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Home Depot integration
The largest home-improvement audience in the US — marketplace or dropship — run from one operation, with orders, inventory, shipping, and reconciled profit in one place.
Home Depot is the biggest home-improvement retailer in the country, and that scale is the whole pitch. Get a product in front of Home Depot shoppers and you're reaching a volume of DIY homeowners and professional contractors that no independent storefront can match on its own traffic. The pro side especially matters: tradespeople who buy the same materials, tools, and fixtures again and again, in quantities a marketplace sale rarely sees. Home Depot lets you reach that audience two ways — through its marketplace and through its dropship fulfillment program — and Rilk supports selling to Home Depot on either. The prize is enormous reach; the risk is that a channel this big will overwhelm a seller running it out of a spreadsheet. Rilk is what keeps it inside one calm operation.
What you can do
- Home Depot orders land in Rilk as they're placed — DIY and pro alike — and get picked next to your Amazon, Walmart, and other-channel orders.
- One stock pool absorbs the volume without overselling. A big-box channel can move units fast; sell the same fixtures elsewhere and the Home Depot quantity drops in step so you never commit stock twice.
- Fulfill from your warehouse and confirm the ship, with tracking returned to Home Depot automatically.
- Push listings and pricing from one place — titles, attributes, images, and price — without living in a separate seller console.
- Returns worked in the same flow as every other channel, matched to the original order and its cost.
- Per-unit profit reconciled against Home Depot's real payouts — so high-volume, repeat-buy orders show a margin you can actually trust.
What's supported
- Both routes to Home Depot — its marketplace and its dropship supplier program — connected through Rilk.
- Listing and inventory in lockstep with Amazon, Walmart, eBay, Shopify, and BackMarket from one stock pool — no overselling.
- Order intake with full line-item detail into your unified inbox, built to keep up with big-box volume.
- Ship-confirmation with tracking sent back to Home Depot as the order leaves.
- Label buying for UPS, FedEx, USPS, and DHL in the same shipping workflow.
- Returns handled next to every other channel — restock, re-grade, or write off.
- Settlement-reconciled per-unit profit built from Home Depot's actual payouts.
Connecting Home Depot
Setup runs in a few minutes. Log into Rilk, open Company Settings → Marketplace integrations, pick Home Depot, and connect the seller account you've been approved on — Home Depot vets sellers on its side, so you connect the account you already hold. Your listings, inventory, and recent orders flow in on the first sync, and orders arrive automatically after that.
Why sell on Home Depot with Rilk
The reason to sell on Home Depot is simple: reach. No other home-improvement channel puts your product in front of as many buyers, and its pro loyalty pulls in repeat, volume-driven orders that reward sellers who can keep up. That last part is where it gets hard on your side — a channel that can move a lot of units fast is also the one most likely to oversell, drown your team in a separate order console, and hide the true margin on high-turn, thin-markup hardware. Rilk runs Home Depot as one lane of the same operation: a single stock pool so the volume never oversells your other channels, one order inbox your team already works, and one profit number reconciled against what Home Depot actually paid after its cut. You take the reach and leave the chaos behind.
Related capabilities
- All marketplace integrations — every channel Rilk connects, in one place.
- Lowe's integration — the other major home-improvement channel Rilk supports.
- Multi-channel sync — one stock pool across Home Depot, Amazon, Walmart, and more.
- Reporting — per-unit profit verified against settlement data, not estimated.
