You can’t see a Shopify store’s real sales — that data is private. What you can do is analyze its public catalog: how many products it sells, the spread of prices, and the total list value of the range. The Catalog & Revenue Estimator computes those pricing signals and is upfront about the difference between catalog value and actual revenue.
▶ Open the Catalog & Revenue Estimator →
What the Catalog & Revenue Estimator gives you
- Total product count
- Average, lowest, and highest price
- Estimated catalog list value
- The most expensive products
- A clear note on what’s an estimate
How it works
The tool reads the store’s public /products.json endpoint — the same feed Shopify themes use to render products. It paginates through the catalog (up to about 5,000 products) and assembles the full list. No login, API key, or admin access is involved; only data the storefront already publishes is read.
How to use it, step by step
- Open the Catalog & Revenue Estimator and paste the Shopify store URL (for example, allbirds.com).
- Click “Estimate”. The tool reads the store’s public data — no login, password, or API key is involved.
- Review the result on screen, then download it as CSV, JSON, or Excel, or copy it to your clipboard.
What you can use it for
- Sizing up a competitor’s catalog
- Understanding price positioning in a market
- Quick due-diligence on a store
- Spotting premium vs. budget catalogs
Things to keep in mind
Everything here comes from public data, so a few caveats apply. Password-protected and headless stores may not expose every endpoint, and a merchant can choose to disable the public JSON feeds. Very large catalogs are capped at around 5,000 items. And remember: public storefront data never includes private figures such as exact inventory counts or actual sales — any tool claiming to reveal those is estimating, not reporting fact.