You have a product idea. Maybe it’s handmade, maybe it’s private label, maybe it’s a digital download. But the first question that stops most new sellers isn’t “what should I sell?” — it’s “where should I sell it?” In 2026, the three heavyweight contenders for independent sellers are Amazon FBA, Etsy, and Shopify. They look different on the surface, but the real difference shows up in your bank account. This guide gives you the numbers, the hidden costs, and the strategic tradeoffs — no fluff, no affiliate bias. By the time you scroll to the FAQ, you’ll know exactly which platform matches your product, your personality, and your profit goals.
- Quick Comparison: Amazon FBA vs Etsy vs Shopify
- Deep Dive: How Each Platform Actually Works for Sellers
- Real Fee Comparison at $5K and $20K Monthly Revenue
- Customer Data, Brand Ownership, and Exit Value
- Which Products Win on Each Platform
- Top Mistakes New Sellers Make on Each Platform
- Which Platform Is Best for Your Specific Business Type?
- Frequently Asked Questions
Amazon FBA vs Etsy vs Shopify at a Glance
All three platforms are legitimate, but the way you set up matters. Check our verified list to avoid common seller pitfalls.
How Each Platform Actually Works for Sellers in 2026
Amazon FBA: The High‑Volume Machine
Amazon FBA lets you ship inventory to Amazon’s fulfillment centers. When an order comes in, Amazon picks, packs, ships, and handles customer service. It’s hands‑off once inventory arrives, but you pay for storage (especially long‑term) and fulfillment. The referral fee is 15% on most categories, and FBA fees can take another 15‑30% of the sale price. Your cost of goods must be extremely low to stay profitable. Succeeding on Amazon in 2026 demands excellent product research, competitive pricing, and advertising (Amazon PPC can eat 10‑30% of revenue). The algorithm cares about sales velocity and positive reviews; getting both quickly requires a launch strategy. Our 12‑month case study comparing Amazon FBA vs dropshipping gives you the real numbers on initial capital and month‑by‑month cash flow.
Etsy: The Handmade and Niche Marketplace
Etsy is simpler: you create a listing, a buyer searches and finds it, and Etsy takes a cut. Listing fee is $0.20 for 4 months, then an auto‑renewal of $0.20. Transaction fee is 6.5% of the item price plus shipping, and the payment processing fee (via Etsy Payments) is 3% + $0.25 (US). There’s no warehouse, no inventory shipping to Etsy — you handle fulfillment yourself (or use a production partner). Etsy’s strength is its organic search traffic for keywords like “personalized birthday gift” or “handmade ceramic mug.” The seller tools are improving — now you can run off‑site ads (optional) where Etsy takes an additional 15% if the sale comes from their ad click. Margins are generally better than Amazon, but volume is usually lower. Your shop rank depends on recency, reviews, and shipping speed. For a step‑by‑step launch, use our Etsy starter tutorial.
Shopify: Your Brand, Your Rules
Shopify is the tool we didn’t have 15 years ago. For $39/month (Basic plan), you get a fully hosted ecommerce website with a drag‑and‑drop builder, SSL, unlimited products, and integrated payments. The transaction fee is 2.9% + $0.30 if you use Shopify Payments; using an external gateway like PayPal adds an extra 2% fee on transactions. There’s no listing fee, no marketplace competition — but also no audience. Every single visitor you get comes from your own marketing: Instagram ads, SEO, influencer collaborations, email lists. That’s the hardest part and the reason many Shopify stores fail. But if you can drive traffic profitably, you own the customer and the relationship. You can collect emails, run retargeting ads, and build a repeat purchase ecosystem. Shopify also integrates with apps for reviews, upsells, and dropshipping; if you later want to add print‑on‑demand, it’s seamless. For a full breakdown of Shopify vs other ecommerce platforms, see our Shopify vs WooCommerce vs Wix review.
Real Fee Comparison at $5K and $20K Monthly Revenue
Many beginners fixate on the monthly subscription but miss the transaction and fulfillment fees that actually erode profit. Here’s what you’d pay on each platform assuming a typical product with COGS of $10, selling for $30 (shipping not included).
Fee Breakdown — Single Item Selling for $30 (simplified, US seller)
- Amazon FBA: Referral fee 15% = $4.50. FBA pick/pack/weight fee ≈ $4.76. Storage ≈ $0.10/month. Total fee ~$9.36 (31.2% of sale). Net before COGS: $20.64.
- Etsy: Transaction 6.5% of $30 = $1.95. Payment processing 3% + $0.25 = $1.15. Listing $0.05 amortized. Total fee ~$3.15 (10.5%). Net before COGS: $26.85.
- Shopify (Shopify Payments): Transaction 2.9% + $0.30 = $1.17. No listing fee. Monthly plan ($39) amortized across sales — if you sell 100 units, then $0.39 per unit. Total fee ~$1.56 (5.2%). Net before COGS: $28.44 — but you must pay for traffic separately.
When we scale to $5K monthly revenue (approx 167 units), the total fees look like this:
At $20K monthly revenue, the gap widens:
But remember: Shopify’s low transaction fee requires you to buy your own traffic. A conservative marketing spend of 15‑25% of revenue quickly shrinks the margin advantage. Amazon’s high fees include the most valuable digital real estate on Earth — a customer base primed to buy. Etsy’s mid‑range fee reflects its curated discovery and buyer trust. The net profit after marketing is what you actually bank.
If you sell digital items, the fee dynamics change dramatically. Check how Etsy’s 6.5% stacks against a zero‑fee direct site.
Customer Data, Brand Ownership, and Exit Value
This is the silent killer. When you sell on Amazon FBA, you never see the buyer’s email. You cannot build an email list of your Amazon customers. You’re invisible. If Amazon decides to suspend your account or a competitor’s algorithm change drops your ranking, your business disappears overnight. Etsy gives you a little more: you can communicate with buyers, but Etsy owns the relationship and you can’t export an email list to market externally. Shopify, however, gives you full ownership. Every customer email, every browsing behavior, every lifetime value — it’s yours. You can build a brand that an aggregator might buy for 3‑4x annual profit. Marketplace stores rarely command that multiple because of platform risk.
Platform Risk Reality
In 2025, thousands of Amazon sellers were suspended due to automated review manipulation flags. An Etsy shop that relies solely on the platform’s algorithm can lose 50% of traffic after a search update. Shopify traffic declines only when your own marketing stops. Choose your dependency level carefully.
If long‑term brand value matters — if you might ever sell the business — Shopify or a hybrid model (Shopify + Etsy) gives you the strongest asset. But building that asset takes time and marketing skill. If you need cash flow this quarter, the marketplaces (Amazon, Etsy) provide faster velocity.
Which Products Actually Sell Best on Each Platform
- Amazon FBA wins for: Private label supplements, electronics accessories, kitchen gadgets, toys, home & kitchen, pet supplies, and any product with high search volume on Amazon. Products that need fast, reliable shipping and where reviews drive purchase decisions. Avoid categories where Amazon Basics competes directly.
- Etsy wins for: Jewelry, personalized gifts, custom apparel, wedding items, art prints, craft supplies, digital downloads (resumes, planners, SVG files), and vintage goods. Handmade perception matters; if you manufacture in China, Etsy’s community may reject you, which affects visibility and flagging.
- Shopify wins for: Unique branded products that tell a story, high‑fashion items, subscription boxes, high‑ticket products ($100+), and categories where you want to control the entire buying experience (e.g., custom furniture, boutique clothing). Also ideal for combining dropshipping with brand building (see our dropshipping for beginners guide).
If you’re unsure whether to sell physical goods or downloads, our digital products guide breaks down 80%+ profit margins.
Top Mistakes New Sellers Make on Each Platform
- Amazon FBA: Ignoring PPC advertising until inventory is stuck; neglecting product inserts that encourage reviews; underestimating storage fees during Q4 and the subsequent long‑term storage wipe; not managing inventory turnover rate.
- Etsy: Using generic stock photos instead of lifestyle images; ignoring Etsy’s tag and attribute fields (which are crucial for search); under‑pricing because you compare to mass‑market goods; not understanding the off‑site ads fee that kicks in after $10K in sales.
- Shopify: Building a beautiful store but doing zero marketing; assuming “build it and they will come”; not setting up abandoned cart recovery from day one; choosing a slow theme that kills mobile conversions; not collecting email addresses before launch.
The Hybrid Approach That Works
Many successful sellers start on Etsy for the built‑in traffic and proof of concept, then launch a Shopify store and use Etsy’s customer base to drive initial visits via insert cards and Instagram. They keep both channels running, using Etsy as a lead‑generation engine and Shopify as the high‑margin, brand‑building home. Our Etsy vs your own website comparison helps you decide when to make the leap.
Which Platform Is Best for Your Business Type?
No matter which platform you choose, the most profitable path is the one you take consistent action on. Many sellers start on one and expand later. The best platform for you today is the one that matches your product, your tolerance for marketing, and your growth timeline. If you need side income fast, you might also want to look at our list of 25 side hustle ideas for additional streams while you set up your store.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes — many established sellers do. You can fulfill Amazon FBA orders while also listing on Etsy and running your own Shopify store. Just be mindful of inventory syncing and order fulfillment to avoid overselling.
Generally yes. You need capital to purchase inventory upfront, ship to Amazon, and fund PPC until sales become organic. A reasonable starting point is $2,000–$5,000. Compare that with dropshipping, which starts with $0 inventory.
Absolutely. Integrations like Printful work seamlessly with both. Etsy’s audience for custom t‑shirts and mugs is massive, while Shopify gives you full brand control. Read our POD beginner guide to see the money side.
Amazon typically requires a business entity (LLC or sole proprietorship) and an EIN for professional sellers. Etsy allows personal accounts; Shopify also supports personal use but a business bank account is recommended.
Shopify has the lowest transaction fees, but you must add the cost of traffic. Overall, Etsy often yields the highest net margin for handmade items because the organic traffic is free. Amazon margins are the tightest but can be compensated by huge volume.
Keep your Etsy shop open while you build traffic to your Shopify store. Include a “visit our website for exclusive deals” card in every Etsy order. Gradually shift new product launches and email collection to Shopify. Eventually you can drop Etsy if margins justify it.