Both build done-for-you buyback websites. The business model they are built for is completely different. Which one fits your shop depends on one question: are customers coming to you, or mailing devices in?
R3up and SiteBot are the two done-for-you options in this category. Both build your buyback website so you do not have to. But they are designed around fundamentally different business models, and choosing the wrong one means paying for a system that was never built for how your shop actually works.
R3up is built for buyback businesses that operate primarily online. A customer visits the site, gets a quote, ships their device with a prepaid label, and gets paid when it arrives and passes inspection. This is the model national platforms like Gazelle use. It works well for flippers, recyclers, and businesses that want to buy devices from anywhere in the country without a physical counter. The prepaid shipping label system is central to the entire platform.
SiteBot is built for local shops with a physical location. A customer searches "sell iPhone Detroit," finds your site, uses the calculator, locks a price, and walks in the same day with an offer code to collect cash in person. The customer is in your city. The transaction happens face to face. The entire system is built around driving walk-in traffic and same-day in-store conversions — not shipping logistics.
If your shop has a physical address and you want customers in your city to walk through the door — either for repairs or to sell a device for cash same day — R3up's platform was not designed for that workflow. The shipping label infrastructure, the mail-in quote system, and the national-reach positioning are built for a fundamentally different operation.
R3up fills a real gap for a real type of business. If you are running or want to run a primarily online buyback operation — buying devices from customers across the country who mail them in — R3up gives you the infrastructure to do that without building it yourself. The automated shipping label generation, the quote system, and the order management tools are all designed specifically for that workflow.
For phone flippers and recyclers who do not have a fixed physical storefront but want a professional online buying presence, R3up is a purpose-built option. The marketing and chatbot add-ons extend the platform for businesses trying to grow their online reach beyond organic search.
If you have a repair shop and you buy phones from walk-in customers, the mail-in infrastructure R3up is built around is largely irrelevant to your daily operation. Your customer is not shipping a device from Ohio — they are driving down the street, walking in, and expecting cash today.
The local SEO piece is where the gap is most significant. R3up's primary positioning is national online reach. Getting your shop to rank for "iPhone screen repair Detroit" or "sell iPhone Chicago" in the local map pack requires city-specific page structure, a well-configured Google Business Profile, and local keyword targeting — none of which are core to R3up's platform. These are the searches that drive walk-in customers to a local shop, and they require a fundamentally different approach than national buyback SEO.
Repair is also an add-on for R3up rather than a native capability. For a shop that does equal or more volume in repair than buyback, a system where repair is bolted on as an optional extra is not the right foundation.
The test that separates them: when your next buyback customer calls, are they asking "where do I drop it off?" or "where do I ship it?" If the answer is almost always drop it off — you are a local walk-in shop and you need a system built for that. R3up is built for the second customer. SiteBot is built for the first.
R3up does not publish pricing. Three tiers are mentioned on the site but the cost of each requires a demo call to discover. That is a common sales approach for custom-built platforms, but it makes direct cost comparison difficult. You may find after the demo that it is reasonably priced for what it provides — or that the higher tiers needed for SEO and marketing add-ons push the total well above alternatives.
SiteBot is $99 per month with no setup fee for early access shops. No demo required to find that out. If cost transparency matters to you as you evaluate options, that difference is worth factoring in before you spend time on calls.
SiteBot builds the website, the calculator, the repair pages, and the local SEO for walk-in shops. Join the waitlist.
Join the Waitlist — It's FreeNo setup fee for early access shops. No credit card required.