Vinted's recommendation system reads what you consistently list, not just what you've listed lately. If you've sold wide-leg women's trousers for eight weeks running — Zara, H&M, M&S, doesn't matter what brand, same category — the platform starts treating your shop as a specialist in that category. Two things follow.
Your listings start ranking higher inside the category search because the algorithm trusts category-coherent shops more than scatter shops. And the platform starts surfacing your other items as a 'more from this seller' carousel on competing listings — which is free traffic from buyers who came for someone else's item and ended up in your shop. The lesson is unintuitive for resellers who source whatever's cheap at the charity shop: scattered shops underperform focused ones, even when the focused shop's items are individually less interesting.
Pick one category for a couple of months, restock it relentlessly, and let the algorithm learn what you sell. You can always widen the net afterwards. VintSnap doesn't care what category you pick — the same 12-second generation works on trousers, dresses, jumpers — so the constraint is your sourcing, not the tool.
Your listings start ranking higher inside the category search because the algorithm trusts category-coherent shops more than scatter shops.
Part of our Reseller economics series — field notes from building VintSnap.