EHunt sits in a corner of the software world that's grown fast over the last few years: tools built for people who sell on Etsy. The site pitches itself as an all-in-one kit, the kind of dashboard a maker or shop owner opens before listing anything new. Its whole reason for being is research — figuring out what sells, who's buying, and which words bring shoppers to a page.
What gives the platform its weight is the sheer size of the data behind it. EHunt pulls from more than 70 million product listings, over 14 million tags, and around 3 million shops, with a couple million ad records on top — all refreshed daily. The company says more than two million sellers have used it, which says something about its reach. That's a huge pile of information, and it's the engine feeding nearly every feature on the site.
The product research tool is where most sellers will start. It lets you sort through that big database with filters, so you can spot best-sellers by category, price, favorites, or recent sales. You can export what you find with a click, then study how a product's numbers moved across a year. For anyone tired of guessing what to make next, that kind of data is a steadying hand.
EHunt doesn't stop at Etsy's own shelves. It folds in an Amazon Handmade database too, so sellers working across both can check an idea against a second crowd. There's also a side-by-side listing comparison that lines up pricing, photos, keywords, and reviews, which makes it easier to see why one product outsells another. A separate niche finder digs into whole categories to point toward markets with room to grow.
One feature that caught my eye is the inactive product database. These are listings that vanished from Etsy — maybe a shop ran out of stock, maybe someone closed up — even though they'd been selling well. EHunt brings them back into view. Think of it like peering into the window of a shuttered store and realizing the shelves were full of things people clearly wanted.
Then there's the keyword side, which leans into Etsy SEO. The keyword tool holds millions of search terms, updated daily, and it sorts them by search volume and competition. Sellers can hunt for long-tail phrases or seasonal terms — the sort of thing that matters when holiday shoppers start typing. You can run a big batch of keywords at once, which saves a fair bit of time.
Picking the right keywords is a bit like choosing the sign you hang at a craft fair. The wrong words and people walk past; the right ones pull a crowd. EHunt tries to take the guesswork out of that choice by showing what shoppers actually search for.
The shop analyzer turns the lens onto other sellers. It lays out a top shop's products, tags, listings, sales, and reviews, so you can see what's working for people already doing well. As a reviewer, what stands out here is how the tool treats competitors as a study guide rather than a threat. There's plenty to learn from a shop that's figured things out.
Alongside that, EHunt offers ad analysis and real-time tracking. The ad tool digs into how other sellers run their Etsy ads, which can hint at strategies and niche products worth a look. The tracking feature keeps tabs on competitors' shops, products, and keyword rankings day by day. If a rival's sales suddenly climb, you'll know about it.
Where the platform shifts gears is its set of AI tools for running a shop. There's a title and description generator that builds listing copy from suggested keywords, plus an image editor that can strip out or swap a product's background. A pattern extractor pulls design ideas from popular items and helps spin up fresh, copyright-safe versions. And a mockup generator drops your patterns onto products to make ready-to-list photos.
So the research tools tell you what to sell, and these creation tools help you actually get it listed. That split is worth pointing out, because it's the difference between a library and a workshop. EHunt tries to be both under one roof.
Email marketing rounds out the operation side. EHunt includes a follow-up reminder feature aimed at review invitations, with filtering and copy help meant to nudge more buyers into leaving feedback. Anyone who's sold online knows how hard it is to get a happy customer to actually write something. Reviews carry real weight on Etsy, so a tool that chases them politely fits a genuine need.
For the folks who'd rather work straight from their browser, there are a few extensions too. A quick-view tool shows product sales while you browse Etsy itself, a tags extension surfaces trending keywords on the spot, and an order exporter handles bulk order downloads. These little add-ons aren't the headline act, but they shave minutes off the small jobs that pile up. There's also a fee calculator for sellers doing their sums before they price something.
EHunt isn't only for Etsy regulars, either. The site says it serves sellers on Amazon Handmade, AliExpress, and Shopify as well, and it works for newcomers and seasoned multi-platform shop owners alike. Getting started doesn't ask for card details, which lowers the bar for anyone just testing the waters. The interface also runs in eight languages, so it reaches well beyond English-speaking sellers.
In my opinion, the most useful thing about a platform like this isn't any single feature — it's having the scattered parts of selling in one place. Sellers usually juggle a dozen tabs and half-remembered hunches. Pulling research, keywords, tracking, and listing tools together can quiet some of that noise.
Selling on Etsy has only gotten more crowded, and the shops that do well tend to watch their numbers closely. EHunt aims squarely at that crowd, handing them a steady stream of data and a few shortcuts to act on it. You know what often separates a hobby shop from a growing one? Usually it's the habit of checking the data before making a move — and that's exactly the habit this toolkit feeds.




Business address
EHunt
350 5th Ave, New York, NY,
New York,
New York
10118
United States
Contact details
Phone: 15927608586