What Etsy Niche Research Actually Measures
Most sellers approach Etsy niche research the wrong way. They browse the bestseller lists, notice a product category performing well, and assume the niche is worth entering. What they've actually found is a saturated market — the top sellers there have months or years of listing history, review counts, and Listing Quality Scores that a new listing cannot compete with on day one.
Genuine niche research measures something different: the ratio between buyer demand and seller supply at a specific level of search specificity. A search for "planner" returns millions of listings (useless for analysis). A search for "ADHD daily planner printable undated" returns 3,400 listings and tells you exactly what the competitive environment looks like for a buyer making that specific purchase decision.
The platform matters too. Etsy's algorithm in 2026 weights listing quality score — your historical click-through rate and conversion rate — alongside keyword relevancy. This means a new listing entering a niche with 40,000 established sellers, each with hundreds of reviews and optimised images, faces a structural disadvantage regardless of keyword quality. Finding a niche before it saturates is the most sustainable path to consistent Etsy sales.
The secondary goal of niche research is identifying price ceiling. A technically low-competition niche selling products for $2.50 average is rarely worth entering — the revenue per sale doesn't justify the design effort. The best niches have both manageable competition and a price floor above $8, ideally above $12.
The Three Signals That Actually Matter
Signal 1: Competition (Listing Count)
Search your target keyword on Etsy and look at the total number of active listings returned. For digital downloads specifically, these thresholds apply in 2026:
- Under 5,000 listings — Low competition. New listings can rank within days.
- 5,000–15,000 listings — Medium competition. Differentiation through design and sub-niche specificity is required.
- 15,000–50,000 listings — High competition. Only enter with a clearly differentiated product targeting a narrow buyer persona.
- Above 50,000 listings — Saturated. Avoid for new shops unless bundling or specialising into a sub-niche with its own search terms.
Signal 2: Demand (Average Saves / Favourites)
Open the top 20–30 listings in your keyword search and note their favourite counts. Calculate the average. This is Etsy's closest public proxy to search volume — a listing saved 4,000 times means buyers have repeatedly engaged with it over time, confirming purchase intent exists. Targets:
- Under 100 average saves — Very low demand. Buyers aren't searching for this.
- 100–500 average saves — Moderate demand. Viable if competition is very low.
- 500–2,000 average saves — Good demand. Sufficient to support multiple sellers.
- Above 2,000 average saves — Strong demand. Worth pursuing even with medium competition.
Signal 3: Price Ceiling (Average and Maximum Prices)
Record the average price across the top 30 listings and the highest price you see in the top results. The average tells you where most sellers position. The maximum tells you what buyers have already demonstrated willingness to pay. A niche where the highest price is $4.99 is a commodity market. A niche where buyers pay $18–$35 for the right product has margin you can capture with a premium offering.
Step-by-Step: The Niche Research Process
- Start with a broad niche hypothesis, not a product idea. Begin with a buyer audience or use case: "people managing ADHD symptoms", "Airbnb hosts setting up a new property", "teachers organising their classroom". The product type comes after you understand the audience — not before. This prevents the common mistake of designing a product nobody is specifically searching for.
- Generate 5–8 specific search queries from that audience. For ADHD: "adhd planner printable", "adhd daily schedule", "adhd time management tracker", "executive dysfunction planner", "adhd planner for adults", "adhd planner undated". Each of these is a separate niche with its own listing count and demand profile.
- Search each query on Etsy and record the listing count and top 20 average save count. Use a simple spreadsheet with four columns: keyword, listing count, avg saves, avg price. This takes 15–20 minutes per batch of 8 keywords. For "adhd planner printable" you'll see approximately 12,000–18,000 listings (medium-high), while "executive dysfunction planner" returns under 3,000 (low competition) — a significant difference for the same audience.
- Calculate an opportunity score for each keyword. See the formula section below. Sort by score descending. Your target keywords will emerge from this ranking — not from guesswork.
- Analyse the price distribution of your target keywords. Look specifically at what price bands are underserved. If 80% of listings for "adhd planner printable" price between $4–$8, but occasional listings appear at $14–$18 with hundreds of saves, the mid-range is underserved. Your pricing target should slot into that gap.
- Choose a sub-niche with a specific buyer persona. "ADHD planner" is the niche. "ADHD weekly planner for college students with time-blocking and energy tracking" is the product. This specificity lets you target a 4-word long-tail keyword with near-zero direct competition while still appearing in searches for the broader niche.
- Validate with the tag and title analysis of top performers. Open the 5 bestsellers in your chosen keyword and note every tag they use. The tags they share in common across multiple listings are the buyer vocabulary — those are the phrases buyers type. Tags that only appear once are likely low-traffic experiments. Build your 13 tags from the shared vocabulary of top performers.
The Opportunity Score Formula
Converting your three signals into a single score lets you objectively compare niches rather than relying on intuition. The formula below uses normalised sub-scores (each 0–100) weighted by their relative importance to new listing success:
For reference, "executive dysfunction planner" scores approximately 78/100 (low competition + proven ADHD demand + $10+ average price), while a broad search like "printable" scores around 12/100 (millions of listings, unfocused demand, extreme price spread).
Templifier's Niche Opportunity Ranker runs this exact formula across 15 digital product niches simultaneously — pulling real Etsy listing counts, average saves, and price data live from the Etsy API.
Run Niche Research Free in Templifier →2026 Digital Product Niche Comparison
The table below reflects real Etsy listing data from Q2 2026. Opportunity scores are calculated using the formula above. These are directional benchmarks — run live searches to confirm current figures before committing design time.
| Niche Keyword | Est. Listings | Demand Signal | Avg Price | Opportunity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Executive dysfunction planner | ~2,800 | High (ADHD audience) | $11–$16 | Strong · 78/100 |
| Airbnb welcome book template | ~8,900 | High (host niche) | $13–$20 | Strong · 72/100 |
| Shadow work journal printable | ~11,000 | Very high (trending) | $9–$14 | Moderate · 64/100 |
| Teacher planner printable | ~22,000 | High (seasonal) | $8–$14 | Moderate · 52/100 |
| Daily planner printable | ~85,000 | Very high | $5–$12 | Saturated · 22/100 |
| Notion template for ADHD | ~1,200 | Medium (emerging) | $12–$22 | Strong · 80/100 |
Tools for Etsy Niche Research
The two paid tools most commonly used for Etsy niche research are eRank and Marmalead. eRank provides keyword search volume estimates (derived from its own database, not Etsy's internal data), listing count data, and a trend graph going back 12 months. Marmalead's distinctive feature is its "engagement score" — a composite of search volume, listing count, and engagement signals — which gives a single number comparable to the opportunity score formula above. Both cost $9.99–$19.99/month for meaningful access.
The limitation of both tools is that their keyword volume data is estimated, not real — neither Etsy nor any third party has access to Etsy's internal search query counts. What they do have is crawler data from listing results, which approximates demand through proxy signals (saves, reviews, listing age). Understanding this distinction prevents over-relying on their numbers.
Templifier's Niche Opportunity Ranker takes a different approach: it pulls live data directly from Etsy's API for 15 template-specific niches simultaneously, returning real listing counts, real average prices, and real average save counts — not estimates. The resulting opportunity score is calculated from actual marketplace data, not from a third-party database. For digital product sellers focused on printables, planners, journals, and Notion templates, it covers the relevant search space without a monthly subscription. Access it free at /studio/ under the Research section.