
When to Cut the Etsy Cord and Launch Your Own Website 🪓✨
Let’s Start with the Key Takeaways:
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How to tell when Etsy is no longer serving your business goals
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The signs you're ready to launch your own Shopify (or standalone) store
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Pros and cons of staying on Etsy vs. going solo
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How wholesale changed my game and why it might work for you
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Real talk: the money, the mindset, and the move
Let's Start with a Little Disclaimer Dance 🕺
If you’re new here: welcome, friend! And if you’re returning — bless your loyal heart.
Quick confession: grammar and I are still beefing. So if you spot any rogue commas or typo gremlins, just pretend you didn’t see 'em. We’re all here for the vibes, the truth bombs, and maybe a little tough love.
Also, there may be affiliate links tucked in here like Easter eggs 🥚💰. Clicking them costs you nothing, but might throw a few coins my way — and I’m forever grateful if you do!
Breaking Up with Etsy: Is It Time?
Look, I’ve got a soft spot for Etsy. It gave me a seat at the table when I had no clue what I was doing. And for a while, it worked. Like really worked. But over time, I started asking:
“Is Etsy still helping me grow — or is it holding me back?”
Spoiler alert: it was the latter. And cutting the cord was scary, but freeing. So let’s talk about when you might want to do the same.
1. Your Sales Are Steady, But Your Fees Keep Growing
If you're selling consistently, but every time you get a payout it feels like someone already took a bite outta your sandwich 🥪… you're not alone. Between Etsy listing fees, transaction fees, and ad fees (don’t get me started), you can start to feel like you're working for them — not yourself.
My tipping point:
When I realized I was selling more but keeping less, I knew I had to shift gears.
2. You’re Tired of Competing on Price
There comes a point where no amount of glittery keywords or SEO wizardry will save you from copycats selling your vibe at half the price. On Etsy, there’s always someone ready to undercut, especially if your product starts trending.
On your own site? You set the tone. You build the brand. You own your space. 💅🏽
3. You’ve Got a Loyal Audience (Or You’re Ready to Build One)
If you’re seeing repeat buyers, if folks are DMing you on Insta asking for custom stuff, or if you’ve built any kind of audience — it's time to bring them home.
👉 My move to Shopify wasn’t instant success. But it gave me control, let me build an email list, and — big one — sell wholesale without jumping through hoops.
4. You're Not Just Selling Stickers — You're Building a Brand
There’s a big difference between being “a shop on Etsy” and being your own brand. When people start to recognize your name, your vibe, or say “OMG this is so you!” when they see your work — that’s your sign. You’re onto something.
Etsy’s cool for exposure, sure. But your own site? That’s where you get to show off. Custom domains. Branded packaging. Email signups. All the things that scream professionalism — even if you’re still packing orders in your pajamas at 2am. (No judgment, I’ve been there too.)
5. You're Ready to Say Goodbye to the Algorithm Games
Remember that time you went from 10 sales a day to crickets because Etsy decided your stuff wasn’t cool anymore? Yeah. Been there. Nothing like waking up to silence and panic-refreshing your dashboard for answers.
On your own site, you make the rules. You drive the traffic. You run the ads (if you want). And when someone signs up for your email list? You own that connection — not Etsy.
6. You're Thinking Long-Term (Not Just Next Month’s Rent)
Etsy is great for getting started, but not always great for scaling. You’re renting space. And the landlord keeps raising the rent.
Launching your own website doesn’t mean you're abandoning Etsy overnight — you can absolutely run both. But if you're serious about long-term growth (and maybe one day hiring help so you're not printing labels at midnight), then your own site is a must.
What Happened When I Finally Jumped Ship
Let me be real: I didn’t just wake up one day and say, “Time to leave Etsy!”
Nope. I held on way longer than I should have. Why?
Because Etsy felt safe.
Because I was scared I wouldn’t get sales on my own site.
Because I didn’t know how to set up email marketing, Google Analytics, Shopify themes — all the “techy” stuff no one tells you about.
But when I finally made the leap and focused on wholesale through my own store, things shifted. I wasn’t just getting one-off sales — I was building volume orders. I started selling more consistently, and honestly, making more money. Because their is people who buy wholesale. They’re not just looking for a one-time sticker. They’re stocking up.
Final Thoughts: You Don’t Need to Have It All Figured Out
Don’t wait until you feel “ready.” You’ll never be 100% ready. Just start somewhere.
Build the site. Launch messy. Add products one by one. Your site doesn’t need to be a digital palace on day one — it just needs to work. (Trust me, people are way more forgiving than you think.)
And if you’re still making that Etsy vs. Website decision? Don’t overthink it.
You can start small. You can keep both.
But eventually, if you want more control, more growth, and more peace of mind — it might be time to cut the cord. ✂️