Netsave is a secondhand resale platform built around local communities, positioning itself as a “safer, local, and sustainable” resale marketplace for furniture and home goods. It is not merely a classifieds site: it embeds buyer and seller verification, escrow-style payments, delivery or standard shipping into the transaction flow, aiming to replace the traditional secondhand process of in-person meetups, cash collection, and parking-lot handoffs.
The platform lets sellers quickly list used items such as furniture, electronics, and household goods: take photos, set a price, and publish. Buyers can browse both local and nationwide listings. On fulfillment, the site emphasizes that local delivery or standard shipping is built into every transaction, and says drivers will pick up items from sellers and deliver them to buyers, so users do not need to leave home or coordinate logistics themselves. For payments, buyer funds are held by the platform and only released to the seller after delivery is confirmed. Netsave also offers a 3-day purchase protection policy.
The fee structure is important: if a seller chooses cash payment and local in-person handoff, the service can be free. However, for all electronically processed seller earnings, Netsave charges an approximately 9.95% total fee, which includes payment-processing-related costs. Payment methods include cash and credit/debit cards; the terms mention Visa, MasterCard, American Express, PayPal, and others, and state that Stripe is used as the payment processor. For higher-value furniture transactions, this fee may be acceptable in exchange for safety and delivery convenience; for low-ticket or low-margin resale, the cost is relatively high.
Its strengths are clear: Netsave targets real pain points by reducing the risks of scams, chargebacks, cash transactions, and meeting strangers in person. Built-in delivery also makes local transactions for bulky items easier. Seller verification, escrowed funds, and purchase protection help build trust. The downsides are that covered markets and cities are not clearly disclosed, and the inventory import feature is still marked as Coming soon. The platform does not guarantee the accuracy of item pricing, inventory, or descriptions, and there is also limited information on features professional sellers may need, such as bulk listing, analytics, and customer service rules.
Netsave is better suited to individual sellers with unwanted items, secondhand furniture/home-goods buyers, and users who prefer not to meet offline within the context of local communities in the United States. For Chinese sellers doing cross-border e-commerce, Netsave currently does not show clear support for cross-border merchant capabilities, international logistics, or Chinese payment methods, so its practical usefulness is limited. Access from China is not stated in the available text, so real-world testing is recommended. Comparable alternatives include Facebook Marketplace, OfferUp, Craigslist, eBay, Mercari, and China’s Xianyu.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on netsave.com official site.
netsave.com is an United States E-commerce provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach netsave.com directly.