Vinted's condition field is doing two separate jobs: the dropdown sets the filter, and the description provides the depth signal that determines rank within that filtered set. The seller who picks 'Very good condition' and writes 'great nick' is giving the algorithm a mismatch — the filter and the depth signal are using different vocabulary for the same fact. The fix is straightforward: learn Vinted's five condition labels, mirror the language of the label you've selected in the first sentence of your description. 'Worn a small number of times, no visible signs of use' takes ten seconds to write and tells the algorithm exactly what the dropdown is already claiming.
It's also more useful to the buyer — it confirms that your definition of 'Very good condition' matches the platform's definition, which is the reassurance they need before they commit. VintSnap's description generation defaults to platform-vocabulary condition language keyed to whichever condition grade the listing is set to, so the dropdown-description alignment happens on every listing without requiring a manual check.
Part of our Reseller economics series — field notes from building VintSnap.