Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Used Project is an Australia-focused directory for antique, vintage, and second-hand businesses. It lists more than 2,500 antique stores, op shops, vintage boutiques, collectables dealers, and second-hand shops. The service emphasizes its role as a “directory and information service”: it is not a marketplace, does not facilitate transactions, and does not represent or endorse the businesses listed on the platform.
The platform’s core value is local discovery. Users can browse by Australian state and territory, or search by categories such as antiques, vintage fashion, collectables, furniture, jewellery, and charity op shops. Its help documentation indicates support for maps, filters, Open Now, and sorting options. In addition to permanent stores, it also includes community listings such as markets, fairs, swap meets, market stalls, and garage sales, making it useful for planning offline thrifting routes. Account features include creating an account, managing a profile, and using on-site messaging. Store owners can claim a listing, update information, or request removal, while users can report errors, suggest missing stores, or flag closed businesses.
The site clearly states that Used Project is a free service, and that garage sales and market stalls can also be posted for free. We did not find merchant plans, advertising products, subscription pricing, or trial information. From a SaaS or enterprise software perspective, it does not present a mature paid product lineup; it is closer to a free directory platform.
The terms state that users are responsible for protecting their passwords and prohibit unauthorized access, malicious code, harassment, and spam. The platform says it takes reasonable security measures and will comply with Australia’s Privacy Act 1988 notifiable data breach scheme for security incidents involving personal information. However, it does not disclose enterprise-grade controls such as encryption, audits, backups, SOC 2, or ISO certification. On the third-party side, it only notes that the site may contain external links; no specific integrations are listed. APIs, webhooks, SDKs, and developer documentation are not disclosed, and the terms prohibit bots, crawlers, and automated access without permission.
The main advantages are its focused coverage of Australia’s second-hand and vintage scene, clear browsing structure, free access, and channels for store owners to correct or claim listings. The drawbacks are that many listings come from public information and are not independently verified, so opening hours, addresses, and contact details may be outdated. The platform does not take responsibility for transactions or the accuracy of information, and it lacks enterprise features such as team permissions, analytics, and merchant CRM. It is suitable for consumers looking for shops, stallholders posting local events, and store owners maintaining basic visibility. It is not suitable for merchants that need full e-commerce, inventory management, or enterprise-grade SaaS capabilities.
The site does not provide information about access from mainland China, payments, or localization, so china_access can only be assessed as unknown. Since the platform focuses on offline local stores in Australia, Chinese users are more likely to use it for travel, sourcing, or research. Alternatives may include Google Maps, Gumtree Australia, and Facebook Marketplace; for domestic Chinese scenarios, local lifestyle or second-hand trading platforms would be more appropriate.
⚠ 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 usedproject.com official site.
usedproject.com is an Australia SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach usedproject.com directly.