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How Much Can You Make Selling Used Panties? Real numbers

What used panties actually sell for, what casual sellers really take home each month, what the top sellers earn, and the subscription and shipping costs that quietly eat into all of it. No hype, no invented averages, no promises.

Last updated July 2026

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Earn more than pocket money

Income here is decided by promotion and by selling in the messages, and both take more time than the selling itself. We do both for you, behind your seller identity. Free, confidential application, a reply within 24 hours, and your login and payouts stay yours.

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The short answer

A single worn pair of used panties commonly sells for about $20 to $30, and beginners often report $20 to $50 a pair once their listings look decent. Casual sellers with a few listings and little promotion commonly report roughly $200 to $500 a month. Top, heavily promoted sellers report $5,000 a month or more, but they are the exception and they run it as a business. Most platforms also charge a monthly seller subscription whether or not you sell, so a seller making $200 a month is not netting $200.

The number that moves your income is not the platform, it is promotion. For the full picture, read our pillar guide to selling used panties online.

The numbers

How much can you make selling used panties?

Commonly reported ranges, not guarantees. Every figure below is gross, before your platform subscription, shipping and packaging.

Level Commonly reported What that looks like The honest caveat
One worn pair $20 to $30 The commonly reported price for a standard pair with normal wear time. Beginners often report $20 to $50 a pair once their photos and listings are decent.
A single order with add-ons $50 or more Longer wear, extra photos, a short video or a specific custom request. Customs are where the money is, not single pairs at the market floor.
Casual seller, per month $200 to $500 A few listings, little or no promotion, occasional orders. This is before subscription, shipping and packaging costs, so it is not what you keep.
Serious seller, per month Varies widely Steady listings, repeat buyers, active promotion and selling in the messages. Income here depends almost entirely on how hard you promote, not on the platform.
Top promoted sellers $5,000 or more People who treat it as a business and drive their own traffic every day. The exception, not the norm. Do not plan your budget around this number.

The gap between the $200 row and the $5,000 row is not talent or luck. It is promotion, customs and repeat buyers. If you want the platform-by-platform costs behind these figures, see where to sell used panties.

How much does one pair of used panties sell for?

About $20 to $30 for a single worn pair with a normal wear time. That is the figure sellers report over and over, and it is the number to plan around. Once your photos are clear and your listing actually describes the wear time and the options, beginners commonly report $20 to $50 a pair. Anything lower than that means you are competing at the market floor, which is the worst place to be, because the buyers who pay the least are also the ones who message the most. Anchor your price around the middle of the range and let buyers pay extra for what they actually want.

What do panty sellers actually make per month?

Casual sellers, meaning people with a handful of listings who are not promoting anywhere, commonly report roughly $200 to $500 a month. It is real money, and it is also honestly modest for the time it takes to shoot photos, write listings, wear items, answer messages and mail orders. At the other end, the top sellers who promote hard report $5,000 a month or more. Those figures are real but rare, and they belong to people who treat this as a business rather than as a side hustle they check twice a week. Most people land nearer the first number than the second, and the ones who move up do it by promoting, not by switching sites.

What raises your price per order

A single order can reach $50 or more once you add to it, and add-ons are where the real money sits. The levers are consistent: longer wear time, extra photos, a short video of the item being worn, a specific custom request, bundles and sets rather than single pairs, and a standing arrangement with a buyer who comes back every month. Customs are where the money is, not single pairs. A buyer who wants one particular thing filled will pay several times the price of a stock listing to get it, and they will come back to the seller who filled it well. If you are still setting up your listings, our step-by-step guide to selling used panties covers how to present all of this properly.

The costs nobody mentions

Here is the part that most earnings posts leave out. Most panty-selling platforms charge a monthly seller subscription whether or not you sell a single item. Commonly reported figures, and you should confirm current pricing on the platform itself: All Things Worn is around $15 a month and takes no commission, so you keep 100% of the sale. Pantydeal is around $19 a month and advertises no transaction fees. Snifffr has a free tier with premium from about $10.95 a month, and our Snifffr review goes through what that actually buys. Scented Pansy is one of the cheaper subscriptions. Sofia Gray is sold as a membership, roughly $24.99 for three months or $44.99 for six, and you keep the whole sale.

Then subtract shipping and packaging on every order. So a seller making $200 a month in sales is not netting $200. Run your own arithmetic before you sign up: if your subscription is $19 and you sell two pairs at $25, the platform has taken most of one pair before the postage is paid. This is exactly why an unpromoted account can quietly run at a loss for months.

Why most sellers earn very little

Three reasons, and they are the same three every time. The first is no promotion. Listings that are not promoted stall, regardless of which platform they sit on, because a marketplace is not a traffic source, it is a shelf. The second is no repeat buyers. If every sale requires finding a brand new buyer, your income resets to zero at the start of every month. The third is pricing at the floor. Sellers who undercut everyone attract the buyers who spend the least and negotiate the most, then conclude the whole thing does not pay. Earnings here are not passive and not guaranteed. The variable that decides your income is promotion, driving your own traffic from places that allow adult content such as Reddit and X, plus how well you sell in the messages once someone is talking to you.

How to actually earn more than pocket money

Do the opposite of the three failures above. Promote every day somewhere that allows adult content, and treat that as the job rather than as an afterthought. Convert one-off buyers into repeat buyers by being easy to deal with, filling customs well and offering a standing monthly arrangement. Then move your best buyers onto a page you own, where the same people subscribe, tip and reorder without you paying a marketplace subscription for the privilege. That is the shift that takes someone from $300 a month to a genuine income. The same logic applies to adjacent items, and plenty of sellers add used socks to the same buyer base for very little extra work.

Do you pay tax on money from selling used panties?

Yes. In the US this is taxable self-employment income however the money reaches you, and a platform or payment app may issue you a 1099, in which case the IRS has a copy too. Set aside part of every sale from your first order and keep records from day one rather than trying to rebuild them in April. Track your subscription, shipping and packaging costs as well, because they matter to what you actually owe. Keeping payouts in a separate account under your seller identity makes this simple, and being able to turn a messy PDF statement into a clean spreadsheet of every payout takes minutes and saves an ugly afternoon later. None of this is tax advice, and an accountant is worth the fee once you are earning steadily.

Where we come in

The difference between $300 and a real income is promotion

The two things that decide your earnings, promotion and selling in the messages, are also the two that eat your week. That is our job. We promote where your buyers already gather, price your offers, and put trained chatters on your messages around the clock, all behind your seller identity. You keep your login and payouts and the large majority of what you earn.

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Frequently asked questions

Used panty earnings, answered

Casual sellers commonly report roughly $200 to $500 a month, with a single worn pair usually selling for about $20 to $30. Top sellers who promote hard report $5,000 a month or more, but they are the exception and they treat it as a full business. Subscriptions and shipping come out of whatever you make, so your take-home is lower than your sales total.

A single worn pair commonly sells for about $20 to $30. Beginners often report $20 to $50 a pair once their photos and listing details are decent. Add-ons lift a single order past $50: longer wear time, extra photos, a short video of the item being worn, specific custom requests, and bundles or sets. Customs and repeat-buyer arrangements earn far more than one-off pairs.

It is worth it if you are willing to promote and answer messages, and it is not worth it if you expect passive income. Most platforms charge a monthly seller subscription whether or not you sell, so an unpromoted account can lose money. Sellers who drive their own traffic and build repeat buyers earn a real side income. Sellers who only list and wait usually earn very little.

Casual sellers with a few listings and little promotion commonly report roughly $200 to $500 a month. That figure is gross, not net. Subtract the platform subscription, shipping and packaging and the real number is meaningfully lower. Sellers who promote consistently and build repeat buyers earn more, and the small group at the top report $5,000 a month or more.

Yes. In the US this is taxable self-employment income however the money reaches you. A platform or payment app may issue you a 1099, and the IRS gets a copy. Set aside part of every sale for tax and keep records from your first order rather than reconstructing them in April. Your subscription, shipping and packaging costs are worth tracking too.

Some people do, but they are a small minority and they work at it like a business. The reported $5,000-plus months come from sellers who promote every day on platforms that allow adult content, sell in the messages, and keep a base of repeat buyers. Marketplace listings alone rarely get anyone to full-time money, because a listing that nobody sees does not sell.

Keep reading

Pillar

Sell used panties online

Where to sell, real fees, how much you can make, and how to stay anonymous and legal.

Step by step

How to sell used panties

Alias, platform, photos, pricing, safe payment and shipping, in the order you need them.

Platforms

Where to sell used panties

Every major panty-selling site compared on subscriptions, fees, payouts and buyer pool.

Review

Snifffr review

What the free tier and premium actually cost, and how much sellers really earn there.

Related income

Sell used socks

The same buyers, the same playbook, a second product line with almost no extra work.

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