StockX isn't a store that ships from its own warehouse, and it isn't a courier either — it's a resale marketplace that verifies items before they reach you. That extra step shapes how a StockX order travels. When you buy, the seller first ships the item to a StockX authentication center, where it's inspected and confirmed genuine. Only after it passes does StockX ship the verified item on to you. Because of that two-leg journey, a single purchase can show two different tracking numbers: one for the seller-to-StockX leg and a separate one for the StockX-to-buyer delivery you actually wait on.
StockX doesn't run delivery trucks, so the leg that brings the package to your door is handled by a major carrier. In the United States that's usually UPS or FedEx, with most domestic orders arriving within a few business days of authentication. For international orders — especially to Europe and Asia — StockX ships with FedEx or DHL, and delivery times vary by destination and customs.
This page lists the carriers that deliver StockX orders in 2025–2026, what each one does in the chain, and how to recognize its tracking number. If you'd rather not figure out which leg you're looking at or which carrier's site to check, 24hTrack auto-detects the carrier and follows the parcel across handoffs in a single timeline.
A primary carrier for StockX deliveries within the United States, used for both the seller-to-authentication-center leg and the final delivery to the buyer. Once an item is verified, StockX commonly ships it out on a UPS label, and buyers in UPS's network can often manage the delivery — redirecting to a pickup point or an Access Point — through UPS's own tools. Tracking numbers: 18 characters — 1Z followed by 16 letters and digits
Carries a large share of StockX orders, both domestically and on international routes, and is often the carrier for the seller's shipment into the authentication center as well as the final delivery. FedEx's tracking updates each scan from pickup through to your door. Tracking numbers: A 12-digit number (sometimes 15 digits on some services)
The carrier StockX leans on for many international deliveries, particularly to Europe, Asia, and other regions outside the US. DHL handles the export, customs clearance, and hand-off in the destination country, so an overseas StockX order most often arrives on a DHL number. Tracking numbers: A 10-digit number, or an express number beginning with JD or JJD
StockX doesn't deliver packages itself. After an item passes authentication, StockX ships it to you through a major carrier — usually UPS or FedEx for orders inside the United States, and FedEx or DHL for international deliveries. The carrier on the label is who brings the package to your door.
Every StockX purchase makes two trips. First the seller ships the item to a StockX authentication center, which has its own tracking number. After the item is verified, StockX ships it on to you under a second, separate tracking number — and that's the one that ends at your address. Seeing two numbers is normal; the second is the delivery you're waiting on.
There's no separate 'StockX' number — the tracking number belongs to whichever carrier is on the label. A UPS shipment is 18 characters starting with 1Z; a FedEx shipment is usually a 12-digit number; and an international DHL shipment is typically a 10-digit number or an express code beginning with JD or JJD.
Because of the verification step, StockX orders take longer than a normal store purchase. The seller has a few days to ship the item to the authentication center, and once it's verified StockX sends it to you — US buyers typically receive it within a few business days after that. Counting the whole process, most US orders land within about one to two weeks, and international orders vary by destination.
StockX tracking can sit quiet during the gaps between legs — after the seller ships in but before authentication finishes, or after your delivery label is created but before the first carrier scan. A tracking number often shows 'label created' with no movement for a day or two, especially over weekends. If the delivery leg stays silent well past its estimated window, the carrier — UPS, FedEx, or DHL — can confirm the parcel's status.
Check around entrances, mailboxes, and with neighbors or household members first, since parcels are sometimes scanned delivered shortly before or after the actual drop-off. If it still hasn't turned up, contact the delivering carrier to confirm where it was left, and open a case with StockX support — StockX can help trace the shipment and address orders that don't arrive.
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