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Strategy6 min readFeb 23, 2026

Is Everbee Worth $30/Month for Etsy Sellers (My Honest Take)

Everbee shows estimated revenue for any Etsy listing. That's powerful for product research. But is it worth $30/month? Depends on where you are.

What Everbee does

Everbee is a Chrome extension that overlays estimated revenue and sales data on Etsy search results. When you search "budget planner" on Etsy with Everbee installed, each listing shows estimated monthly revenue, estimated sales count, and tags used.

It also has: - Product analytics (estimated revenue, sales trends for any listing) - Keyword research (search volume, competition) - Shop analytics (any shop's estimated total revenue) - Email collection tool (for building your own list from Etsy buyers)

The core value: instead of guessing what sells on Etsy, you can see revenue estimates for actual listings. This is useful for deciding what products to create.

The accuracy problem

Everbee's revenue estimates are just that: estimates. They reverse-engineer sales data from public signals (reviews, favorites, listing age). I've compared Everbee's estimates against my own actual sales data on several products.

The results: sometimes close, sometimes way off. On my best-selling budget planner, Everbee estimated $1,200/month. My actual revenue from that product was about $890/month. Off by 35%.

On another product, Everbee estimated $300/month. Actual: $460. Off by 35% the other direction.

The relative rankings are more useful than the absolute numbers. If Everbee says Product A makes 3x more than Product B, that's probably directionally correct even if both numbers are wrong. Use it for "this niche is bigger than that niche" decisions, not "this exact product makes exactly $X" conclusions.

When Everbee is worth $30/month

You're actively researching new product ideas. If you're in a phase where you're launching 3-5 new products per month and need to validate ideas before investing creation time, Everbee's data helps you make faster decisions. One good product idea that earns $200/month pays for years of Everbee subscriptions.You're entering a new niche. If you sell planners and want to expand into wedding templates, Everbee helps you understand the competitive landscape and revenue potential before committing hours of design work.You're at $1,000+/month and optimizing. At this level, the $30/month is a small percentage of revenue, and the data helps you double down on what's working and drop what isn't.

When it's not worth it

You're brand new and haven't listed anything yet. Spend that $30 on listing fees instead. You learn more from listing 150 products ($30 / $0.20) than from looking at competitor data. Get products live first, optimize second.You're under $500/month and on a tight budget. eRank Pro at $5.99/month gives you keyword research and listing audit features. It doesn't have Everbee's revenue estimates, but it covers 80% of what a new seller needs. We compared [eRank vs Marmalead](/blog/erank-vs-marmalead-etsy-seo-tools) in detail.You already know your niche well. If you've been selling planners for a year and know exactly what works, you don't need Everbee to tell you that budget planners sell better than gratitude journals. Your own data is more accurate than Everbee's estimates.

The alternative approach

You can get most of Everbee's value for free, just slower:

1. Search Etsy for your target keyword 2. Sort by "most relevant" (Etsy's default, which factors in sales velocity) 3. Look at review counts and favorites on the top results 4. Check listing ages (a listing with 500 reviews that's been up for 6 months is selling faster than one with 500 reviews over 3 years) 5. Note their prices, tags, and photo styles

This manual research takes 30-45 minutes per keyword. Everbee does it in seconds. If you research 2-3 keywords per month, the time savings doesn't justify $30. If you research 10-20 keywords per month, it might.

My verdict

I used Everbee for 4 months. It helped me identify 2 product ideas I wouldn't have found otherwise. Both products now earn about $150/month combined. So the $120 I spent on Everbee ($30 x 4) paid for itself in under a month.

But I cancelled after month 4 because my product research slowed down. I'm now in a creation-and-optimization phase where my own sales data is more valuable than competitor estimates. I'll probably re-subscribe next time I explore a new niche.

For a broader look at all the Etsy tools and which ones are worth paying for at different stages, read our [best Etsy seller tools for 2026](/blog/best-etsy-seller-tools-2026). And for free tag research, our [tag analyzer](/tools/tag-analyzer) shows tag performance data without a monthly subscription.

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