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A client came to me last year wanting to build “the Etsy of handmade pet products.” They’d looked at Sharetribe ($99/month + revenue cap), custom development ($50k+), and various SaaS marketplace builders. None of the options felt right.
I showed them they could launch on WooCommerce with the right multivendor plugin for under $500, own everything, and keep 100% of their platform fees. Six months later, they had 40 vendors and a functioning marketplace.
A WooCommerce multivendor marketplace gives you ownership, flexibility, and a lower total cost than every SaaS marketplace platform. This guide walks through the complete setup, from picking the right plugin to onboarding your first vendors to scaling past 100.
Marketplaces aren’t easy. Before starting, check that your business model actually fits the marketplace shape:
The hardest marketplace problem isn’t the technology — it’s vendor recruitment. We’ve seen new marketplaces fail after spending $10k on design but never onboarding their first 20 vendors. Seed vendors before you build features.

Three plugins dominate the WooCommerce multivendor space.
| Plugin | Starting Price | Commission Models | Vendor Onboarding | Payment Splitting |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WC Vendors | Free / $199/yr Pro | Flat, per-product, per-vendor | Strong | Stripe Connect |
| Dokan | Free / $199+/yr Pro | Flat, category-based, per-product | Very strong | Stripe Connect, PayPal Adaptive |
| WCFM Marketplace | Free / $139+/yr Pro | Flat, tiered, per-product | Strong | Stripe Connect, PayPal |
Pricing shown is approximate as of early 2026 — check each plugin’s site for current rates.
WC Vendors is a focused multivendor plugin with a clean admin UI and solid core features. The Pro version ($199/year) adds Stripe Connect payment splitting, commission tiers, and shipping management per vendor.
What it does best: clean vendor dashboards, straightforward commission management, and deep integration with standard WooCommerce features. The plugin feels like a natural extension of WooCommerce rather than a separate system.
Best for: Marketplace owners who want focused multivendor functionality without feature bloat.
Dokan is the most feature-rich multivendor plugin. Beyond core marketplace functionality, it includes product types (simple, variable, downloadable, auction), shipping management per vendor, booking integration, and more.
The tradeoff is complexity. Dokan’s admin panel has more options than WC Vendors, which can overwhelm first-time marketplace operators.
Best for: Established marketplaces that need advanced features and are willing to invest more setup time.
WCFM sits between WC Vendors and Dokan on features and complexity. It’s free core plugin has more built-in than the others, but their add-on ecosystem can get expensive if you need many features.
Best for: Budget-conscious marketplace builders who start with free/low-cost tools.
For this guide, I’ll use WC Vendors as the primary example since it has the cleanest setup flow. The steps transfer conceptually to Dokan and WCFM.
Building a platform where other people can sell their products might seem like a huge mountain to climb, but you don’t need a massive budget or custom coding to make it happen. By using the right WooCommerce tools, you can build a fully functioning marketplace that you completely control.
Instead of trying to figure everything out at once, it’s much easier to follow a clear, proven path. From setting up your plugin to bringing in your very first sellers, these seven steps will guide you through a smooth and successful launch.
Start with the free version of WC Vendors to validate your marketplace concept before paying for Pro.
After installation:
The WC Vendors Pro license adds Stripe Connect integration, which you’ll want for automatic payment splitting. Plan to upgrade to Pro once you have 3-5 vendors on the platform.
Your vendor onboarding flow is the single most important part of marketplace setup. Bad onboarding = no vendors = no marketplace.
Design a multi-step application flow:
For the first 10 vendors, handle every step manually. Automate only after you’ve validated the flow works.
Commission models to consider:
For a new marketplace, start with flat percentage. Add complexity only if vendors request it or you have a specific reason.
Configure commission in WC Vendors under WC Vendors > Commission. Set a global default and override per-vendor if needed.
For the first 50 vendors, every product should require manual approval. This protects marketplace quality and prevents brand-damaging products from appearing.
Moderation checklist:
As you scale past 50 vendors, you can shift to auto-approval for trusted vendors while keeping manual review for new ones.
Stripe Connect is the gold standard for marketplace payment splitting. When a customer pays, Stripe automatically splits the payment between your marketplace (commission) and the vendor (their portion) without you handling the money.
Setup steps:
Payout timing matters. Instant payouts are convenient for vendors but create more transaction fees. Scheduled payouts (weekly or bi-weekly) reduce fees but delay vendor payments.
Marketplaces accumulate disputes faster than single-vendor stores. You need a clear policy.
Dispute workflow:
Who pays for refunds? In most cases, vendors bear the cost of refunded orders (including the commission you earned). Make this clear in your vendor agreement to avoid disputes later.
Before driving any traffic to your marketplace, you need vendors with products. Launch marketing happens in two phases.
Phase 1: Vendor recruitment (first 2-3 months) Goal: 20+ vendors, 200+ products live.
Tactics:
Phase 2: Customer acquisition (month 3+) Goal: First 100 orders across the marketplace.
Tactics:
As your marketplace grows, priorities shift.
Marketplace growth is non-linear. The first 20 vendors are the hardest. Once you cross 50, referrals and organic applications start accelerating growth.

Minimum viable: $500-1,000 including hosting, WC Vendors Pro license, theme, and Stripe fees. Realistic launch budget: $3,000-10,000 including design, initial marketing, and vendor recruitment.
Most WooCommerce multivendor marketplaces charge 10-20% commission. Starting marketplaces often lean higher (15-20%) to support operations. Established marketplaces can reduce to 8-12% once volume increases.
Yes. WC Vendors creates a dedicated shop page for each vendor (like /shop/vendor-name/) where they can customize branding, logo, description, and social links.
The free version handles basic marketplace functionality. You’ll want Pro for Stripe Connect payment splitting, commission tiers, shipping management, and vendor coupon features. Plan to upgrade before you have paying vendors.
Tax responsibility varies by jurisdiction. In many places, vendors are responsible for their own taxes. In others, the marketplace is considered the seller of record (requiring you to collect and remit tax). Consult a tax professional familiar with marketplace rules in your operating regions.
Yes. Many marketplaces start this way. You’re just another vendor on your own marketplace, with your own products for sale alongside third-party vendors.
Building a WooCommerce multivendor marketplace is a serious business project — but it’s approachable with the right tools and sequence. WC Vendors, Dokan, or WCFM give you the technical foundation. The strategic decisions (commission model, vendor recruitment, quality standards) determine whether you succeed.
Here’s what to do next:
If you’re ready to launch a WooCommerce multivendor marketplace, start by installing the free version of WC Vendors, build your vendor application flow, and reach out to 10 potential vendors before you launch any customer marketing. The marketplace is the vendors — everything else is infrastructure.
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