June 2, 2026

Uhuru Marketplace brings personalised AI selling tools and services to South Africa

6 min read

Uhuru Marketplace is a peer-to-peer AI-powered marketplace designed to reduce the barrier to entry for South Africans selling second-hand tools and services to the local market.

The platform provides a professional, easily personalised, AI-embedded marketplace to anyone with a mobile phone and an idea, simplifying the seller journey and amplifying access to a growing second-hand buyer market.

Uhuru is live and actively growing its seller base, currently hosting approximately 1 200 items across seven stores, and is in an active development phase with several significant features in the pipeline.

Despite growing demand for accessible tools, South Africa has a shortage of solutions that allow sellers without marketing and photography budgets to reach their target audiences, and Uhuru Marketplace effectively closes this gap.

What distinguishes Uhuru Marketplace is its deep integration of AI, enhancing every step of the buyer and seller journey. Where other marketplaces expect sellers to manage photography, pricing and content on their own, Uhuru has an embedded AI assistant that works directly with sellers throughout the listing process. The result is a platform that actively helps sellers across item presentation and pricing, and ensures they are better positioned to reach more buyers.

The platform is a smart move at a time when economic pressures are impacting the cost of living and South African wellbeing. The Competition Commission’s second Cost of Living Report showed that essential goods and services continue to rise above headline consumer price index (CPI), even as inflation moderates. CPI rose to 4% in April 2026 – its highest point since August 2024 – and fuel prices remain high, directly impacting the cost of living.

Against this backdrop, 57% of South Africans now participate in a side hustle, highlighting a thriving market and plenty of opportunity for sellers to benefit from tools like Uhuru Marketplace. The platform brings a clear value proposition to South African buyers and sellers, allowing them to turn items they no longer use into income.

How the platform works

When a seller uploads an item on Uhuru, they are provided with guided, AI-assisted listing tools. The image-cleaning tool removes cluttered or distracting backgrounds automatically, producing the clean white background that professional product photography delivers, without the cost.

The AI description assistant analyses the item and recommends the best way to write the listing to maximise buyer engagement. Every completed listing is scored by an AI quality checker out of 100, with an itemised breakdown of what elements are reducing the score, so sellers can apply the improvements quickly and easily.

On pricing, the AI benchmarking tool compares each listing against comparable items and recommends a price range, guiding sellers toward market value.

This suite of tools provides a seller with no marketing background or pricing expertise with access to the kind of intelligence previously available only to professional retailers.

On the buyer side, Uhuru’s most distinctive feature is its try-on functionality, which is a virtual outfit builder that lets buyers see how any item on the platform would look on them, across the full range of categories including tops, dresses, skirts, swimwear, shoes, socks and hats.

Buyers can upload images of items from their existing wardrobe and combine them with listings on the platform, effectively asking the question most buyers ask in a physical store: does this new piece work with what I already own? The answer is now available before checkout, not after delivery.

One of the structural decisions that sets Uhuru apart from comparable platforms is its approach to fees. On many peer-to-peer marketplaces, the burden of platform costs falls disproportionately on buyers, layering processing fees, buyer protection fees and delivery fees on top of the listed price, which suppresses purchase intent. Uhuru splits costs 50/50 between buyers and sellers, with no hidden charges.

“You know exactly what you’re paying upfront,” says Shaheen Price, CEO and founder of Uhuru Marketplace.

The platform operates on a freemium model. A free tier gives sellers access to the core marketplace. A subscription tier at R99 per month opens up the full suite of AI tools that include the image cleaner, quality scoring, description guidance and pricing intelligence. The subscription exists, Price is direct about this, because AI infrastructure costs money to run.

Both buyers and sellers can earn rewards through the platform’s loyalty programme, with more than 60 partner brands confirmed, including Pick n Pay, Checkers and Nando’s.

An AI buyer assistant, built through a personalised preference profile, actively scouts new listings for buyers based on size, colour, style and budget and alerts them when a match appears, whether they are on the platform or not.

“The name Uhuru is Swahili for ‘freedom’, and that’s exactly what this platform is designed for: freedom to sell, shop with confidence and earn on their own terms,” says Price.

“Most people have clothes they don’t wear and things in their house they don’t use. A lot of it is still good and in working condition. This platform gives you the tools to turn that into income without needing to know anything about photography, pricing or marketing.”

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