Inman

Letgo now offers for-sale and rental listings

Letgo, a shopping app for secondhand items, is now helping sellers and landlords “let go” of their listings with a new feature that enables users to list a home for sale or rent, the company announced today.

To create a listing, all users have to do is snap a few photos and write a brief description of the home. Users can add additional photos at any time, and they’ll be able to field questions from buyers or renters through letgo’s in-app messaging system.

Letgo’s listing feed.

In September 2017, letgo reached 75 million downloads, 200 million listings and 3 billion messages — something letgo co-founder Alec Oxenford said spurred his team to begin offering the for-sale and for-rent feature.

Letgo’s listing filters.

“We see this as the natural evolution of a vast and diverse marketplace like ours, especially as we approach the 100M-download milestone,” said Oxenford in a statement. “We’ve designed letgo to make it effortless to list what you don’t need and find what you do in your own neighborhood, whether that’s a snowboard, an SUV or a two-bedroom apartment with a view.”

Letgo’s housing description.

In an interview with TechCrunch, Oxenford refused to reveal exactly how many of those listings result in sales, how much revenue is generated by those sales or how many active users are on the app. He only told TechCrunch, “ [it’s] in the tens of millions monthly.”

Letgo’s listing page.

Letgo isn’t the only tech platform to jump into the world of real estate — since Facebook Marketplace’s 2016 launch, Facebook has allowed agents and owners to list for-sale and for-rent properties. And in November 2017, Facebook partnered with Apartment List and Zumper to include listings from both sites on the Marketplace feature, opening the door for future partnerships with brokerages for for-sale listings.

And of course, letgo counts Craigslist, one of the first sites sellers and landlords used to find potential buyers and renters, as another source of competition.

The company says the feature will slowly roll out to its U.S. userbase with full availability by the end of January.

Email Marian McPherson.