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House Of Resell Review 2026

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

Independently tested · Last updated

Visit House Of Resell
£34.99/month79/ 100

At a glance

Price
£34.99/month
Trial
None
Founded
Not disclosed
Members
Not disclosed
0/ 100
Alert speed20% weight7/10
Alert quality25% weight8/10
Retailer coverage15% weight9/10
Community15% weight8/10
Value for money15% weight8/10
Support10% weight7/10

The full review

Overview

House Of Resell is the broadest-category UK cook group we cover. Alongside the standard reselling verticals (sneakers, trading cards, price errors), the group explicitly extends into NFTs, stocks, crypto, matched betting, and whisky investments. That kind of category sprawl is unusual in the UK cook group space and creates a clear positioning: for resellers who want exposure to alternative reselling opportunities, it’s the obvious shortlist entry.

At £34.99/month the group sits in the middle of the UK broad-reselling price range. The headline credibility signals, a BBC Radio 4 feature and a 5-star Trustpilot rating, are unusual at this price point and suggest more operator legitimacy than the typical anonymously-operated cook group.

What’s included

The published feature set:

  • Widest category coverage in our rankings, sneakers and TCG alongside NFTs, stocks, crypto, matched betting, and whisky investments. The breadth is the group’s primary differentiator.
  • Exclusive price-error alerts and flip notifications across UK retailers. Price errors are a specific high-variance category where the group invests heavily.
  • Discount-code generator, an in-house tool that surfaces working UK retailer codes, including stacking opportunities the public deal sites don’t catch.
  • Amazon deals, freebies, and in-store flip alerts alongside the standard reselling monitors.
  • Active category-specific chat hubs rather than one undifferentiated alerts channel, members can focus on the categories they actually flip.

The BBC Radio 4 feature is a credibility signal, public-facing legitimacy that most cook groups can’t claim. The 5-star Trustpilot rating is the more directly verifiable contemporaneous signal.

How it performs

The structural value proposition splits into two streams:

  • Standard reselling coverage. Sneakers, TCG, price errors, Amazon deals, discount codes. For these, House Of Resell competes with Reseller Paradise (£24.99) and Paragn Network (£39.99). The retailer coverage is broad, the discount-code generator is differentiated tooling, but Vinted-focused resellers will get more from Reseller Paradise specifically.
  • Alternative category exposure. Whisky, matched betting, NFTs, stocks, crypto. This is where House Of Resell is genuinely unique among the UK groups we cover. Most members won’t use all of these; the value is having access when you want to explore beyond traditional reselling.

The honest constraint is breadth-versus-depth. A group covering eight categories can’t go as deep on any single one as a specialist could. For resellers who genuinely want category exposure, this is an acceptable trade. For resellers wanting depth in one vertical, a specialist group serves better.

Who it’s for

The clearest fit is UK resellers curious about non-traditional categories alongside the standard reselling stack. The £34.99/month is reasonable for the breadth, the BBC/Trustpilot credibility signals are genuine, and the category-specific chat hubs prevent the firehose feel that broader groups sometimes have.

It’s less suitable for:

  • Vinted-focused sourcing, Reseller Paradise’s faster monitors are the better pick.
  • Single-vertical specialists, pay for depth elsewhere.
  • Resellers who view matched betting and NFT-style categories as fundamentally outside their interests, much of the differentiated value won’t apply to you.

Final verdict

House Of Resell is the genuine breadth play in our UK rankings, the group most likely to introduce you to a reselling category you weren’t already exploring. The BBC Radio 4 and 5-star Trustpilot signals are unusual external credibility markers at this price point, and the discount-code generator is differentiated tooling that the other broad UK groups don’t offer. For resellers wanting depth in one vertical, a specialist subscription serves better. For resellers wanting exposure to where UK reselling is expanding next, House Of Resell is the natural pick.

Pros & cons

Pros

  • BBC Radio 4 feature and 5-star Trustpilot rating, strongest mainstream-media credibility in our rankings
  • Widest category coverage we’ve seen (sneakers, TCG, NFTs, stocks, crypto, matched betting, whisky)
  • Exclusive price-error alerts and flip notifications across UK retailers
  • Built-in discount-code generator alongside the standard restock and deal monitors
  • Active category-specific chat hubs rather than one undifferentiated firehose

Cons

  • Breadth comes at the expense of depth in any single vertical
  • No free trial, commit before evaluating
  • Some advertised verticals (whisky investments, matched betting) are niche use-cases most members won’t touch

Inside the group

Original screenshots taken during testing.

House Of Resell screenshot
House Of Resell screenshot
House Of Resell screenshot

Price & plans

PlanPriceTrial
Monthly£34.99/monthNoneVisit

Compare with similar groups

Other UK groups that overlap with House Of Resell’s coverage.

Frequently asked questions

  • Is the BBC Radio 4 feature recent or historical?
    The reference is to BBC Radio 4 coverage of the UK reselling space more broadly, with House Of Resell as one of the operators discussed. It’s a credibility signal for the operator’s public-facing legitimacy rather than evidence of current-year scale. The 5-star Trustpilot rating is the more directly verifiable contemporaneous signal.
  • What does "whisky investments" actually mean in this context?
    The reselling angle on whisky, sourcing limited-distribution bottles at retail and reselling on the secondary market (eBay, specialist whisky platforms, auction houses). The category is real but specialist; only a handful of members are likely to use it. It’s a feature, not a primary use case.
  • How does House Of Resell differ from Reseller Paradise?
    Reseller Paradise (£24.99/month) is faster on Vinted monitors with broader UK retailer monitor coverage. House Of Resell (£34.99/month) stretches wider into non-traditional categories (whisky, stocks, matched betting). For Vinted-led sourcing Reseller Paradise is the better pick; for exposure to alternative reselling categories, House Of Resell is the differentiated option.
  • What’s the discount-code generator and how does it work?
    An in-house tool that surfaces working UK retailer discount codes, stacking opportunities, expired-but-still-active codes, edge-case combinations the public deal sites don’t catch. Practical use varies by retailer; for resellers buying frequently at major UK retailers, it’s a meaningful margin enhancement.
  • Is matched betting actually legal as part of this?
    Matched betting itself is legal in the UK and treated as a non-taxable hobby income up to certain thresholds. The activity sits inside specific bookmaker rules though, and abuse can lead to bookmaker account closures. House Of Resell’s coverage is treated as additional opportunities rather than a primary income stream, read our methodology and disclosure pages for the editorial position on this kind of category.

Final verdict

House Of Resell stretches the cook group format wider than anyone else we cover, whisky investments, matched betting, stocks, and crypto layered alongside the standard reselling verticals. The BBC Radio 4 feature and 5-star Trustpilot rating are unusual external credibility signals at this price point, and the £34.99/month is reasonable for the breadth on offer. Best for resellers who want exposure to non-traditional categories alongside the standard reselling stack.