How to book a Brenger courier pickup for a Whoppah item, step by step
Brenger is our default courier for furniture-sized items across NL, BE, DE and FR. Here's how the booking flow actually works, what it costs, what to prepare on the day, and what to do if anything goes sideways on delivery.
Brenger is the courier partner we route most of our pickups through across the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and France. Our team has booked many thousands of pickups through them and the process is straightforward once you've done it once.
Why Brenger, and what to expect
Brenger is Whoppah's primary courier partner for furniture delivery in the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany and France. It isn't a parcel service. It's a network of professional movers who specifically handle furniture-sized items, including narrow stairwells, doors that need angling, and pieces that genuinely need two people to lift safely.
The integration is built into Whoppah's checkout flow. When you click Buy on a listing eligible for Brenger delivery, the courier option appears automatically with an upfront price. No phone calls, no separate booking, no surprise bills.
That's the short version. Here's the detailed walkthrough so you know exactly what's going to happen on pickup and delivery day.
How the booking flow works
Step 1, buyer initiates
When you buy an item that supports Brenger delivery, Whoppah generates a Brenger quote based on:
- Pickup address (the seller's location)
- Delivery address (yours)
- Item dimensions and weight
- Floor of pickup and delivery (ground floor, first floor, second floor)
- Whether the item needs two people or one
The quote appears right in the checkout. You can accept it or request a custom shipping option if Brenger doesn't fit your route.
Step 2, you pay for the item and delivery
Payment goes through Whoppah's escrow. Brenger receives confirmation that the booking is active.
Step 3, seller is notified
The seller gets an automatic email with an expected pickup window, usually a four-hour slot, three to seven days out. They don't have to do anything yet besides be ready.
Step 4, Brenger contacts both parties
A few days before pickup, Brenger sends both parties a more precise time window (typically two hours) and a courier name. Both parties can adjust if the slot doesn't work for them.
Step 5, pickup
The Brenger courier arrives in their van, loads the item, takes a delivery photo for the record, and confirms in their app. The seller doesn't need to do any paperwork. The booking is digital end to end.
Step 6, delivery
The same courier (or a relay courier for cross-border) delivers to your address, takes another photo, and the buyer-protection window opens. You have 48 hours to flag any issues.
What it actually costs
Costs depend on route, item size and complexity. As of 2026, typical bands:
- Within-NL small chair: €40 to €75
- Within-NL sofa: €120 to €180
- NL to BE small chair: €80 to €140
- NL to DE sideboard: €180 to €280
- NL to FR (Paris) sofa: €250 to €400
These are typical figures. Cross-border, multi-floor and very large items cost more. The exact number shows in your Whoppah checkout before you commit, so there are no surprises.
What to do as a buyer before delivery day
- Measure the doorways and stairwells the piece needs to pass through. A 220 cm sofa won't fit through a 200 cm doorway no matter how skilled the courier is. Better to know now than on the day.
- Clear the path. Rugs, lamps, anything fragile that could be knocked off during the move.
- Have access to your front door at the agreed time window.
- Keep your phone on. Brenger couriers call when they're 30 minutes out.
If the piece is going up multiple floors and your stairwell is tight, mention this when accepting the quote. Brenger may price-adjust upward, but it's far cheaper to know upfront than to have the courier arrive and refuse the job.
What to do as a seller before pickup day
- The piece should be cleaned, ready to leave, and accessible without moving other furniture
- If it's upholstered, the courier will wrap it in moving blankets. Cushions can usually stay attached. Loose cushions should be bagged.
- For glass-fronted cabinets, take the shelves out and let them travel separately. Tape them lightly together with the doors closed.
- Keep your phone on for the pickup window
You don't need to print anything. The courier confirms in-app.
What to do if something goes wrong
Brenger couriers are insured up to a fixed amount per item, covered by Whoppah's buyer protection scheme. If an item arrives damaged:
- Don't refuse the delivery outright. Let the courier deliver it and document.
- Photograph the damage immediately, within minutes of delivery while you can still match the courier photo timestamp
- Open a dispute via the Whoppah chat for the order within 48 hours
- Whoppah support contacts both parties and Brenger to resolve
Brenger pays out claims directly when damage was clearly in transit. If the damage was visible on the original listing photos and the buyer didn't flag it before purchase, that's a different conversation, but rare.
I don't want this paragraph to sound alarming. Damaged-in-transit deliveries are unusual. We're flagging it because the 48-hour window is important and easy to forget.
When Brenger isn't the right answer
For items outside Brenger's service area (most of central and eastern Europe, parts of Spain, Italy beyond major cities), Whoppah offers Custom Delivery. The seller arranges a partner courier and the buyer pays the agreed amount through Whoppah's escrow. The mechanics are the same. The courier is different.
For art (paintings, sculptures), oversized one-piece items (some piano-sized sideboards), and very fragile glass, the seller may opt out of Brenger and use a specialised art-handler. The listing will indicate "Custom shipping" rather than the Brenger option.
A note on self-pickup
If the piece is local, within an hour's drive, self-pickup is the cheapest option, and the seller is usually happy to coordinate. You'll need a van (rental, friend's car) and probably a second person for anything larger than a chair. Whoppah's chat is the right place to coordinate pickup time and confirm the seller will help with carrying.
If a seller insists on self-pickup only and won't accept Brenger, it's worth asking why. Usually the reason is the piece is too large or too fragile for standard courier handling, both legitimate. Occasionally it's a seller trying to avoid the integration, which is a different signal worth noting.
The short version
Brenger is the default, and it works for around 80% of furniture moves on Whoppah. The integration removes the parts of secondhand-furniture-buying that historically made people nervous. How do I get a 1970s sideboard from a seller's apartment in Antwerp to mine in Amsterdam without scratching it. Now it's three clicks at checkout, and a friendly van turning up on the agreed day.
If anything goes sideways, we're a chat message away. That's the part I most want you to know.




