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OnBuy, B&Q, Temu: Hidden Marketplace Opportunities for UK Sellers

Three under-rated UK marketplaces with low competition. Setup costs, traffic estimates, customer profiles and break-even data from real seller accounts.

MC
Head of Growth
7 min read 2 April 2026
UK

Most UK brands' marketplace strategy stops at Amazon and eBay. There's nothing wrong with that — those are the volume channels. But the brands we work with that successfully diversify away from Amazon dependence usually do so by adding 2-3 secondary marketplaces that fly under most sellers' radar. These are three of the most under-rated.

Why look beyond Amazon and eBay

Three real reasons UK brands diversify their marketplace mix:

  1. Amazon dependence is a business risk. Account suspensions, fee increases, or competitive pressure can wipe a brand if Amazon is 70%+ of revenue.
  2. Lower competition = higher margins. Secondary marketplaces have fewer sellers, less aggressive pricing pressure, and customers who haven't been trained to expect lowest-price-wins.
  3. Different customer demographics. Each marketplace attracts a different customer profile — broadening reach matters for brands trying to grow.

The downside: each marketplace requires operational lift (listings, customer service, fulfilment, returns) that adds up. Don't add a channel you can't operate properly.

OnBuy — the British alternative

OnBuy is a UK-headquartered marketplace explicitly positioning as the British Amazon alternative. It's smaller (~3-5% of Amazon's UK GMV), but has carved out a real audience.

The numbers

Where it works well

OnBuy works best for:

Real numbers from a client account

Deep Fresh UK launched on OnBuy in 2025 alongside Amazon. After 6 months:

Not transformational, but consistent and incremental. For a brand managing 5+ marketplaces, OnBuy is worth the operational effort.

B&Q Marketplace — home & DIY only

B&Q opened a third-party marketplace in 2022 (after acquiring CastoramaDIY's model). It's narrow but high-intent: customers visiting B&Q.com are actively shopping for home improvement.

The numbers

Where it works well

B&Q is restrictive — they only accept categories that fit their store positioning (home, garden, DIY, hardware, cleaning, paint, decor). If your products fit, the competition is dramatically lower than Amazon.

Real numbers from a client account

An anonymous cleaning products client launched on B&Q in 2025:

The high conversion rate is the surprise — B&Q customers come with high purchase intent. The downside is the narrow category fit.

Worth knowing

B&Q's marketplace is essentially a "trusted seller" curation. If you get approved, you're competing against far fewer sellers than Amazon. This is a competitive moat for brands that fit the category.

Temu — high volume, thin margin

The newcomer everyone has opinions about. Temu launched UK seller acquisition in 2024 and now has a UK marketplace operating alongside its direct-from-China model.

The numbers

The honest assessment

Temu is hard. The pros: massive traffic, low fees, fast setup. The cons:

Where it actually works

Temu works for UK brands that:

For everyone else, Temu is more trouble than it's worth.

Which one fits which brand

You sell premium consumer goods (£30-150 AOV)

Try OnBuy. The audience is closest to your Amazon customer, less competition, better margins.

You sell home, DIY, garden or hardware products

B&Q Marketplace is mandatory. The category match and traffic quality is exceptional. Don't ignore this.

You sell low-priced commodity products with margin headroom

Try Temu. Treat it as a volume play, not a brand experience.

You sell anything else

OnBuy first, B&Q only if there's a category fit, skip Temu.

"Most UK brands could profitably operate 4-5 marketplaces. Most operate 1-2. The gap is operational capacity, not opportunity."

Want to launch on secondary marketplaces?

We operate UK marketplaces end-to-end for clients. Free consult to scope what fits your catalogue.

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MC

Head of Growth, Groweyo

E-Commerce Strategy

I run growth at Groweyo. We work with UK e-commerce brands across Shopify, paid media, email and marketplaces.