How to Set Marketplace Commission Rates Without Killing Growth
Too high and suppliers leave. Too low and you can't sustain operations. Here's the data on what successful marketplaces charge—and the framework for setting rates that work for everyone.
Who Is This For?
This guide is specifically designed for:
Best For Role:
Strategic guidance for marketplace founders and business leaders.
Commission rates might be the most consequential decision a marketplace founder makes.
Too high: Suppliers leave for competitors or go direct to customers. Too low: You can't cover operations, support, and growth investment.
For the complete pricing and economics picture, also see our pricing strategy calculator and unit economics modeling guide.
After analyzing commission structures across hundreds of marketplaces, here's what actually works.
The Landscape: What Marketplaces Actually Charge
Product Marketplaces
| Platform | Take Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Amazon | 8-15% | Category dependent, plus FBA fees |
| Etsy | 6.5% | Transaction fee + payment processing |
| eBay | 12-15% | Category and tier dependent |
| Poshmark | 20% | Flat rate on all sales |
| StockX | 8-10% | Reduced for high volume |
| Depop | 10% | Plus payment processing |
Product marketplace average: 10-15%
Service Marketplaces
| Platform | Take Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Uber | 25-30% | Service fee to riders + driver commission |
| Airbnb | 14-16% | Split between host (3%) and guest (13%) |
| Upwork | 5-20% | Slides down with client relationship |
| Fiverr | 20% | Flat rate on all transactions |
| DoorDash | 15-30% | Commission from restaurants |
| TaskRabbit | 15% | Service fee from task posters |
Service marketplace average: 15-25%
B2B Marketplaces
| Platform | Take Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Faire | 25% | Commission from brands |
| Alibaba | 3-8% | Lower rates for high volume |
| Amazon Business | 8-15% | Similar to consumer |
| Thomasnet | Lead fees | Not transaction-based |
B2B marketplace average: 10-20% (or lead/subscription model)
The Commission Rate Formula
Your commission rate must cover:
- •Payment processing: 2.9% + $0.30 per transaction (Stripe baseline)
- •Platform operations: Support, moderation, infrastructure
- •Customer acquisition: Marketing cost to acquire both sides
- •Growth investment: Product development, expansion
- •Margin: Profit for sustainability
The minimum viable rate:
Payment processing alone is ~3%. Add basic operations and you're at 7-10% minimum. Below that, you're subsidizing transactions.
The maximum sustainable rate:
This depends on your category's economics:
- •What's the supplier's profit margin?
- •What alternatives exist?
- •How much value do you add?
If your commission exceeds the value you provide or cuts too deeply into supplier margins, suppliers will leave or work around you.
The Value-Based Framework
Commission rates should reflect value delivered. The more value you provide, the more you can charge.
Low Value Add → Low Commission (5-10%)
You provide:
- •Basic matching
- •Simple transaction processing
- •Minimal trust infrastructure
Examples: Craigslist-style listing sites, basic directories
Medium Value Add → Medium Commission (10-20%)
You provide:
- •Quality matching with search/filters
- •Payment protection
- •Review/rating systems
- •Customer support
Examples: Most product marketplaces, many service platforms
High Value Add → High Commission (20-30%+)
You provide:
- •Demand generation (buyers come to you)
- •Full transaction handling
- •Insurance/guarantees
- •Professional tools and analytics
- •Trust and safety infrastructure
Examples: Uber (provides all demand), Poshmark (handles shipping), Airbnb (provides booking engine, insurance, global demand)
The rule: Your commission rate is only sustainable if suppliers would pay it voluntarily because of the value you deliver.
Category-Specific Considerations
High-Margin Products (Fashion, Art, Luxury)
Supplier margins: 60-80% Sustainable commission: 15-25% Reasoning: High margins mean suppliers can afford higher rates if you provide qualified demand.
Low-Margin Products (Electronics, Commodities)
Supplier margins: 5-15% Sustainable commission: 5-12% Reasoning: Thin margins mean every percentage point matters. Suppliers are price-sensitive.
Services with Labor Cost
Supplier margins: Varies by labor cost structure Sustainable commission: 15-25% Reasoning: Service providers have relatively high margins (labor is their cost, not inventory), but they're sensitive to take rates that reduce hourly earnings below alternatives.
B2B Transactions
Supplier margins: Varies widely Sustainable commission: 3-15% Reasoning: Higher transaction values mean lower percentage rates can still generate meaningful revenue. B2B buyers are price-sensitive.
The Disintermediation Calculation
Here's the math your suppliers are doing:
Commission paid to platform: $X per transaction Cost to acquire customer directly: $Y per customer Repeat business value: $Z per repeat customer
If $Y < $X × expected_transactions, suppliers will invest in direct acquisition instead of your platform.
How to win this calculation:
- •Provide demand they can't generate themselves
- •Create switching costs (reviews, history, tools)
- •Add value beyond just matching (payments, insurance, support)—see why supply-side UX matters
- •Price below their cost of direct acquisition
The Split Model (Host/Guest)
Airbnb pioneered splitting commission between both sides:
- •Host fee: 3% (paid by supplier)
- •Guest fee: 13% (paid by buyer)
- •Total take: ~16%
Why this works:
- •Lower perceived seller cost: 3% feels much more acceptable than 16%
- •Buyer expectation: Buyers expect service fees on bookings
- •Psychological pricing: $100 + $13 fee feels different than $113 with no fee
- •Reduced disintermediation: At 3%, hosts don't have strong incentive to go direct
When to use splits:
- •High-value transactions where percentage feels large
- •Categories where buyers expect booking fees
- •When supplier sensitivity to rates is high
The Sliding Scale Model
Upwork uses a sliding commission based on relationship volume:
| Client Billings | Commission |
|---|---|
| First $500 | 20% |
| $500-$10,000 | 10% |
| Over $10,000 | 5% |
Why this works:
- •Captures value early: New relationships have highest matching value
- •Reduces disintermediation: Lower rates for ongoing relationships reduce incentive to go off-platform
- •Rewards loyalty: Suppliers see benefit to staying
- •Matches value delivered: Platform adds less value to established relationships
When to use sliding scales:
- •Service marketplaces with repeat relationships
- •B2B platforms with ongoing contracts
- •Categories where disintermediation risk is high after first transaction
The Subscription Model
Some marketplaces avoid transaction fees entirely:
| Model | Example | Use Case |
|---|---|---|
| Supplier subscription | LinkedIn Premium | When transaction tracking is difficult |
| Buyer subscription | Costco | When membership provides enough value |
| Dual subscription | Some B2B platforms | When both sides need tools |
| Freemium + premium | Zillow | When visibility can be tiered |
Advantages:
- •Predictable revenue
- •No disintermediation incentive
- •Simpler accounting
Disadvantages:
- •Revenue doesn't scale with GMV
- •Harder to adjust pricing
- •May limit supplier participation
The Free Launch Question
Many marketplaces launch with 0% commission to build liquidity:
The argument for:
- •Removes friction during cold-start
- •Attracts suppliers who wouldn't otherwise try
- •Allows focus on product-market fit before monetization
The argument against:
- •Suppliers acquired at 0% may leave when you introduce fees
- •No revenue = no sustainability signal
- •Delays validation of actual business model
- •Creates entitlement ("you were free, now you're not")
Our recommendation:
Launch with your intended long-term rate, but offer:
- •Reduced rates for early adopters (first 100 suppliers get 50% off forever)
- •Promotional periods ("0% commission for your first month")
- •Volume bonuses ("reach $X in sales, get Y% back")
This builds the right expectations while still reducing early friction. For more on launching marketplaces effectively, see solving the chicken-and-egg problem and the first 90 days after launch.
When to Change Rates
Raising Rates
Valid reasons:
- •Costs have increased (payment processing, support)
- •You've added significant value (new features, better demand)
- •Market rates have risen
- •Current rate is unsustainably low
How to do it:
- •Grandfather existing suppliers at old rate (at least temporarily)
- •Announce well in advance (90+ days)
- •Communicate what's improved to justify the increase
- •Increase incrementally, not dramatically
Warning signs you raised rates wrong:
- •Supplier churn spikes immediately
- •New supplier acquisition drops
- •Disintermediation increases
Lowering Rates
Valid reasons:
- •Competing platform offers lower rates
- •You've achieved scale efficiencies
- •Category economics shifted
- •Suppliers are leaving for alternatives
How to do it:
- •Announce as competitive move
- •Consider permanent vs. promotional reduction
- •Evaluate impact on unit economics before committing
The trap: Lowering rates is easy. Raising them again is extremely hard. Only lower if you're confident you can sustain the lower rate.
The Minimum Order Problem
Transaction fees create a minimum viable order problem:
At 10% commission + 2.9% + $0.30 payment fee:
- •$5 order: $0.50 + $0.45 = $0.95 in fees = 19% effective rate
- •$50 order: $5.00 + $1.75 = $6.75 in fees = 13.5% effective rate
- •$500 order: $50 + $14.80 = $64.80 in fees = 13% effective rate
Solutions:
- •Minimum order thresholds
- •Flat fee for small transactions
- •Subsidize small transactions as growth investment
- •Focus on categories with larger transaction values
The Real-World Decision Process
Here's how we help founders set rates:
Step 1: Understand Category Economics
- •What are typical supplier margins?
- •What do competitors charge?
- •What alternatives do suppliers have?
Step 2: Calculate Minimum Viable Rate
- •Payment processing costs
- •Support costs per transaction
- •CAC recovery timeline
- •Margin requirement
Step 3: Assess Value Delivered
- •How much demand do you provide?
- •What trust infrastructure exists?
- •What tools/services are included?
- •What would suppliers pay for this value?
Step 4: Set Initial Rate
- •Usually slightly below category average initially
- •With room to increase as value grows
- •Clear enough to explain to suppliers
Step 5: Plan for Evolution
- •Volume discounts for power sellers
- •Rate increases as platform matures
- •New revenue streams beyond commission
The Bottom Line
Commission rates aren't arbitrary. They're constrained by:
- •What you need to sustain operations
- •What value you deliver to suppliers
- •What alternatives suppliers have
- •What category economics allow
The marketplaces that get rates right build sustainable businesses that serve both sides well.
The marketplaces that get rates wrong either burn cash subsidizing unsustainable operations, or lose suppliers to platforms that price more fairly.
Your rate is a signal. It tells suppliers whether you understand their economics and respect their business.
Our Commission Rate Consulting
Setting commission rates requires understanding your specific category, competition, and cost structure.
When we build marketplaces, we help founders model:
- •Unit economics at various rate levels
- •Disintermediation risk at different price points
- •Value-based pricing tied to platform features
- •Evolution strategy as the platform matures
Because the rate you set in month 1 affects everything that follows.
Let's model your marketplace economics. We'll help you find the rate that works for everyone.
Sources:
- •Marketplace Pulse - Commission Rate Analysis
- •a16z - Marketplace Pricing
- •Stripe - Building Marketplaces
- •Platform pricing pages: Airbnb, Uber, Etsy, Amazon, Upwork, Fiverr
- •Internal analysis of commission structures across 200+ marketplace builds
How much should your build actually cost?
Get a personalized investment estimate based on your platform type, scope, and timeline.
Open the Investment CalculatorAbout the Author

Chris Mask
Founder & CEO
Serial entrepreneur, marketplace architect, and AI-assisted development pioneer with 7+ years building two-sided platforms. Founded Directorism after launching and exiting two successful marketplace businesses. Has personally architected and consulted on 200+ marketplace and directory projects. Recognized authority on cold-start problems, platform economics, marketplace SEO, and leveraging AI tools for rapid development. Early adopter of AI-powered coding workflows, integrating Claude, Cursor, and agentic development patterns into production systems.
Related Articles
What It Actually Takes to Build a Profitable Marketplace
You're not building a website. You're building an entire business. Here's the mindset shift every founder needs before investing a single dollar.
Marketplace M&A: How Acquirers Value Your Marketplace
Marketplace consolidation is accelerating. Strategic buyers and PE firms are actively acquiring. Here's what they look for, how they value marketplaces, and how to position yours for acquisition.
Why Service Marketplaces Are Harder Than Product Marketplaces
Product marketplaces like eBay and Etsy print money. Service marketplaces like Homejoy and Exec die. The difference isn't execution—it's fundamental economics. Here's what makes service marketplaces so hard.