Cook group reviews
Every group below is researched against its live Whop listing, current pricing, member counts and rating data, plus community feedback. We tell you who each group suits and who should skip it. How we rank →
Cook groups
Ranked comparison →
KaiKicks Apprentice
The best group in the UK for actually learning to resell. Pay-for-what-you-flip tiers from £15/month, genuinely good Vinted and eBay guides, and mentorship up to 1-on-1 calls, built like a course with live tools attached.
Resellers Paradise
The best pound-for-pound UK reselling group we've assessed. For £24.99 a month you get fast Vinted monitors, broad UK retail coverage and an active community, the price most groups charge for half as much.
Paragn Network
The UK's original cook group, running since 2012, and the only big one with a genuinely free tier, so you can sit inside the community before spending a penny. Full membership is pricey, but nothing in the UK matches the pedigree.
House of Resell
The widest net in UK reselling, 50+ automated monitors and channels spanning sneakers, tickets, whisky, trading cards and crypto, run by a team that's been at it since 2014. Generalist by design, and the best pick if you want one group for everything.
Sneaker & retail bots
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Hidden AIO
The most sensible entry point into botting we've assessed: $49.99 on simple monthly billing you can cancel anytime, with the Hidden Society team behind it. Coverage is tighter than the big AIOs, but what it covers, it does well.
Stellar AIO
The breadth king, 70+ supported retailers make Stellar AIO the pick for retail arbitrage, collectibles and price errors rather than pure sneaker heat. Quarterly pricing works out reasonable; the UI has a learning curve.
Nike Shoe Bot (NSB)
One of the longest-running names in botting, built around Nike and SNKRS with useful side-modules for Pokémon Center, Amazon and Shopify. The $349/6-month plan rewards committed users; casual botters should start cheaper.