
Shopify Search Optimisation: Helping Customers Find Products
Alex Morgan
Head of Strategy
Shoppers who use site search convert at 2-3x the rate of those who do not. Here's how to optimise your Shopify store search to help customers find what they want faster.
Visitors who use your site search are telling you something important: they know what they want, they just cannot find it. They are the most motivated buyers on your store, converting at two to three times the rate of browsers. Yet most Shopify stores treat their search functionality as an afterthought. Here is how to change that.
Why Shopify's Default Search Falls Short
Shopify's built-in search is exact-match only by default. A customer searching for 'trainers' will not find products tagged as 'sneakers'. A customer who misspells 'leggings' as 'leggings' (common autocorrect errors) will get zero results. These zero-result searches represent lost sales.
Upgrading Your Search
Shopify's Predictive Search API and semantic search apps like Searchanise, Boost Commerce, or Searchie solve the fundamental limitations of native search:
- Synonym handling: map 'trainers' to 'sneakers', 'sofa' to 'couch', 'jumper' to 'sweater'
- Typo tolerance: fuzzy matching returns relevant results even with misspellings
- Autocomplete and suggestions: predictive results appear as the customer types
- Faceted filtering in search results: filter by category, price, size, colour within results
- Personalisation: surface results based on browsing and purchase history
Optimising for What Customers Actually Search
- 1Review your zero-results search terms monthly — these are your biggest opportunities
- 2Add synonyms for every term that returns zero or poor results
- 3Improve product tagging and metafield data — better data means better results
- 4Ensure variant options (colours, sizes) are searchable
- 5Add product-specific keywords to descriptions and tags that reflect how customers describe things
The Search Bar Placement
Make your search bar visible and prominent — especially on mobile. A hidden search icon that requires a tap to expand reduces search usage significantly. On mobile, a full-width search bar at the top of the page outperforms a small icon in almost every test.
“Site search is not just a navigation tool — it is a window into exactly what your customers want. Treat the data it generates with the same seriousness as your analytics.”
Alex Morgan
Head of Strategy, Flex Commerce


