There are several websites and apps working to make buying Black easier.

Did you know there’s Black-owned toilet paper? The Leafy Products company, which specializes in eco-friendly and 100% bamboo paper, was founded by a group of Black friends. And it’s not the only Black-owned toilet paper company out there.

August is National Black Business Month, so we have created a roundup of platforms and directories that are making it easier to shop Black-owned businesses. 

“If we are able to put it in the palm of someone’s hand, then I think we’ll see a lot more people willing to [buy Black],” standup comedian and Blapp founder Jon Lester says in the Word In Black video above.

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Inside the Blapp app, you can enter your location to find Black-owned businesses near you. So far, Lester says the platform can point its users to 40,000 Black businesses in the U.S. Soon, it will support online shopping, as well.

“So [it’s] a Black Amazon of sorts,” Lester says.

Blapp is one of a handful of platforms hoping to make it easier to find Black-owned businesses.

8 More Platforms to Shop Black Businesses

Here’s a list of the other ones we found:

  • EatOkra: an app helping you locate Black-owned restaurants near you
  • Miiriya: an app allowing you to buy Black-made products in one place
  • National Black Guide: a Black business directory, events, and news platform 
  • Buy from a Black Woman: a directory of Black women-owned businesses
  • Blk + Green: an online marketplace carrying toxic-free, Black-owned beauty products
  • Black Dollar Network: an app allowing you to buy Black-owned products and services in one place
  • Black Nile: a marketplace featuring luxury Black-owned brands and services
  • Sadiaa: a Black-owned beauty directory

Lester says there’s enough room for all these platforms to help the Black community retain its $2.1 trillion spending power. 

“You can go out; you can march,” he explains. “Trouble only comes knocking when Black folks start to circulate our money… By the time we as a community get to [the point where] 5%, God forbid 10% or 20% of our spending is Black-owned, we will feel it. Black folks will feel it.”