Compared live against every buyable CS2 market in our index.
White.Market is a peer-to-peer marketplace for buying and selling CS2 (CS:GO) skins for real cash, built inside the WhiteBIT crypto exchange ecosystem. It suits sellers who want to cash out to money rather than Steam wallet credit, and buyers hunting prices below the Steam Community Market. This White.Market review covers the real fees, the payout mechanics, and the trust questions that decide whether your money is safe.
Last updated: June 8, 2026. Fees and figures checked: June 2026. We track 30,623 live White.Market listings and refresh prices regularly.
White.Market is a P2P platform, so you keep the skin in your inventory until a buyer pays, then send the trade yourself. White.market does not use trading bots, and because it is a P2P marketplace it cannot take your skins, since you are the one giving them to the buyer. That removes one category of risk (a bot inventory getting drained) but adds another (the human on the other side has to confirm). See how it stacks up against other venues in our full marketplace comparison.
The headline number is simple. White.Market charges a flat 4.0% seller fee, and there is no separate buyer fee on the listing itself. On a clean $100 sale you net about $96.00. There is no percentage to memorize for tiers or volume, which I appreciate; opaque fee ladders are where marketplaces usually hide cost.
| Sale price | Seller fee (4.0%) | You net |
|---|---|---|
| $10.00 | $0.40 | $9.60 |
| $50.00 | $2.00 | $48.00 |
| $100.00 | $4.00 | $96.00 |
| $500.00 | $20.00 | $480.00 |
Two honest caveats. First, the 4.0% is the marketplace cut; the method you use to move money can carry its own cost, and reviewers flag card deposits as the pricey lane. Some users felt the fees for depositing money via credit card could be lower, and there were mentions of difficulty withdrawing funds without KYC verification. Second, payout speed is gated by Steam, not White.Market. Since Valve rolled out Trade Protection, sold-item funds sit pending while the trade is reversible. During the Trade Protection window Steam can reverse the trade if the original owner regains control of their account, so white.market releases funds only after the trade becomes irreversible. White.Market is upfront that this rule applies to all legitimate CS2 marketplaces, without exception. That is accurate, not a stall tactic.
On cash-out, the platform supports both fiat (bank card) and crypto rails, the main reason sellers pick it over Steam. White.market enables users to deposit and withdraw crypto as well as national currencies. To compare the net you would actually pocket on an item before you sell, run it through our price comparison catalog or the current biggest price gaps.
Here is where I separate the brand from the marketing. The evidence points to a legitimate operation, with some real caveats you should price in.
Company and track record. White.Market is not an anonymous Discord storefront. The platform is an offshoot of WhiteBIT, a well-known cryptocurrency exchange. WhiteBIT is a sizable, regulated European exchange that holds a virtual currency service provider license from the Estonian Financial Intelligence Unit, operating under anti-money laundering and know-your-customer obligations. The marketplace carries named partners rather than vague claims. Despite being relatively new, WhiteMarket has garnered positive reviews, a high Trustpilot score, and partnerships with esports organizations such as FACEIT and ESL Pro League. A backing company with a real license and a public team is a trust signal many skin sites cannot show.
KYC and AML. Verification is required to cash out fiat, framed as standard financial compliance. White.market describes KYC as user verification designed to protect against fraud, money laundering, or terrorist financing, and says it usually takes from 10 to 30 seconds. It can take longer if flagged: if there are issues or rejections it may take an hour or two, and in very rare cases up to a day. I count KYC as a positive for payout safety. A market that verifies cash-outs is one that can survive an audit.
Escrow and buyer protection. The protection model is the Steam Trade Protection window plus White.Market holding funds until the trade is final. That protects buyers from a seller who reverses a trade and shields the platform from laundering stolen goods. The trade-off is the delay.
2FA and account security. Sign-in is Steam-based, and the platform repeats core anti-phishing hygiene clearly. It tells users not to share their trade link or API key, to verify they are on white.market before logging in, and warns that scammers make near-identical clone domains to steal data. That is the right guidance. Enable 2FA on Steam and your email, and bookmark the real domain.
Disputes, the honest part. Here the reviews split. Plenty of users report smooth experiences. Customers are happy with prices that are often cheaper than other markets, describe the site as easy to navigate, and appreciate fast deposits and skin transfers. But there is a recurring complaint pattern around reversal penalties you should read before trading big. One user who suffered a Steam-side reversal after a phishing compromise said White.Market retained 30% of the transaction amount as a reversal penalty and permanently blocked the account. Another said the terms promised 70% back within 24 hours on a reverse trade, but that the rules changed and the platform kept everything. I cannot adjudicate individual cases, and reversal penalties exist on most P2P sites to deter abuse. The lesson is concrete: do not reverse trades, secure your Steam account, and treat the reversal-penalty clause as a real cost if anything goes sideways.
To buy: 1. Log in with your Steam account on the real white.market domain (bookmark it to dodge clone sites). 2. Set your Steam profile and inventory to public, and add your trade URL. 3. Browse listings, filter by float, wear, and price, and review the item details. 4. Fund your balance (crypto or card) and click buy; accept the incoming trade offer from the seller.
To sell: 1. Connect Steam, verify your email, and add your trade URL and API key. 2. List the skin; you keep it in your inventory until it sells. 3. When it sells, send the trade offer to the buyer promptly. 4. Complete KYC, then withdraw your balance to crypto or your bank card once the pending window clears.
Want to know what your whole inventory is worth before you list? Use our inventory valuation tool first.
On seller fee alone, White.Market sits at the low-friction end. Steam charges roughly 15% but locks you into wallet credit you cannot withdraw. As White.Market itself notes, Steam also charges a selling fee and the money you receive there cannot be withdrawn, while their marketplace allows users to withdraw funds. That cash-out ability, not the fee gap, is the real reason sellers leave Steam.
Fees are only half the story; liquidity and payout reliability matter just as much. To weigh alternatives, see our reviews of Skinport, CSFloat, DMarket, and Market.CSGO. Each strikes a different balance between fee, speed, and KYC.
White.Market earns a cautious thumbs up. It is legit and safe to cash out for users who complete KYC, secure their Steam account, and accept the Trade Protection hold. The 4.0% fee is fair, the WhiteBIT backing and AML checks are real trust signals, and the cash payout is the genuine draw over Steam. Knock points off for card-deposit costs and the reversal-penalty disputes, which make account security non-negotiable. Before you sell, compare your real net across venues on SkinWise's live price comparison so you keep the most money on every trade.
Sven, SkinWise
