Selling products online in 2026 starts with one decision: where to sell. Your options are your own store, an established marketplace, or social and messaging platforms, and each trades reach for fees and control. After that, the work is the same everywhere: write listings that build trust, price so that fees and shipping do not erase your margin, and make checkout painless. You do not need a big, polished store to begin. You need one product, a place to list it, and a way to get paid and ship it.
Where to sell, and the trade-offs
There is no single best channel, only the one that fits your product, audience, and tolerance for fees.
- Your own store. Full control and no marketplace cut on each sale, but you bring your own traffic. Best once you have an audience or are ready to run ads.
- Marketplaces. Built-in buyers searching to purchase, in exchange for listing rules and per-sale fees. The fastest way to your first sale.
- Social and messaging. Sell where your followers already are. Great for visual products and engaged audiences; weaker for cold discovery.
Most sellers do best starting on a marketplace or social channel for early sales, then adding their own store once demand is proven. If a marketplace specifically appeals, how to sell on Amazon in 2026 goes deeper on that route.
Comparing your main options
| Channel |
Reach |
Fees |
Control |
Best for |
| Own store |
You drive it |
Low per-sale |
High |
Repeat buyers, brand |
| Marketplace |
Built-in buyers |
Higher per-sale |
Lower |
First sales, discovery |
| Social selling |
Your followers |
Varies |
Medium |
Visual products, niches |
How to start selling, step by step
- Pick one product and one channel. Do not spread thin. Prove that a single product sells in one place first.
- Write the listing. Clear photos in good light, an honest description that answers real questions, and the trust signals buyers look for.
- Price for total cost. Add up product cost, platform fees, payment processing, shipping, and expected returns, then set a price with margin left over.
- Set up payments. Use a trusted processor so buyers feel safe. A familiar checkout converts better than a clever one.
- Sort out shipping. Decide rates, packaging, and turnaround. Show shipping clearly; surprise costs at checkout kill sales.
- Make the first sales. Tell your network, post where your buyers are, and gather early feedback to fix the listing.
- Iterate. Watch which products and photos convert, drop what does not move, and double down on what does.
Common mistakes
- Building before selling. Months spent perfecting a store before a single sale is wasted effort. List something and learn from real buyers.
- Hiding shipping costs. Revealing a fee only at checkout is the top reason carts get abandoned. State it up front.
- Vague listings. If a buyer has to guess size, materials, or what they actually get, they leave. Answer the obvious questions.
- Underpricing. Forgetting fees and returns means selling at a loss. Price for the full cost, not just the product.
- Too many channels at once. Running five platforms badly beats running one well only in theory. Focus first.
Realistic expectations
Your first sales are usually slow and come from people who already know you. That is normal. The early job is learning what converts, not chasing volume. Margins are tighter than they look once fees, processing, and shipping are counted, so price honestly from the start. Expect to tweak listings and prices for weeks before something clicks. Sellers who last treat the first few months as cheap research, then scale the products and channels that actually worked.
FAQ
Do I need my own website to sell online?
No. Many sellers start on a marketplace or social channel and add a store later. Your own site gives more control but means bringing your own traffic.
How should I price my products?
Cover product cost, platform and payment fees, shipping, and expected returns, then add margin. Pricing only against the product cost is the fastest way to lose money.
What is the most important part of a listing?
Clear photos and an honest description that answers buyers' real questions. They do more to convert a sale than design or branding.
How do I get my first customers?
Start with your own network and the places your target buyers already gather. Early sales and reviews build the trust that brings strangers later.
Where to go next
How to sell on Amazon in 2026, How to price your product in 2026, and How to market a small business in 2026.