Key Takeaways
- Marketplace commissions typically run 8-25% per transaction higher than most merchants expect.
- Building your own traffic from scratch (SEO, ads) takes 6-18 months and real budget.
- Customer loyalty is structurally harder on marketplaces the platform owns the buyer relationship.
- The break-even point between marketplace fees and self-generated traffic shifts depending on your product margin and average order value.
- Automated inventory and order sync is the operational key to running both channels profitably at the same time.
The debate between selling on marketplaces and running your own webshop is one of the most common decisions online merchants face and most advice oversimplifies it. The honest answer depends on your product margin, your category, and how much operational complexity you can handle.
This guide walks through the real trade-offs on both sides: reach, cost, customer loyalty, product fit, and what it takes to run both channels at once without doubling your workload.
What does selling on your own webshop actually give you?
Your own webshop gives you full control over every aspect of the customer experience pricing, branding, product presentation, and the post-purchase relationship. That control has measurable value, but it comes with one significant cost: you are entirely responsible for generating your own traffic.
Here is what owning your channel means in practice:
- You collect full customer data (email, purchase history, browsing behaviour) and can use it for retargeting, upsells, and loyalty campaigns.
- You set your own return policy, shipping rates, and packaging no marketplace rules constraining your decisions.
- Your brand is front and centre: the customer buys from you, not from “a seller on bol.com”.
- Your margin is structurally higher no 8-25% commission per sale going to a third party.
- You build long-term SEO equity: a well-ranked product page keeps generating free traffic for years.
The trade-off: a new webshop starts with zero traffic. Building an audience through SEO typically takes 6-18 months. Running paid ads (Google Shopping, Meta) requires ongoing spend and expertise. Most merchants underestimate this cost in the early stages.
Why do marketplaces give you immediate access to millions of buyers?
Marketplaces solve the hardest problem a new online store faces: traffic. Bol.com has over 13 million active customers in the Netherlands and Belgium. Amazon reaches 200+ million Prime members globally. When you list on a marketplace, you plug directly into an audience that is already in buying mode.
The value of that reach is real. For categories like consumer electronics, household goods, or toys where buyers already search on the marketplace first a new webshop seller cannot replicate that volume on their own.
Marketplaces also provide:
- Built-in payment infrastructure and buyer trust (customers feel safe purchasing from a known platform).
- Logistics services in some cases Amazon FBA and bol.com LVB handle warehousing, packing, and delivery.
- Search visibility within the platform if your product ranks in the top results on bol.com, you get clicks without ad spend.
Which European marketplaces should you consider – and how do they compare?
The European marketplace landscape is more fragmented than North America. Different markets have dominant local players alongside Amazon. Understanding the key options – and their cost structures – is essential before deciding where to invest.
| Marketplace | Primary Market | Commission Range | Key Categories | Seller Requirements | Logistics Option |
| bol.com | NL, BE | 8-17% | General, electronics, books, toys | Dutch/Belgian business registration preferred | LVB (bol.com fulfils) |
| Amazon EU | DE, FR, IT, ES, NL, SE, PL | 8–15% + €39/mo | Almost all categories | VAT registration per country recommended | FBA available |
| Zalando | DE + 24 markets | 15-25% | Fashion, footwear, beauty | Brand approval required | ZFS (Zalando fulfils) |
| Kaufland | DE, CZ, SK, PL, RO, BG, HR | 8-16% | General merchandise | EU business registration | KFN (Kaufland fulfils) |
| Beslist | NL, BE | CPC model (€0.10-€0.50) | Price comparison – all categories | Webshop required | Own logistics |
| Cdiscount | FR | 5-15% | Electronics, home, toys | French market focus | CLogistique available |
| Miinto | DK, NO, SE, NL, DE, PL | ~25% | Fashion only | Brand/retailer approval | Own logistics |
| Etsy | Global | 6.5% + €0.20 listing | Handmade, vintage, craft supplies | No formal approval needed | Own logistics |
| Key insight: most larger European e-shops run on Shoptet (CZ/SK) or Shopify/WooCommerce (NL/BE/DE) If you are expanding from a Czech or Slovak market into Western Europe, bol.com (NL/BE) and Kaufland (DE, CZ, SK, PL) are the highest-leverage first steps. Both have structured seller onboarding processes and accept merchants from neighbouring EU countries. Starting with one marketplace at a time – rather than launching everywhere simultaneously – allows you to optimise your feed and fulfilment before scaling. |
What are the hidden costs of selling on marketplaces?
The commission rate is the headline number, but it is rarely the total cost. Here is a realistic breakdown of what marketplace selling actually costs:
| Cost Type | Typical Range | What to Watch |
| Commission | 8-25% per order | Zalando charges up to 25% in fashion |
| Fulfilment (FBA/LVB) | €2.50-€8 per unit | Amazon FBA, bol.com LVB programs |
| Sponsored listings | €0.10-€2+ CPC | Required to gain visibility in most categories |
| Return handling | 3-20% return rate absorbs margin | Especially high in fashion and electronics |
| Cancellation penalties | Score thresholds enforced (e.g. bol.com: max 2%) | Repeated cancellations risk account suspension |
| Account suspension risk | No prior warning in many cases | Lost revenue while appealing |
A real-world example: a merchant selling a €60 product on bol.com pays roughly 13% commission (€7.80), a logistics fee if using LVB (€3-4), and a portion of sponsored product spend to remain visible. Net margin on a €60 sale can easily fall below €15 before your own product cost a margin of 25% or less.
This does not make marketplace selling unprofitable, but it makes margin calculation essential before committing to a channel.
🔗 Source: BigCommerce blog breakdown of marketplace fees and their impact on seller margins
How do margins actually compare across channels at different price points?
Abstract comparisons of commission percentages versus traffic costs are hard to act on. The table below applies real numbers across three product price points, assuming a 40% gross margin product and realistic fulfilment costs, to show where each channel actually lands.
| Product Price | Channel | Commission / Traffic Cost | Fulfilment | Est. Net Margin (40% GM product) | Verdict |
| €30 | bol.com (13%) | €3.90 | €3.00 | €5.10 (17%) | ⚠️ Thin |
| €30 | Own webshop (Google Shopping, €8 CPA) | €8.00 | €3.00 | €1.00 (3%) | ❌ Loss risk |
| €30 | Own webshop (organic SEO) | €0 | €3.00 | €9.00 (30%) | ✅ Strong |
| €80 | bol.com (13%) | €10.40 | €4.00 | €17.60 (22%) | ✅ Viable |
| €80 | Own webshop (Google Shopping, €20 CPA) | €20.00 | €4.00 | €8.00 (10%) | ⚠️ Marginal |
| €80 | Own webshop (organic SEO) | €0 | €4.00 | €28.00 (35%) | ✅ Strong |
| €150 | bol.com (13%) | €19.50 | €5.50 | €35.00 (23%) | ✅ Viable |
| €150 | Own webshop (Google Shopping, €30 CPA) | €30.00 | €5.50 | €24.50 (16%) | ✅ Viable |
| €150 | Own webshop (organic SEO) | €0 | €5.50 | €54.50 (36%) | ✅ Strong |
| What the numbers show Marketplace selling becomes less competitive on margin as your product price increases – but remains the better choice for low-priced commodity items where paid traffic costs would eliminate margin entirely. Organic SEO on your own webshop delivers the highest net margin at every price point – but requires the 6-18 month investment to build. The practical strategy for most merchants: use marketplace volume to fund the business while SEO builds, then shift high-margin products toward the owned channel as traffic grows. Calculate your own numbers: your gross margin percentage × product price = max allowable combined cost of marketplace fees + fulfilment + ads. If the real cost of a channel exceeds this, that channel is unprofitable regardless of volume. |
How do marketplace commission fees compare to the cost of generating your own traffic?
This is the core financial question and it has no universal answer. The comparison depends on your average order value, your product margin, and your ability to generate traffic efficiently.
| Channel | Traffic Type | Typical Cost | Key Note |
| bol.com | Included | 8-17% commission | No ad spend needed to list |
| Amazon | Included | 8-15% + optional PPC | PPC often required for visibility |
| Google Shopping | Paid | €0.20-€2 CPC average | You pay per click regardless of sale |
| Own webshop (SEO) | Organic | Time to rank: 6-18 months | High ROI long-term, slow to build |
| Own webshop (Meta Ads) | Paid | €15-€60+ per acquisition | Depends heavily on product and targeting |
A practical comparison: if your product sells for €80 with a 40% gross margin (€32), a 15% marketplace commission (€12) leaves you €20 net. Running Google Shopping ads to your webshop with a €20 customer acquisition cost gives you the same outcome but now you have the customer’s email address and can market to them again.
At scale and with a well-optimised webshop, owned traffic becomes cheaper than marketplace fees. At early stage, marketplace volume is faster and more predictable.
Can you realistically build customer loyalty when selling through a marketplace?
Structurally, no not through the marketplace itself. When a customer orders from you on bol.com, they see bol.com’s branding on the confirmation email, the packaging label, and the app notification. They may not remember your store name at all.
Repeat purchases on a marketplace typically go to whoever wins the buy box at the time of the next search not necessarily back to you specifically.
What you can do to build recognition within marketplace constraints:
- Custom packaging inserts (where allowed) with your brand name and a QR code to your webshop.
- Consistent product quality that earns reviews high review volume improves your visibility and repeat buy box wins.
- After-sales email communication (where permitted by marketplace terms) with helpful content.
On your own webshop, customer loyalty is a controllable system: email sequences, loyalty points, personalised retargeting. This compounding relationship value is the structural argument for investing in your own store alongside marketplace presence.
🔗 Source: Shopify blog why customer retention and owned data matter more than marketplace volume
What loyalty and retention tactics are available on each channel?
The difference in customer relationship capability between a marketplace and your own webshop is not just philosophical – it translates directly into revenue per customer over time. The table below maps specific tactics to each channel.
| Tactic | Works on Marketplace? | Works on Own Webshop? | Difficulty | Revenue Impact |
| Email list building | ❌ Not permitted | ✅ Core capability | Low | High – repeat purchase driver |
| Loyalty / points programme | ❌ Not possible | ✅ Full control | Medium | High – increases LTV |
| Personalised retargeting ads | ⚠️ Limited (Sponsored only) | ✅ Full pixel access | Medium | High for high-AOV products |
| Custom packaging & brand inserts | ⚠️ Allowed on some (check ToS) | ✅ Full control | Low | Medium – brand recall |
| Post-purchase review requests | ⚠️ Allowed via platform email | ✅ Direct email sequence | Low | Medium – SEO + trust |
| Subscription / replenishment offers | ❌ Not supported | ✅ Full control | Medium–High | Very high for FMCG / consumables |
| Cross-sell / upsell sequences | ❌ Not possible | ✅ Automated email flows | Medium | High |
| Community building (reviews, UGC) | ⚠️ Platform-controlled | ✅ Full ownership | High | Very high long-term |
| The lifetime value gap A customer who buys once on bol.com is worth roughly the margin on that single transaction. A customer who buys from your webshop and enters a loyalty sequence – receiving personalised emails, upsell offers, and subscription prompts – is worth 2-5x that amount over 12 months. This multiplier is the financial case for treating your webshop as the primary customer relationship channel, even if marketplace volume is larger in the short term. |
Which types of products sell better on marketplaces versus your own store?
Product type is the most reliable predictor of where you should invest. This is not a subjective question it follows from how buyers search and what they value.
| Product Type | Marketplace Fit | Webshop Fit | Best Channel(s) |
| Consumer electronics | ✅ Strong | ⚠️ Competitive | Amazon, bol.com |
| Fashion & apparel | ✅ Strong (volume) | ✅ Strong (margin) | Zalando, Miinto, own store |
| Branded FMCG / food | ⚠️ Restricted | ✅ Full control | Own store + Google Shopping |
| Handmade / niche items | ⚠️ Low visibility | ✅ Loyal audience | Own store + Etsy |
| High-ticket (€500+) | ⚠️ Fee pressure | ✅ Strong margin | Own store + ads |
| Commodity / price-sensitive | ✅ High volume | ❌ Hard to compete | bol.com, Amazon, Beslist |
A useful rule of thumb: if your buyer compares prices across three tabs before purchasing, they are a marketplace buyer. If your buyer searches for a specific brand, reads reviews on your site, and comes back for related products, they are a webshop buyer. Most product categories have a mix of both.
How do you decide which channel to prioritise for your specific situation?
The right channel mix depends on where you are in your business journey, your product margins, and your operational capacity. The framework below maps common merchant situations to a recommended starting point.
| Your Situation | Recommended Starting Point | Reasoning |
| New store, no existing traffic, broad product category | Start with marketplace + build webshop in parallel | Marketplace provides immediate cash flow while SEO builds over 6-18 months |
| Established webshop, <200 orders/month, good margins | Add 1-2 marketplaces for incremental volume | Low risk – use automation to avoid overselling; test which channels fit your category |
| High-margin branded product (>40% GM) | Prioritise own webshop; use marketplace selectively | Commission erodes margin too heavily at scale; brand equity compounds on owned channel |
| Commodity / price-sensitive product (<25% GM) | Marketplace-first strategy | Volume is the only path to profitability; webshop traffic costs exceed margin at this level |
| Selling across 3+ channels already, growing ops complexity | Automate immediately | Manual sync at this scale guarantees errors; one oversell incident can cost more than 3 months of tool fees |
| Expanding into new EU markets (DE, FR, PL, CZ) | Lead with relevant local marketplace | Local marketplace trust is faster to earn than cross-border SEO; use data to decide if own webshop localisation is worthwhile |
How does AI-powered product discovery change the channel equation?
| How AI-powered search changes the marketplace vs. webshop equation ChatGPT Shopping, Google AI Overviews, and Perplexity are increasingly surfacing product recommendations in direct answer format – before the buyer ever visits a marketplace or webshop. These systems pull structured product data from Google Merchant Center, schema markup on product pages, and indexed marketplace listings. This creates a new layer in the channel equation: • Marketplaces (bol.com, Amazon) already have strong structural presence in AI search results – their product listings are indexed at scale and carry domain authority that individual webshops cannot match quickly. • Your own webshop product pages can appear in AI recommendations if they are properly structured with schema markup, complete product data, and consistent pricing across all channels. • Inconsistent data between your webshop and marketplace listings (different prices, descriptions, or availability) sends conflicting signals to AI systems – reducing the probability of appearing in AI-generated recommendations for either channel. • Merchants who maintain clean, consistent product data across all channels – distributed automatically via feed management – gain compounding AI search visibility that neither channel alone would provide. Practical implication: the multi-channel strategy is not just a sales decision – it is increasingly the foundation of AI search discoverability. A webshop with schema markup + marketplace listings with accurate feeds creates a data footprint that AI recommendation engines treat as high-confidence. |
| Channel Setup | AI Search Visibility | Why |
| Marketplace only (no webshop) | Medium | Marketplace listings are indexed but no schema on owned pages; brand recognition limited |
| Webshop only (no marketplace) | Medium | Own product pages indexable with schema – but lower domain authority vs. marketplaces |
| Both channels, inconsistent data | Low | Conflicting prices / descriptions across sources = low AI confidence = excluded from results |
| Both channels, consistent automated sync | ✅ High | Multiple consistent data sources = high AI confidence signal; recommended in results from multiple surfaces |
How do successful online stores combine both channels profitably?
The most effective multi-channel strategy is not “sell everything everywhere.” It is a deliberate assignment of products and margin tiers to channels where they perform best.
A practical framework for combining channels
- Identify your margin tiers. Products with gross margin above 40% are candidates for your own webshop focus. Products with margin below 25% may only work profitably on high-volume marketplace listings.
- Assign fast-moving commodity SKUs to marketplaces for volume. Use marketplace reach to clear inventory efficiently on price-sensitive lines.
- Drive your branded and high-margin products through your own store, supported by Google Shopping and Meta retargeting.
- Use marketplace visibility to introduce new buyers to your brand. A customer who buys from you on bol.com and finds a product insert for your webshop may convert to a direct repeat buyer.
- Automate inventory and order sync across all channels. Running two systems manually doubles errors overselling on one channel when stock sells on another is a common and costly failure.
Tools like Koongo connect your Shopify or WooCommerce store to 500+ channels including bol.com, Amazon, and Google Shopping syncing inventory every 5 or 15 minutes across all active channels. This eliminates the core operational risk of multi-channel selling: stock levels diverging across platforms and triggering oversells or account penalties.
🔗 Source: Statista global e-commerce marketplace share and growth projections by channel
What does a well-structured multi-channel operation look like in practice?
| What a well-structured multi-channel operation looks like A Dutch pet supplies merchant with 480 SKUs runs their WooCommerce webshop alongside bol.com and Google Shopping. Their approach: • High-margin branded products (own-label supplements, accessories) are driven through the webshop via Google Shopping and email marketing. Average margin on these lines: 48%.• Commodity products (standard food brands, basic accessories) are sold primarily on bol.com for volume. Average margin: 18% – viable only because of order volume. • All inventory is managed through WooCommerce as the single source of truth. Koongo syncs stock across both channels every 15 minutes. • When bol.com runs promotions, only the commodity SKUs are enrolled – protecting margin on the branded lines. • A customer who discovers them on bol.com and receives a brand insert converts to a webshop buyer at approximately 12% – adding to the email list and entering a loyalty sequence.Result: the webshop generates 55% of revenue at 43% average margin. The marketplace generates 45% of revenue at 19% average margin. Combined, the business is more profitable and more resilient than either channel alone would support. |
Marketplace vs. Webshop: At a Glance
Use this table as a quick reference when evaluating which channel makes sense for a specific product or business decision:
| Aspect | Marketplace | Own Webshop |
| Reach | Instant access to millions of buyers | You build your own audience over time |
| Trust | Borrowed from the marketplace brand | You build your own brand credibility |
| Fees | 8-25% commission per sale | Transaction fees only (0-2%) |
| Traffic cost | Included (marketplace drives visitors) | Paid ads, SEO, email ongoing investment |
| Customer data | Marketplace owns it you see orders only | Full CRM access, email list, retargeting |
| Control over pricing | Often constrained by buy box rules | Full control |
| Returns & logistics | Marketplace sets the rules | You define your own policy |
| Time to first sale | Days to weeks | Weeks to months |
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to choose between a marketplace and my own webshop?
No. Most successful online merchants use both. The choice is not either/or – it is about understanding which channel fits which product and building operations that support both without creating manual overhead.
What is the average commission rate on bol.com?
Bol.com’s commission rates vary by category, typically ranging from 8% to 17% of the sale price. Some categories like media or electronics carry lower rates; fashion and lifestyle categories trend toward the higher end. This does not include optional LVB logistics costs or sponsored product fees.
How long does it take to start generating traffic to my own webshop?
Organic search traffic (SEO) typically takes 6–18 months to build meaningfully from scratch. Paid traffic via Google Shopping or Meta Ads can generate visits from day one, but requires ongoing budget – typically €15-60+ per acquired customer depending on your product and targeting.
Can I lose my marketplace account without warning?
Yes. Marketplace platforms enforce performance thresholds automatically. On bol.com, a cancellation rate above 2% can trigger penalties. Amazon suspends seller accounts when performance metrics fall below thresholds, often with limited recourse. This is one reason experienced merchants treat marketplace income as complementary, not their only revenue source.
What happens if I sell the same product at a different price on my webshop and on a marketplace?
Most marketplaces require you to offer products at a competitive price – some, like Amazon, use price parity clauses that can suppress your listing if they detect a lower price elsewhere. Maintaining consistent pricing (or a deliberate slight premium on your webshop) is both a practical and a contractual consideration. It also matters for AI search: inconsistent pricing across your webshop and marketplace signals unreliable data to AI recommendation engines and reduces your visibility in AI-generated results.
How do I manage inventory across both channels without overselling?
Manual management at any meaningful volume is error-prone. The practical solution is automated inventory sync: a system that updates stock levels across all connected channels in near real-time whenever a sale occurs on any platform. This prevents the scenario where a product sells out on your webshop but remains listed as available on bol.com.
Is it worth selling on a marketplace if my margins are thin?
It depends on volume and category. If a marketplace generates 200 orders per month on a product with €5 margin, that is €1,000 contribution – worth it for inventory turnover. If fees push the margin below zero, it is not. Calculate net margin per unit including all marketplace fees before committing.
At what point should I start automating inventory and order sync?
The practical threshold is when you are selling on more than 2 channels simultaneously with more than 150-200 SKUs, or when you run promotions that require rapid price synchronisation. Below this threshold, a disciplined daily manual routine is manageable. Above it, the error rate from manual management typically costs more than an automation tool within the first 2-3 months.
How does the marketplace vs. webshop decision affect AI product recommendations?
AI tools like ChatGPT Shopping and Google AI Overviews increasingly surface product recommendations before the buyer visits any channel. These systems favour merchants with consistent, structured product data across multiple sources. Running both a well-structured webshop (with schema markup) and marketplace listings (with accurate, up-to-date feeds) creates a data footprint that AI systems treat as high-confidence – improving your visibility in AI-generated results versus merchants on only one channel.
The Bottom Line
There is no universally correct answer to marketplace versus webshop. The right approach depends on your product category, your margin structure, and where your buyers actually search.
What is clear is that the merchants who grow most efficiently do not choose one channel – they run both deliberately. Marketplaces provide volume and reach. A webshop builds customer relationships and long-term margin. Used together – with automated sync keeping inventory consistent across all channels – the combination outperforms either channel alone.
The three decisions that determine whether a multi-channel strategy works:
- Which products go to which channel (based on margin and buyer intent, not convenience).
- How you turn marketplace buyers into webshop customers over time (packaging inserts, brand recall, product quality).
- Whether your operational infrastructure can scale – meaning automated inventory and order sync – or whether manual management creates the ceiling that limits your growth.
If you are already selling on one channel and considering expanding to the other, the operational piece matters as much as the strategic one. Koongo’s free plan lets you connect your Shopify or WooCommerce store to your first additional channel and see how real-time sync works in practice – without a long-term commitment.
| Ready to run both channels without the operational complexity? Koongo connects your Shopify or WooCommerce store to 500+ channels – including bol.com, Amazon, Google Shopping, and Kaufland – syncing inventory and orders automatically every 5 to 15 minutes. Start for free – no credit card required. Paid plans from €24/month. Scale up as your catalogue and channel count grows. |