How to Find Someone's Amazon Storefront
Here's how to find someone's Amazon storefront: search their name or handle in a free storefront finder — Spreesy's checks 1,200+ verified storefront links — or type amazon.com/shop/ plus their social handle straight into your browser. Without a link, a Google search for site:amazon.com/shop "their name" often surfaces the page, and most active creators also link their storefront from a TikTok or Instagram bio. Amazon's own search bar is the worst place to look: it matches products, not people.
Search intent
Built for sellers searching how to find someone's amazon storefront
Consumers and Amazon sellers trying to locate a specific person's Amazon storefront, with or without a direct link.
How can I find someone's storefront on Amazon?
Every Amazon influencer storefront lives at amazon.com/shop/ followed by the creator's handle, but Amazon's search is built for products — typing a person's name into it almost never surfaces their page. That makes a name-based index the shortcut: put the creator's name or social handle into the free Amazon storefront finder and it resolves to a verified amazon.com/shop link if one is on record. It covers 1,200+ verified storefront links and takes seconds, so run it before any manual method.
- Open the free storefront finder and enter the creator's name or handle.
- If it hits, you get the direct amazon.com/shop link — done.
- If it misses, that is not proof there is no storefront; fall through to the manual methods below.
How to find someone's Amazon storefront without a link
With no link, work from the URL pattern and search operators. Storefront URLs follow amazon.com/shop/HANDLE, and the handle is usually the creator's social username, not their display name — so try amazon.com/shop/ plus their exact TikTok or Instagram handle first. If guessing fails, Google indexes storefront pages even though Amazon does not surface them, and a scoped operator query is far more precise than a plain name search.
- Try amazon.com/shop/ + their exact social handle, then obvious variants (no spaces, no dots).
- Google: site:amazon.com/shop "their name" — quotes on, then off if it returns nothing.
- Google: "their handle" "amazon storefront" — catches roundup posts and bio pages that link the storefront.
- Add a niche word ("kitchen", "skincare") when the name is common.
- Honest limit: brand-new storefronts may not be indexed yet, and creators who leave the Influencer Program typically lose the page — a 404 can mean the storefront is gone, not that you searched wrong.
How to find an Amazon storefront from a TikTok or Instagram bio
Most active Amazon creators publish their storefront where their audience already is. Check the bio link first: on TikTok and Instagram it is usually a link hub (Linktree, Beacons, Stan store) with the Amazon storefront listed among other links — scroll the whole hub, because storefronts often sit below newer sponsored links. On YouTube, check the channel About page and recent video descriptions.
- Bio link hubs: open every link labeled "Amazon", "storefront", "my finds", or "shop my favorites".
- Pinned posts and pinned comments frequently carry the storefront link even when the bio does not.
- Video captions saying "link in bio" or "linked in my storefront" confirm a storefront exists — worth the operator search even if you cannot find the link itself.
- Limit: some creators only share the link in stories or broadcast channels, where it expires.
How do I find an Amazon storefront on the Amazon app?
The Amazon app is the least reliable place to find a specific person's storefront. Amazon's search bar is built to match products, and influencer storefront pages rarely surface in results. In-app creator discovery has also changed repeatedly — Amazon shut down its Inspire discovery feed in early 2025, and remaining creator surfaces vary by region and app version as of 2026. The one dependable in-app path is your own Following list, which only helps if you already follow the creator: tap the profile icon, open Your Account, then your Amazon profile, and look for a Following section (menu names vary by app version). If you have never followed them, skip the app and use the name search or Google methods above.
- App path (wording varies by version): profile icon → Your Account → your Amazon profile → Following.
- Following a storefront means you can get back to it later from that list.
- Full walkthrough: see the guide on finding Amazon storefronts you follow.
How to find an Amazon seller storefront
A seller storefront is a different page from an influencer storefront, and the lookup path is different too. Sellers are businesses that ship products; their storefront is reachable from any product they sell. Open one of their listings and click the seller name next to "Sold by" (below the buy buttons) to reach their seller profile, which lists their other products and feedback. Brands enrolled in Brand Registry also get a dedicated brand store — click the brand name above the product title to reach it (those URLs start with amazon.com/stores/). Influencers, by contrast, sell nothing — their amazon.com/shop page is a curated list of other sellers' products they recommend for commission.
- Seller storefront: product page → "Sold by [name]" link → seller profile and product list.
- Brand store: click the brand name above the product title — URLs start with amazon.com/stores/.
- Influencer storefront: amazon.com/shop/HANDLE — recommendations, not inventory.
- If you only know the business name, search it on Amazon, open any of its products, and click through from there.
For sellers: from one storefront lookup to a creator shortlist
If you are an Amazon seller checking a creator out before outreach, a single lookup answers one question: does this person have a live storefront? A working amazon.com/shop page means they are an approved Amazon Influencer with a commission incentive to feature products — a meaningfully warmer prospect than a creator with no Amazon presence. Doing this one name at a time does not scale past a handful of candidates, though. Spreesy does the same resolution across a creator database and pairs it with a product-fit score (the Spreesy Index — a fit signal, not a performance guarantee), so you shortlist creators who both fit your product and already have a storefront.
- Live storefront = approved Amazon Influencer with an existing commission incentive.
- Dead or missing storefront is a signal too — weigh that creator differently in outreach.
- Batch research: see the guides on finding Amazon influencer storefronts and evaluating fit.
Simple workflow
Search the name in the free finder
Enter the creator's name or handle in the Amazon storefront finder. It resolves against 1,200+ verified storefront links and returns the direct amazon.com/shop URL on a hit.
Try the direct URL
Type amazon.com/shop/ plus their exact social handle into your browser. Handles usually match TikTok or Instagram usernames, not display names — try variants without spaces or dots.
Run the Google operator query
Search site:amazon.com/shop "their name" on Google. If that misses, drop the quotes, then try "their handle" "amazon storefront", adding a niche keyword for common names.
Check their social bios
Open the bio link on TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube. Scroll link hubs (Linktree, Beacons) to the bottom and check pinned posts and video descriptions for a storefront link.
Check your Amazon Following list — or ask
If you already follow them on Amazon, your profile's Following section links straight to their page (menu names vary by app version). Otherwise, a comment or DM asking for the storefront link often gets a reply — creators earn commission from storefront traffic, so they have an incentive to share it.
Before you conclude the storefront doesn't exist
- You tried amazon.com/shop/ with their exact social handle, not their display name.
- You ran site:amazon.com/shop with the name in quotes, then without.
- You Googled the handle plus "amazon storefront".
- You scrolled every bio link hub (Linktree, Beacons, Stan) to the bottom.
- You checked pinned posts, pinned comments, and recent video descriptions.
- You checked your Amazon Following list in case you already follow them.
- You remembered a 404 can mean the creator left the Influencer Program and the page was taken down.
Which lookup method fits your situation?
Common questions
Short answers for sellers deciding how to use this guide.
How can I find someone's storefront on Amazon?
Search their name or handle in a free storefront finder, or type amazon.com/shop/ plus their social handle into your browser. If both miss, Google site:amazon.com/shop "their name" — Google indexes storefront pages even though Amazon's own search bar rarely surfaces them.
How to find someone's Amazon storefront without a link?
Work from the URL pattern and search operators. Try amazon.com/shop/ plus their exact social username first, since handles usually match TikTok or Instagram usernames. Then Google site:amazon.com/shop "their name", and finally check their bio link hubs and pinned posts — most active creators publish the storefront link somewhere on social.
How do I find an Amazon storefront?
It depends which kind. An influencer storefront lives at amazon.com/shop/HANDLE — find it via a name search in a storefront finder, Google operators, or the creator's social bio. A seller storefront is reachable from any of that seller's product pages via the "Sold by" link, and Brand Registry brands also have dedicated brand stores reachable by clicking the brand name above a product title.
How to find an Amazon seller storefront?
Open any product the seller lists and click the seller name next to "Sold by" below the buy buttons — that opens their seller profile with their full product list and feedback. For brands, clicking the brand name above the product title usually opens their dedicated brand store. Seller storefronts are different pages from influencer storefronts, which only curate recommendations.
Why can't I find a storefront by searching on Amazon?
Amazon's search bar matches products, not people, and there is no public people-search, so influencer storefront pages rarely appear in results. Amazon's in-app creator discovery has also changed repeatedly — the Inspire feed was shut down in early 2025 — so as of 2026 the dependable routes are a name-based finder tool, Google operators, and social bios.
Do all Amazon influencers have a storefront?
No. Only creators approved into the Amazon Influencer Program get an amazon.com/shop storefront page. A creator posting Amazon links may be a regular Amazon Associate with affiliate links but no storefront, and creators who leave the program typically have their storefront page removed.
Is it free to view someone's Amazon storefront?
Yes. Storefront pages are public and free to browse with no account required. You only need to be signed in if you want to follow the storefront so it appears in your Amazon Following list.