Sourcing guide

How to Find Amazon Influencer Storefronts

To find Amazon influencer storefronts, start with a free storefront finder that checks any TikTok, Instagram, or YouTube handle against amazon.com/shop and a 1,200+ verified-link index in seconds, then layer on five manual methods: #FoundItOnAmazon feed mining, Google site:amazon.com/shop operators, creator bio links, competitor listing videos, and Amazon Live. Amazon publishes no directory of influencer storefronts as of 2026, so every method works around that gap — and each one surfaces storefronts the others miss.

Free direct check: paste a TikTok, Instagram, or YouTube handle and see whether amazon.com/shop/that-handle is live.
Five manual methods with exact search operators — and an honest note on where each one breaks down.
Amazon has no public storefront directory as of 2026; this guide is the workaround.

Search intent

Built for sellers searching how to find amazon influencer storefronts

Amazon sellers and brands looking for working methods to find which creators run Amazon storefronts, either to recruit them or to research a competitor's influencers.

Set up your creator workspace

Paste the Amazon product URL or ASIN you want to plan around. Spreesy uses it to set up your workspace after you start the trial.

Uses the ASIN only to set up your workspace for the trial.

How to find Amazon influencer storefronts without a directory

Every storefront lives at amazon.com/shop/ followed by a handle, but Amazon offers no public search or directory for those pages as of 2026 — you cannot type 'storefronts' into the Amazon search bar and browse them. Worse, only creators who claim a custom handle get a guessable URL; the rest sit on auto-generated addresses that no lookup can derive from a social username. That structure is why 'top storefront' blog lists go stale fast and why finding storefronts takes a stack of methods rather than one search.

  • Custom URL format: amazon.com/shop/their-handle — guessable when the creator claims a name that matches their social handle.
  • Auto-generated URL: amazon.com/shop/influencer-1a2b3c4d — findable only through links the creator shares publicly.
  • No native Amazon search covers /shop/ pages, so third-party tools and manual mining fill the gap.

Method 1: Run a free Amazon storefront finder check

The fastest way to answer 'does this creator have a storefront?' is a direct lookup. Spreesy's free Amazon Storefront Finder takes a TikTok, Instagram, or YouTube handle (or a full profile URL), checks whether amazon.com/shop/that-handle resolves to a live storefront, and also searches an index of 1,200+ verified storefront links tied to creator profiles. No signup is needed for a few checks per day.

  • Paste the creator's handle or full profile URL and hit Check storefront.
  • A hit returns the live storefront URL you can open and vet immediately.
  • Honest limit: creators on auto-generated /shop/ addresses who never claimed a custom name can only be found via their public links — use Methods 4 and 5 for those.

Method 2: Mine #FoundItOnAmazon — where Amazon storefront influencers surface

Amazon aggregates shoppable creator posts under the #FoundItOnAmazon tag; as of 2026 the feed lives under Amazon's Shop by Interest pages at amazon.com/finds, which includes a dedicated #FoundItOnAmazon section (Amazon has moved this feed around over the years, so navigate from amazon.com/finds rather than trusting an old deep link). Posts credit the creator, and the creator's profile links to their storefront — so scroll the feed for your product's aesthetic, then click through post, profile, storefront in that order.

  • Best for lifestyle-adjacent categories (home, kitchen, fashion, beauty) where the feed is densest.
  • Skews toward creators Amazon already promotes — the same ones every brand sees, so expect more competition for their attention.
  • No category filters or contact info; you still have to find the creator's social handle yourself for outreach.

Method 3: Google operators that surface influencer Amazon stores

Google indexes a slice of storefront pages and, more usefully, the link-in-bio pages where creators post their storefront URLs. These operator queries pull both. Coverage is incomplete and results go stale, but it costs nothing and works at bulk-prospecting speed.

  • site:amazon.com/shop kitchen — indexed storefront pages whose titles or taglines mention your niche (keyword matching here is weak; treat hits as leads, not a complete list).
  • site:linktr.ee "amazon storefront" skincare — Linktree pages that advertise a storefront in your category; swap in beacons.ai or stan.store for the same query.
  • "amazon.com/shop" "[creator name or handle]" — finds where a specific creator has shared their storefront link anywhere Google can see, which catches auto-generated URLs the direct lookup can't guess.

Method 4: TikTok and Instagram bio mining for influencers' Amazon storefront links

Search your niche plus 'amazon finds' or 'amazon storefront' on TikTok and Instagram, then check each promising creator's bio and link-in-bio page for a /shop/ URL. This is the slowest method per storefront found, but it is the only one that reliably reaches smaller creators before they show up in feeds or indexes — and it hands you the social handle you need for outreach at the same time.

  • TikTok search: '[your niche] amazon storefront' or '[your niche] amazon finds', then filter by recent posts.
  • Instagram: the same phrases as hashtags, plus 'amazon storefront' in the bio search of niche accounts you already follow.
  • Watch out: many bio links are one-off affiliate links, not storefronts — confirm the URL actually contains amazon.com/shop/ before logging it.

Method 5: Check the video section on competitor listings

Open a competitor's ASIN and scroll to the video section on the product page (often labeled 'Videos for this product'). Influencers with an active storefront whose videos pass Amazon's moderation — and who have signed up for onsite commissions — can have their shoppable videos placed on relevant product detail pages; Amazon's own help pages have cited different minimum-video thresholds over time, so don't anchor on an exact number. Each influencer video credits the creator, and the creator's profile links to their storefront. This is the highest-intent manual method: everyone you find is already making shoppable content in your exact category.

  • Work through 5–10 competitor ASINs and log every recurring creator name.
  • Some videos in the section are brand-uploaded rather than influencer-made — check that a creator profile is attached before counting it.
  • Slow to scale, but the fit quality per creator found is typically the best of any manual method.

Method 6: Amazon Live, plus a word on 'best storefront' lists

Amazon Live remains active in 2026: creators stream shoppable broadcasts at amazon.com/live, and streams and replays surface on product pages and category feeds. Browsing streams in your category is another path from content to creator profile to storefront. As for 'best Amazon fashion influencer storefronts' roundups — most are lead-gen listicles that were stale the month they were published, because storefront links rot and creators churn. A list you build yourself this week, from the feed, the video sections, and the finder, will usually beat any published roundup for your specific category.

  • Browse amazon.com/live by category and note creators who stream products like yours.
  • Treat published 'top storefront' lists as seed ideas to verify, never as an outreach list.
  • For fashion specifically, #FoundItOnAmazon plus TikTok bio mining is the densest combination.

Simple workflow

1

Check creators you already know

Paste the handles of creators already on your radar into the free storefront finder and get a live-storefront yes/no on each in seconds.

2

Pull category creators from competitor listings

Open 5–10 competitor ASINs, scroll to the video section on each, and log every creator with a profile attached — they are already making shoppable content in your category.

3

Expand with #FoundItOnAmazon and Google operators

Scroll Amazon's finds feed for your product's aesthetic and run site:amazon.com/shop and link-in-bio operator queries to widen the list.

4

Verify each storefront is live and active

Open every /shop/ URL you collected. Drop dead links, and prefer storefronts with recent idea lists, photos, or videos over pages that look abandoned.

5

Log handle, storefront URL, and category fit in one sheet

Record the social handle next to the storefront link — outreach happens on social, not on Amazon — and note whether the storefront actually features your product's category.

6

Move to evaluation and outreach

Finding the storefront is step one. Vet the creator behind it (audience fit, content quality, activity), then send a short, specific first message.

Before you add a storefront to your outreach list

  • The amazon.com/shop/ URL loads a live storefront, not a 404.
  • The storefront shows recent activity — idea lists, photos, or videos from the last few months.
  • The creator's content category matches your product, not just 'Amazon finds' in general.
  • You have the creator's social handle recorded next to the storefront URL for outreach.
  • You noted whether the handle is custom or auto-generated (auto-generated links rot silently if the creator rebrands).
  • You checked whether they already feature competitor products — that is a fit signal, not a blocker.
  • The creator is deduplicated against your existing list.

Which storefront-finding method fits?

Free storefront finder
You have creator names or handles and want a live yes/no on each storefront in seconds.
Cannot find storefronts on auto-generated URLs the creator never linked publicly.
#FoundItOnAmazon feed mining
Browsing for lifestyle-category creators Amazon already surfaces, with visual proof of their style.
No filters or contact info, and it skews to creators every brand already sees.
Google site: operators
Bulk niche prospecting where the storefront or link-in-bio page is the entry point.
Google indexes only a slice of /shop/ pages, and cached results go stale.
Competitor listing videos
You want creators already producing shoppable content in your exact category.
Slow to scale, and some videos in the section are brand uploads, not influencer content.
TikTok / Instagram bio mining
Reaching smaller creators early, and catching auto-generated storefront URLs no lookup can guess.
Slowest per storefront found; many bio links are one-off affiliate links, not storefronts.

Common questions

Short answers for sellers deciding how to use this guide.

How do I find Amazon influencer storefronts?

Use a stack of methods, because Amazon has no storefront directory as of 2026. Start with a free storefront finder to check creators you already know, then mine Amazon's #FoundItOnAmazon feed, run Google site:amazon.com/shop searches, check creator bios on TikTok and Instagram, and open the video section on competitor product listings. Each method surfaces storefronts the others miss.

Can you search for influencer storefronts on Amazon?

Not directly. Amazon's search bar does not cover amazon.com/shop/ pages and there is no public directory as of 2026. The closest on-Amazon paths are the #FoundItOnAmazon feed under Amazon's Shop by Interest pages at amazon.com/finds, influencer videos on product detail pages, and Amazon Live — all of which link from content to a creator profile to their storefront.

How do I find out if a specific person has an Amazon storefront?

Try amazon.com/shop/their-handle directly, check their bio and link-in-bio pages, or paste their handle into a free storefront finder that runs the direct check and searches a verified-link index at the same time. If none of those hit, they may still have a storefront on an auto-generated URL — Google their name plus "amazon.com/shop" to catch links they have shared elsewhere.

Do all Amazon influencers have a storefront?

Creators accepted into the Amazon Influencer Program get a storefront as part of the program, so program members have one by definition. But many creators who post Amazon products are only in the standard Associates affiliate program or use third-party affiliate links, and they have no storefront page. That is why a direct check beats assuming from their content.

What are the best Amazon fashion influencer storefronts?

Published 'best of' lists go stale quickly — storefront links rot and creators churn. For fashion, the densest sources are the #FoundItOnAmazon feed and TikTok searches like 'fashion amazon storefront', filtered to recent posts. A list you build and verify yourself this week will usually fit your brand better than any roundup.

Why can't I find a creator's storefront even though I know they have one?

Some creators never claim a custom storefront name, so their page lives on an auto-generated address like amazon.com/shop/influencer-1a2b3c4d that cannot be guessed from their social handle. Those storefronts are only findable through links the creator shares publicly — check their link-in-bio page or Google their handle plus "amazon.com/shop".

Is there a list of Amazon storefront influencers?

There is no official list from Amazon. Blog listicles exist but are lead-gen pages that age badly. Spreesy's free storefront finder searches an index of 1,200+ verified storefront links tied to creator profiles, and the manual methods in this guide let you extend that with creators specific to your category.