Vinted's brand search is one of the highest-intent search behaviours buyers do. Type 'Zara' or 'Cos' or 'Arket' into the search bar and you're not browsing — you're shopping a specific brand, often with a specific size or item type already in mind. The filter that powers this search uses two fields.
The brand dropdown field, which is structured data, and the title text, which is unstructured. The behaviour most sellers don't realise is that the brand search filter requires both. Title-only listings — 'Zara wool coat' — get ranked lower because the structured brand field is empty.
Field-only listings — title 'Wool coat camel size 10' with the brand field populated — get ranked lower because the search algorithm cross-references the title for keyword density. Listings with both — brand in the title slot 1 AND brand field populated — surface at the top of the brand search and convert at a noticeably higher rate. The mistake is usually one of two things.
Field-only listings — title 'Wool coat camel size 10' with the brand field populated — get ranked lower because the search algorithm cross-references the title for keyword density.
Either the seller types the brand into the title and assumes the field is auto-populated (it isn't — Vinted's brand detection is partial), or the seller picks the brand from the dropdown and assumes the title doesn't need it as well (it does). VintSnap reads the photo, suggests the brand for both fields, and flags the override case if the photo and title don't match — but check the brand field is filled before you publish. Empty brand fields are one of the cleanest unforced errors in the platform.
Part of our Reseller economics series — field notes from building VintSnap.