“Overall it’s a volume game,” Mejia said in a recent interview. “The margins are okay—about 20%.” Mejia can make a profit even selling at or under retail price because he buys
at a discount: he scours local marketplaces, outlet malls, and online platforms looking for deals, and then seizes on sales to buy in bulk. He says networking and establishing relationships with various neighborhood retailers has made it possible to thrive at a time when business has never been more competitive. Some competitors even have an inside edge: You may have heard of 19-year-old Joe Hebert, whose mother was fired from Nike earlier this year after it was revealed in a Businessweek feature that he was availing himself of her employee discount to run a thriving resale biz. Like Mejia, Hebert dealt mainly in bricks, using the deep discount his mom provided to make it all the more worthwhile.
Mejia himself chose this avenue over hype selling, he says, over concerns around shady deals and the rise in fakes. As tough as competition can be these days, at least the outlying costs — and chances of fraud — are comparatively low. “I didn’t want to be scammed, again and again, over a pair of $500 Jordan 1s,” he says. “I’d much rather deal with $100 Air Force 1s.”
Increasingly, brick flipping is becoming the sneaker resale norm. On resale site StockX, for instance, bricks are right up there on the best-seller list beside some of the most popular and talked-about shoes of the moment. The best-selling Nike on StockX — in fact the number one best-seller over the last twelve months and the number one best-seller of all time — is the white Air Force 1. You can walk into any Foot Locker in the country and buy a pair in your size—and yet the shoe was bought and sold on the platform over 40,000 times over the last year. Its average sale price hovers around $100: just about retail. Another major seller is the Adidas UltraBoost 4.0, which runs for an average price of $130, or $50 under its retail price. Over the last 12 months, it’s been bought and sold more than 12,000 times. If you’re a prospective buyer, that’s an easy way to snag a discount. And if you’re a seller like Mejia, who bought the shoe on sale, it’s easy money.
This is such a quiet part of the resale market that it can be hard to even know it’s really happening. That’s in part because the sneakers that get the most attention are rarely the sneakers that people are actually buying in significant quantities. Jesse Einborn, senior economist at StockX, gives the example of Bad Bunny’s recent collab with Adidas, which has been selling, on average, for nearly 500% over retail. “The weekend it dropped, ‘Bad Bunny’ was the number three most-searched term on StockX, trailing only ‘Yeezy’ and ‘Jordan,’” Einhorn explains. “That’s super high. It exceeded almost every other term. And yet we sold far, far more Air Force 1s over that same period.” The seriously hype sneakers command enormous price tags and a commensurate amount of public interest. But what people are actually spending money on, by and large, are under-the-radar bricks.
This is not to say that hype kicks aren’t a resale phenomenon. People go nuts for Jordan 1 Highs and Dunk Lows, and both StockX and private resellers are seeing extremely big business in the high-end sneaker space consistently. But at $300-$500 on average, the Jordans, Dunks, and Yeezys are still pretty rarefied, on the whole. And for resellers such as Mejia, who don’t want to deal with bots and raffles and computer countdowns, there’s still a lot of money to be made selling more ordinary shoes for less money in big numbers.
Buy a pair of grade school Air Force 1s at Marshalls on sale for $34.99. Flip it on eBay or Discord or Facebook Marketplace for $80. Repeat the process about three dozen times. Arduous? No doubt. But for the diligent, the hustle pays off. The brick resale account Jersey Flipping makes the point nicely on their Instagram, where they routinely post motivational quotes and explainers about how to capitalize on bricks the smart way. “Don’t ask yourself how many sales you made this week,” one recent post earnestly encourages. “Ask yourself how many you want to make next year. You gotta have the vision to see where you wanna go, the work to make it happen, and the love to keep it going.” For brick flippers, it’s advice to hold dear.