is £10/month cheaper than House Of Resell.
  • You want documented community scale, Reseller Paradise quotes 1,000+ active members and 10,000+ facilitated autobuy purchases.
  • Breadth of UK retailer coverage is the priority, their custom monitors target 20+ retailers including Vinted, Argos, Currys, Tesco, Smyths, and John Lewis.

Full comparison

House Of Resell and Reseller Paradise are the two broadest UK reselling groups in our current rankings. They overlap heavily on categories, sneakers, trading cards, price errors, general reselling, but they take meaningfully different approaches to coverage and pricing. This comparison is for resellers who've narrowed their shortlist to these two and want to make a sensible call between them.

Alerts and monitors

The headline pitch on alerts is similar, both groups run UK-focused restock and deal monitors across major retailers. Where they differ is what they emphasise.

Reseller Paradise leads with Vinted monitor speed as its primary differentiator. The group documents its Vinted monitors as 4-7 seconds faster than the app itself, which is the gap between sourcing a flip and watching another reseller list it. For sourcing-heavy resellers who use Vinted as a primary channel, this is the single most important feature in either group. The group also runs custom monitors across 20+ UK retailers, Argos, Currys, Tesco, Smyths, John Lewis, which is broader than most groups at this price point.

House Of Resell competes on category breadth rather than monitor latency. Alongside the standard restock and discount monitors, the group runs alert streams for exclusive price errors, in-store flip notifications, and Amazon deals. Their retailer list is shorter, but the categories cover ground that other groups don't, discount code generation, freebies, and the longer-tail "emerging" verticals like whisky and stocks.

Community and category coverage

This is where the two groups diverge most clearly.

Reseller Paradise is the conventionally-scoped reselling community: sneakers, trading cards, Vinted, price errors. The membership runs at 1,000+ active members with documented £1M+ in collective profits and 10,000+ facilitated autobuy purchases. Staff have 15+ years combined experience and the group ships beginner guides as part of onboarding.

House Of Resell is stretched wider. The group's stated coverage includes sneakers and TCG (overlapping with Reseller Paradise), plus NFTs, stocks, crypto, matched betting, and whisky investments. That's an unusual portfolio for a cook group and carries a real trade-off, the breadth comes at the cost of depth in any one category. If you actually want NFTs and matched betting in one Discord, this is a genuine differentiator; if you only care about traditional reselling, the breadth is incidental.

The group also has the strongest mainstream-media credibility of any UK group we cover, with a BBC Radio 4 feature and 5-star Trustpilot reviews. That doesn't directly help your alert speed, but it's a signal of operator legitimacy.

Value for money

The pricing difference is £10/month, £24.99 for Reseller Paradise versus £34.99 for House Of Resell.

For a reseller treating the subscription as a sourcing tool, the question is which £30-ish/month buys more useful information. The answer depends on what you flip:

  • If you're Vinted-heavy or sneaker-heavy, Reseller Paradise's £24.99 lands more value per pound. The Vinted monitor latency advantage alone covers the fee in a few good months.
  • If you want exposure to less-conventional categories (price errors, whisky, matched betting) or value the mainstream-media credibility, the extra £10/month for House Of Resell is reasonable.

Neither has an annual plan, which means switching costs are low. Try one for 30 days, evaluate, switch if needed.

Support and tooling

Both groups run on the standard cook group platform stack (Whop), so the membership management, cancellation, and billing experience is identical.

Reseller Paradise emphasises documented onboarding, beginner guides, autobuy tooling integration, staff experience. House Of Resell emphasises tooling breadth, discount code generator, exclusive Amazon deals, in-store flip alerts. Both groups have public-facing customer support, both moderate their Discord actively.

The bottom line

These two groups will both serve a reseller who flips across general categories, sneakers, cards, supermarket clearance, Vinted. The choice between them is really about emphasis:

  • Pick Reseller Paradise if Vinted is in your weekly sourcing rotation and you want the cheaper option with documented community scale.
  • Pick House Of Resell if you want exposure to non-traditional categories (NFTs, stocks, matched betting) or value mainstream-media credibility and discount code tooling.

Neither group is a wrong answer for most UK general-resellers. The wrong answer is paying for both, the overlap on standard categories is too high to justify the duplicate subscription.

Make your choice

Ready to decide?

Both groups have monthly billing, you can switch at any time. The decision cards above and our individual reviews should help you pick.

Frequently asked questions

  • Which one is cheaper?
    Reseller Paradise at £24.99/month, against House Of Resell at £34.99/month. Both are billed monthly with no annual plan as of this comparison.
  • Do either of these include Amazon FBA leads?
    Not as a primary focus. Both cover Amazon deals and freebies opportunistically, but neither is structured as a UK FBA group with daily lead lists. If FBA is your main vertical, see our FBA category ranking instead.
  • Which has better Vinted coverage?
    Reseller Paradise. They specifically promote their Vinted monitors as 4-7 seconds faster than the app, and Vinted appears at the top of their retailer coverage list. House Of Resell covers a wider category set but doesn't lead with Vinted.
  • Do either offer a trial?
    Neither has a stated free trial. Both run monthly subscriptions on the standard cook group platforms, so cancellation after one month is straightforward if the fit isn't right.
  • Can I switch between them mid-month?
    Yes. Cancel one before the next billing cycle and sign up to the other. Most resellers who've tried both report giving each at least 30 days before deciding, alert patterns and community rhythm take a couple of weeks to read properly.