
Price: 2% total per transaction (1% buyer + 1% seller)
| Feature | Rating | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Marketplace aggregation | 5.0 | Rarible doesn't just show its own listings; it pulls data and prices from OpenSea, Blur, and others, allowing you to find the absolute lowest price for a collection without leaving the site. |
| Multi-chain support | 5.0 | Native support for Ethereum, Polygon, Base, Arbitrum, Tezos, and Flow. |
| Creator tools (minting) | 4.5 | Offers "Lazy Minting" (no upfront cost) and advanced contract ownership. |
| Royalty enforcement | 5.0 | Rarible’s RARI Chain enforces creator earnings at the node level, ensuring artists actually get paid on secondary sales. |
| Governance & DAO | 4.0 | The $RARI token allows for genuine voting on platform fees and treasury use. However, the system is complex for casual users to navigate. |
| Payment options | 4.0 | Support for credit cards and fiat on-ramps is great for beginners, though these transactions often carry higher processing fees than direct crypto swaps. |
| Mobile experience | 3.5 | The app is excellent for browsing and tracking portfolios, but full minting and complex management are still best handled on a desktop browser. |

OpenSea functions as the "Amazon" of NFTs. It is the most objective choice for users who prioritize liquidity—the ease of buying or selling an asset quickly due to high traffic.
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SuperRare operates with a "high-signal" filter. By being invite-only for artists, it maintains a level of aesthetic quality and scarcity that open marketplaces lack. It is the logical choice for serious fine-art collectors.
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Zora is less of a "store" and more of a permanent infrastructure for the internet. It excels in "open editions" and low-cost minting, focusing on the idea that NFTs should be easy to create and share like social media posts.
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Courtyard solves the "trust" problem for physical goods. By acting as a regulated custodian, they allow users to trade digital versions of physical items (like graded cards) with the assurance that the real item is stored in a Brink’s vault.
Learn MoreRarible is the best choice for creators who prioritize long-term sovereignty and collectors who want a “search engine” experience across multiple blockchains. It is less ideal for professional day-traders who require the hyper-liquidity and specialized tools found on platforms.
Rarible currently charges a 1% service fee to both the buyer and the seller (reduced from the historical 2.5%). However, active users can reduce or even eliminate these fees to 0% by locking the platform’s native token, $RARI, and participating in the DAO.
You can use "Lazy Minting." This allows you to create and list an NFT for free. The data is stored off-chain until a purchase is made, at which point the buyer pays the gas fee to officially "mint" it onto the blockchain.
Yes. While Ethereum is the most secure for high-value art, Layer 2 and Layer 3 solutions like Polygon, Base, and the RARI Chain offer fees as low as $0.01 to $0.15 per transaction, compared to Ethereum’s fluctuating costs.
It means Rarible acts as a search engine for NFTs. When you browse a collection, Rarible shows you listings from its own platform as well as OpenSea, Blur, and LooksRare. You can buy any of these listings directly through Rarible’s interface at the best available market price.
Yes. Rarible supports fiat on-ramps (via partners like MoonPay), allowing you to purchase fixed-price NFTs using a credit card or bank transfer. Note that while this is easier for beginners, these providers typically charge a higher processing fee (3.5%–5%) compared to using crypto.