Marketplaces vs Your Own Store: Should You Sell on Amazon, eBay and TikTok Shop?
The first time I watched a product go viral on someone else's platform, I was thrilled for about a week. Then the invoice landed. The marketplace had...
The Sellarix team · 1 Apr 2026 · 6 min read

The first time I watched a product go viral on someone else's platform, I was thrilled for about a week. Then the invoice landed. The marketplace had taken its cut, the ad fees stacked up, and worst of all, I had no idea who any of those buyers were. Hundreds of orders, zero email addresses. That's the moment most operators realize the real question isn't where do I sell more. It's who actually owns the relationship when the dust settles. I've run this experiment from both sides. I've launched products that lived and died on Amazon search, and I've built a direct store that started slow and compounded into something I actually controlled. Neither is "right." They're tools, and they have wildly different price tags once you read the fine print. So let me walk you through what each channel really costs, who keeps the customer, and how I'd run more than one at the same time without losing my mind.
The story the fees tell
Start with the headline number, because it shapes everything else. In 2025 Amazon is on track to capture about 40.4% of US retail ecommerce sales, roughly $491.65 billion, per eMarketer.[1] That's not a channel you ignore. When Amazon and Shopify-powered stores are added together, they account for close to half of US ecommerce, according to Marketplace Pulse.[2] So the market has basically split into "rent reach from a giant" or "build your own and keep the margin." Here's where it gets concrete. Amazon's referral fees run from 5% to 45% depending on category, and they froze those percentages for both 2025 and 2026.[3] Home and Kitchen sits at 15%, Clothing at 17%, Electronics at 8%. eBay's standard final value fee is around 13.25% plus a per-order fee of $0.30 to $0.40, though categories range from roughly 2.5% to 15%, and most categories nudged up by as much as 0.35% in February 2025.[4] TikTok Shop is the cheap newcomer on paper: a 6% referral fee per order in the US (5% for some jewelry), with a 3% promo rate for new sellers in their first 30 days.[5] That 6% looks like a bargain until you remember TikTok Shop is a content-commerce machine. You'll likely pay creators affiliate commissions on top, and ads there need a $50/day minimum budget. The platform fee is low; the cost of actually getting seen is not.

What you're really buying with each channel
| Channel | Reach | Typical fee | Who owns the customer | Data you get | Who it fits |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon | Huge. ~40% of US ecommerce demand in one place | 5%–45% referral; 8%–17% common | Amazon. You rent the buyer | Aggregate only; no buyer email/contact | High-intent search products, commodities, replenishables |
| eBay | Broad, deal/collectible-skewed | ~13.25% + \$0.30–\$0.40/order | eBay, but buyer info is less locked down | More order/buyer visibility than Amazon | Used, refurbished, niche, rare, parts |
| TikTok Shop | Discovery-driven; can spike fast | 6% referral (3% new-seller promo) + creator/ad costs | TikTok. Algorithm owns demand | Limited; content/engagement signals | Impulse, trend-led, visual, sub-\$50 products |
| Your DTC store | Whatever you build. Starts at zero | ~2.9% payment + your acquisition cost | You. Full relationship | Everything: email, behavior, LTV | Brands, repeat purchase, subscriptions, higher AOV |

How I'd actually evaluate it
Forget loyalty to any platform. Ask three questions. Does my product get searched for or discovered? If people already type your product into a search bar, Amazon and eBay win because the intent is sitting there. If your product needs to be shown to be wanted, TikTok Shop's discovery engine is a cheat code. A $24 gadget that demos well in 15 seconds belongs on TikTok before it belongs anywhere. What's my margin after the worst-case fee? Run the math on a real SKU. A $30 Home and Kitchen item on Amazon loses $4.50 to the referral fee before fulfillment. If your gross margin can't absorb 15% to 20% plus ad costs and still leave profit, the marketplace isn't a growth channel, it's a slow leak. How badly do I need the customer back? This is the one people undervalue. If you sell something bought once a decade, owning the customer matters less. If you sell coffee, supplements, skincare, anything with repeat purchase, every marketplace sale is a relationship you rented and handed back. On your own store that same buyer becomes an email subscriber, a winback campaign, a lifetime value number you can actually grow. The honest answer for most operators is not either-or. It's marketplaces for reach and validation, your own store for margin and retention. Use Amazon or TikTok to prove demand and acquire first-time buyers cheaply, then work relentlessly to migrate repeat purchases to a channel you own. Insert cards, offer a better price or bundle on your site, run retargeting against the traffic you can track. Running both does add operational weight: separate listings, inventory sync, channel-specific content, more places for things to break. This is exactly where an all-in-one backend earns its keep, keeping catalog, stock and orders in one place instead of five tabs. If that's the wall you're hitting, Sellarix is built for running storefront and channels together. Use it or don't, the principle stands: your tooling should make multi-channel boring, not heroic.
The takeaway
Marketplaces sell you reach and rent you the customer. Your own store sells you margin and keeps the customer, but you pay for every visitor. The smart play is to treat marketplaces as the top of your funnel and your store as the place relationships go to compound. Validate on Amazon, discover on TikTok, defend your margin on your own turf. So here's my question for you: of your last hundred orders, how many of those customers could you email tomorrow? If the answer is "none," you don't have a sales problem. You have an ownership problem.
Sources
- eMarketer — Amazon will surpass 40% of US ecommerce sales: https://www.emarketer.com/content/amazon-will-surpass-40-of-us-ecommerce-sales-this-year
- Marketplace Pulse — Amazon and Shopify Are Now Half of U.S. E-Commerce: https://www.marketplacepulse.com/articles/amazon-and-shopify-are-now-half-of-us-e-commerce
- Amazon Seller Central — Referral fees: https://sellercentral.amazon.com/help/hub/reference/external/GTG4BAWSY39Z98Z3?locale=en-US
- eBay Seller Center — 2025 final value fee changes: https://www.ebay.com/sellercenter/resources/seller-updates/2025-january/final-value-fee
- TikTok Shop — Referral fee updates (US): https://seller-us.tiktok.com/university/essay?knowledge_id=5982454398175018&lang=en
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