Consignment Software reviews and software guide

Consignment Software overview

Compare 19 Consignment Software products, review ratings, and use this guide to understand common features, pricing considerations, and buyer fit. Consignment Software helps consignment shops and resale teams manage inventory, sellers, payouts, pricing, and point-of-sale activity. Buyers usually compare these products when items, owners, and sales need to stay linked. Look at how each option handles barcode or ticket scanning, credit card processing, and customer database, because those details determine whether the software fits the way the team already works. During shortlisting, check setup effort, reporting clarity, integrations, permissions, and whether frontline staff can keep records current without extra admin work.

Software options 19
Rated products 14
Average rating 4.6/5
Reviews and ratings 1.0K
Software rankings

Top recommended Consignment Software

Browse ranked software in this category. Use filters and sorting to narrow the list by rating, recency, views, or available profile signals.

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Feature checklist

Common Consignment Software features

These are common capabilities buyers compare in this category. Confirm product-specific availability with each vendor.

Barcode / Ticket Scanning

Makes handoffs and approvals easier to follow, especially when several people need to move work from request to resolution.

Credit Card Processing

Connects money-related work with the rest of the consignment process so charges, approvals, and records are easier to review.

Customer Database

Keeps person or account details tied to the work they affect, instead of leaving context scattered across notes and inboxes.

Discount Management

Helps buyers judge whether discount management fits the way their team handles consignment work.

Electronic Payments

Connects money-related work with the rest of the consignment process so charges, approvals, and records are easier to review.

Employee Management

Keeps person or account details tied to the work they affect, instead of leaving context scattered across notes and inboxes.

Gift Card Management

Helps buyers judge whether gift card management fits the way their team handles consignment work.

Label Printing

Keeps important files and records close to the workflow, with easier search, review, and handoff between teams.

Loyalty Program

Connects audience, outreach, and result tracking so teams can understand which activity deserves follow-up.

Multi-Location

Helps buyers judge whether multi-location fits the way their team handles consignment work.

Point of Sale (POS)

Helps buyers judge whether point of sale (POS) fits the way their team handles consignment work.

Retail Inventory Management

Tracks the items, locations, or resources the team depends on so availability and ownership are easier to confirm.

Selection Criteria

Compare how each product supports your core workflow, setup needs, reporting expectations, and vendor fit before choosing.

Buyer guide

How to choose Consignment Software

Compare the features that matter

Review how each vendor handles barcode or ticket scanning, credit card processing, and customer database. Feature names can look similar across products, so ask to see the workflow using your own examples. Pay attention to search, permissions, notifications, and reporting when they affect daily work.

Start with the workflow

Map the work your team needs to control before comparing products. For consignment, that usually means the records, handoffs, approvals, and reports tied to manage inventory, sellers, payouts, pricing, and point-of-sale activity. A product is easier to judge when those steps are written down first.

Check fit before rollout

Ask what data must be migrated, which integrations are standard, and who can change settings after launch. Smaller teams may prefer a simpler setup. Larger teams should check roles, approvals, audit history, and whether reporting stays consistent across locations or departments.

Ask practical vendor questions

Pricing often depends on users, records, locations, modules, or usage. Confirm what is included before comparing quotes. Ask about onboarding, support response, data export, security controls, contract terms, and limits that could affect your busiest period.

Pricing

Consignment Software pricing considerations

Map the work your team needs to control before comparing products. For consignment, that usually means the records, handoffs, approvals, and reports tied to manage inventory, sellers, payouts, pricing, and point-of-sale activity. A product is easier to judge when those steps are written down first.

Comparison starters

Popular software to compare

Start with highly ranked software in this category, then open each profile to compare ratings, pricing, and vendor details.

FAQs

Consignment Software FAQs

Consignment Software helps consignment shops and resale teams manage inventory, sellers, payouts, pricing, and point-of-sale activity. Buyers usually compare these products when items, owners, and sales need to stay linked. Look at how each option handles barcode or ticket scanning, credit card processing, and customer database, because those details determine whether the software fits the way the team already works. During shortlisting, check setup effort, reporting clarity, integrations, permissions, and whether frontline staff can keep records current without extra admin work.

This category includes 19 Consignment Software products. Use ratings, descriptions, and vendor details to compare options.

Common Consignment Software features to compare include Barcode / Ticket Scanning, Credit Card Processing, Customer Database, Discount Management, Electronic Payments. Confirm product-specific availability with each vendor.

Start with your use case, shortlist products with relevant features, compare rating volume and vendor details, then confirm pricing, support, and implementation needs with each vendor.

Map the work your team needs to control before comparing products. For consignment, that usually means the records, handoffs, approvals, and reports tied to manage inventory, sellers, payouts, pricing, and point-of-sale activity. A product is easier to judge when those steps are written down first.

Typical buyers are consignment shops and resale teams, especially when items, owners, and sales need to stay linked. The category is most useful when the team needs clearer ownership, cleaner records, and fewer manual updates.

Start with barcode or ticket scanning, credit card processing, and customer database, then test reporting, permissions, integrations, and setup effort. Ask vendors to walk through your actual workflow so gaps show up before a contract is signed.

Yes. Open a software profile from this category and use the Write a review button to submit a review.
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