ThredUp Stock Gained 340% in 2025. Is There Still Room to Run in 2026?

ThredUp Stock Gained 340% in 2025. Is There Still Room to Run in 2026?


In 2025, a handful of small-cap growth stocks saw massive rebounds as consumer spending held up and select tech-enabled retailers outperformed. U.S. e‑commerce holiday sales are expected to rise 7% to 9% this year, reflecting resilient demand. Within this environment, discount and resale platforms have thrived.

One of the most surprising winners in 2025 has been ThredUp (TDUP), a secondhand apparel platform that has quietly transformed itself from a cash-burning niche retailer into a fast-improving resale infrastructure business. Shares of ThredUp have surged roughly 340% this year as investors reassessed its improving revenue trends, expanding margins, and path toward profitability.

With accelerating growth, rising shopper activity, and expectations for its first profitable quarter, ThredUp is now back on the radar as a potential long-term compounder. The big question heading into 2026 is whether this rally still has room to run or if most of the upside is already priced in. Below, I take a closer look at what’s driving the turnaround and whether TDUP stock can keep delivering for growth-focused investors.

Founded in 2009, ThredUp is among the world’s largest online marketplaces for secondhand women’s and children’s apparel. It operates a tech-enabled consignment model: consumers send in used clothes to the company’s warehouses, and ThredUp sells the items, often at 50% to 90% off retail. The platform also powers “Resale-as-a-Service” for brands, allowing retailers to run their own thrift channels. This unique circular-business approach, combined with ThredUp’s AI-driven curation tools, sets it apart from traditional retailers.

Valued at $780 million by market cap, ThredUp’s stock has been on an astonishing ride. From about $1.4 per share in early January 2025, it traded around $6.2 by late December, a gain of 339% year-to-date (YTD). This surge far outpaces most peers. The stock’s performance reflects renewed investor confidence in ThredUp’s underlying business after years of underperformance.

But while the stock’s momentum is undeniable, valuation paints a more nuanced picture. On a sales basis, ThredUp appears cheap relative to Internet retail peers. The stock trades at only 2.6× trailing price/sales and an EV/sales of 2.7×, well below the 4× median for consumer companies. However, profitability metrics tell a different story. Its forward EV/EBITDA multiple is sky-high at 48.5×, reflecting lofty growth expectations and the current unprofitable status.


finance.yahoo.com
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