What is DMarket?
DMarket is one of the longest-running names in the skin marketplace category, a platform for buying, selling and trading Counter-Strike 2 cosmetics alongside Dota 2, Rust and Team Fortress 2 items. It launched in 2017 in Kyiv, founded by Vlad Panchenko and Tamara Slanova, and in January 2023 it was acquired by Mythical Games, a US studio headquartered in Los Angeles. That history is where the "Ukrainian roots, American parent" description comes from: the engineering heritage is Ukrainian, but the entity now sits under a well-funded US company.
What separates DMarket from a pure escrow marketplace like Skinport is breadth. It runs a conventional order-book marketplace, a peer-to-peer Face2Face mode, item-for-item swaps, and a full Trading API for automation, all under one account. Community sentiment is solid rather than spotless: DMarket holds a 4.0/5 "Great" rating across more than 21,000 Trustpilot reviews, roughly 72% five-star but with a notable ~15% one-star tail, and it earns a SkinJudge Safety Score of 80/100.
Fees & key facts
DMarket's defining fee quirk is that seller commission is liquidity-based rather than a flat rate: the more in-demand your skin, the less you pay.
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Seller fee | 2% on liquid skins, scaling up toward ~10% on illiquid items |
| Buyer fee | 0% |
| Face2Face (P2P) fee | ~4% |
| Item-for-item trade fee | ~2.5% |
| Deposit cost | ~3.5% to 4% by card, ~2% by crypto |
| Withdrawal fee | None (method/network fees may apply) |
| Payout methods | PayPal, Skrill, Neteller, Payoneer, Visa/Mastercard, SEPA, bank wire, crypto |
| Payout time | Minutes to days (e-wallets), up to 7 working days (card/bank) |
| KYC | Required for card & crypto withdrawals |
| Supported games | CS2, Dota 2, Rust, TF2 |
| Owner | Mythical Games (United States) |
How DMarket works
DMarket is an escrow marketplace: listed items sit with DMarket rather than being handed directly between strangers, so a purchase is delivered from a controlled inventory instead of an open trade window. That closes off the most common skin-scam vector, the fake middleman. Around that core, DMarket layers extra selling modes. Face2Face is a cheaper peer-to-peer route (~4%) for sellers who want a bigger cut and don't mind the coordination, while item-for-item trading (~2.5%) lets you swap skins without touching cash.
The other half of DMarket's identity is the Trading API. It is a documented, JSON-based interface with public example clients on GitHub, so traders can generate keys and automate bulk listing, buying and repricing. For a hobbyist that is overkill, but for anyone treating skins as a trading activity, programmatic access is a real differentiator that most consumer-facing marketplaces don't offer.
Is DMarket safe?
DMarket's safety case rests on longevity and ownership. A platform that has processed skin trades since 2017 and now sits under Mythical Games carries far more institutional weight than the typical offshore reseller, and its escrow model removes the fake-trade risk of private deals. Withdrawals run through mainstream processors (PayPal, Payoneer, Skrill, SEPA), which is reassuring in an industry full of crypto-only cash-outs.
The friction is real, though, and it is the dominant theme in negative reviews. Card and crypto withdrawals require KYC, and a slice of users report verification requests or delays surfacing at cash-out rather than sign-up. Fees on cheap, illiquid items climb quickly, and since Steam's 2025 trade-protection changes, sold-skin proceeds can sit locked for the roughly 7-day hold before they fully clear. None of these are safety failures. They are the predictable cost of a regulated, high-volume venue, but they do shape the experience.
Pros
- Backed by a US parent (Mythical Games) with an 8-year operating history.
- Seller fees from just 2% on liquid skins, among the lowest in the category.
- 0% buyer fee and multiple selling modes (marketplace, Face2Face, swaps).
- Widest payout menu we track: PayPal, Payoneer, Skrill, SEPA, bank, crypto.
- Full Trading API for automated and bulk trading.
Cons
- Fees scale up sharply on illiquid or low-value items.
- KYC and occasional verification friction at withdrawal.
- Bank/card payouts are slow (up to 7 working days).
- Steam's 2025 trade hold can lock proceeds for ~7 days.
The verdict
DMarket is a strong, versatile choice for anyone who wants more than a plain buy/sell marketplace. The low 2% floor on liquid skins, the widest cash-out menu in the category, and a real Trading API make it especially appealing to active traders. The trade-offs are convenience-shaped: verification friction, slower bank payouts, and fees that punish illiquid inventory. That balance is why it lands at a solid but not top-tier SkinJudge Safety Score of 80/100. See our methodology for how that is weighted. If your priority is the absolute lowest, most predictable fee, CSFloat at a flat 2% is worth comparing; if you want the cleanest EU-regulated reputation, Skinport still sets the bar. But for a feature-rich, globally accessible marketplace with deep payout options, DMarket earns its place.
