B2B platform for digital goods

How to Sell on Digiseller: 2026 Seller Guide

Digiseller for sellers — the engine that powers your own automated storefront plus a marketplace: fees, auto-delivery, KYC and risks.

How to Sell on Digiseller: 2026 Seller Guide

Digiseller is unusual among digital-goods platforms because it's two things at once: an engine for automating your own storefront and the platform that powers well-known specialised marketplaces such as Plati and GGSEL. For a seller that means you can sell to a ready marketplace audience, run your own automated digital store, or do both — all from one back office with payment acceptance and instant delivery built in. This guide covers what sells, the terms, how auto-delivery works, launch steps and the risks.

This is one platform from our overview of where to sell digital goods.

What Digiseller is and who it's for

Digiseller handles the two things every digital seller needs: accepting payment and delivering the code automatically. On top of that it provides a marketplace (Plati/GGSEL) and a storefront builder for your own site. Because it's purpose-built for digital, it natively supports activation-region fields, code pools and external API delivery sources.

Who it suits:

  • Shops that want full automation — own storefront plus marketplace reach.
  • Resellers who want one back office for payments and delivery.
  • API partners who source wholesale and want codes delivered from a live source rather than pre-uploaded pools.
  • Telegram sellers scaling from a channel to an automated storefront.

What sells well

Category Examples Demand
Game keys Steam, Xbox, PlayStation, Ubisoft High
Gift & top-up cards Steam Wallet, PSN, iTunes, Google Play High
In-game currency / top-up PUBG Mobile UC, Free Fire Diamonds, Roblox Robux High
Subscriptions Game Pass, PS Plus, Discord Nitro Medium
Software keys Windows, Office, utilities Medium

State the activation region on every listing — it cuts disputes and refunds and improves rating.

Fees & payouts

Parameter Indicative*
Commission ~ check current Digiseller rate (plan-dependent)
Buyer payment methods cards, SBP, wallets and others
Acquiring/fees depend on the method
Payout to the seller's stated details

* Values are indicative and change — verify current Digiseller rates before modelling unit economics. Marketplace selling and own-storefront selling can carry different costs; model the final margin after all fees and withdrawal.

How to start selling: 5 steps

  1. Register as a seller. Create a Digiseller account, pass verification and add payout details.
  2. Choose your sales surface. Sell via the Plati/GGSEL marketplace, build your own automated storefront, or run both in parallel.
  3. Set up delivery. Upload a code pool or — better for scale — connect an external delivery source via API so codes are pulled live at the moment of sale.
  4. Create listings. Describe the product, state region and platform, and price for commission plus target margin.
  5. Launch and monitor stock. Watch availability on fast movers, keep a buffer, and pause SKUs on a stockout to avoid cancellations and rating loss.

Auto-delivery: the core of Digiseller

The whole point of Digiseller is that the buyer pays and instantly gets the code with no manual step. The code source can be a pre-uploaded pool or an external source connected by API. The API route is the scalable one: instead of buying codes, exporting them and uploading pools by hand, you let Digiseller request a code from your wholesale supplier at the exact moment of sale. That keeps stock fresh, removes manual pool management and minimises stockout cancellations. Delivery reliability then depends directly on stock and uptime at the source.

Pool delivery vs API delivery: which to use

Digiseller supports both delivery modes, and the choice changes how your business scales:

Aspect Uploaded pool External API source
Setup Buy, export, upload codes Connect supplier API once
Stock freshness Static until you refill Live at moment of sale
Manual effort High (constant refills) Low
Stockout risk Higher on hot SKUs Lower (pulls on demand)
Dependency Your own inventory Supplier uptime + catalogue

For a handful of SKUs at low volume, a pool is the fastest way to start. The moment you add SKUs or volume, manual pool refills become the bottleneck and the main cause of stockout cancellations — at which point API delivery from a wholesale source is what keeps your rating intact.

Marketplace vs own storefront

Because Digiseller gives you both surfaces, decide deliberately how to split them:

  1. Marketplace (Plati/GGSEL). Ready audience, no traffic cost, higher commission. Best for fast validation and steady volume.
  2. Own storefront. Lower commission, full control of branding and pricing, but you pay for traffic. Best once you have repeat demand and a margin to protect.
  3. Both in parallel. Most mature sellers run the marketplace for reach and an own store for margin — and feed both from one API source so stock and pricing stay consistent.

Risks and how to reduce them

  • Chargebacks. A buyer disputes the payment after receiving the code; digital goods can't be returned. Reduce exposure with safer payment methods and clean order history.
  • Code revocation. A publisher or upstream supplier can deactivate a batch — especially "grey" regional keys. It hits rating and triggers compensation.
  • Region locks. A key or card won't activate in the buyer's country — always state the region.
  • Platform rules. Duplicate-listing limits, brand restrictions and source requirements; breaking them suspends the account and holds payouts.
  • Proof of source. Digiseller can request where stock came from. A supplier with a transparent transaction history makes these checks easier to pass.

Bottom line: with API delivery, your store's reliability is only as good as your supplier's uptime and stock. Cheap "grey" wholesale saves on purchase but costs dearly in chargebacks, revocations and bans.

Where to source inventory

To run a Digiseller storefront with API auto-delivery you need a wholesale source with a stable API, correct regions and stock on your fast movers. Assembling that from many suppliers by hand is slow and fragile.

FoxReload is a B2B wholesale platform for digital goods: one catalogue of 10,000+ SKUs (game keys, gift cards, top-up cards, eSIM, subscriptions, in-game currency), instant delivery and a REST API — designed to plug in as the external code source behind your Digiseller storefront.

Related reading:

Ready to model unit economics? Compare FoxReload purchase prices with Digiseller's commission to see the real margin per SKU.

Frequently asked questions

Is Digiseller a marketplace or an engine?
Both. Digiseller is an engine that automates payment acceptance and delivery for your own storefront, and it's also the platform powering specialised marketplaces like Plati and GGSEL. You can sell on the marketplace, run your own automated store, or do both from one back office.
How does auto-delivery work on Digiseller?
After payment, the buyer instantly receives the code from an uploaded pool or from an external source connected by API. The API option lets you deliver from a live wholesale source so you don't have to pre-upload and manage code pools by hand. Instant delivery is what protects conversion and rating.
What is the commission on Digiseller?
Digiseller's commission is indicative and depends on plan, payment methods and whether you sell via the marketplace or your own storefront — verify current rates before pricing. Build the final margin from the platform cut plus acquiring and withdrawal, not just the headline number.
Can I connect an external supplier to Digiseller via API?
Yes. Digiseller supports external delivery sources, so codes can be pulled from a wholesale supplier's API at the moment of sale rather than uploaded in advance. This keeps stock fresh, avoids manual pool management and reduces stockout cancellations.
See FoxReload wholesale prices

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