Store Leads Review 2026

Last reviewed June 2026 by Théo Pascard

Store Leads

Store Leads

The store-level database for selling to ecommerce

Overview

Store Leads is a specialized database of online stores rather than a general B2B contact provider. It tracks 40+ attributes per store across 400+ ecommerce platforms, including installed apps and themes, estimated traffic and sales, location, and the broader tech stack, refreshed weekly. For anyone whose buyers are DTC brands on Shopify, BigCommerce, WooCommerce and similar, it answers the question generic databases struggle with: which stores actually exist, what they run on, and how big they are. The trade-off is that it is built around stores, not the named people inside them.

Who it's for

  • Shopify and ecommerce app or theme vendors prospecting installed-base and competitor-app users
  • Agencies selling design, dev, retention or CRO to DTC brands
  • SaaS and service companies whose ICP is defined by platform, app stack or store size
  • Investors and analysts mapping the ecommerce market for sourcing or research

Not for

B2B teams selling to non-ecommerce companies · Teams that need verified named decision-maker emails and direct dials as the core deliverable · Sellers targeting enterprise accounts outside the online-store universe · Buyers wanting an all-in-one sequencing and dialing sales platform

Capabilities

  • Database of online stores across 400+ ecommerce platforms, updated weekly
  • 60+ filters spanning technographics (installed apps, themes, platform), firmographics (sales, employees, location) and traffic
  • Competitor-app and tech-stack targeting to find stores running specific tools
  • CSV export and API access on higher tiers for piping data into a CRM or enrichment flow
  • Store-level signals like estimated traffic, revenue bands and social presence
  • Third-party review-platform data (Yotpo, Loox, Judge.me and others) surfaced per store

Ratings & reviews

4.9
22 reviews ↗
5★
21
4★
1
3★
0
2★
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1★
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👍 Pros

Data Accuracy 3Integrations 2Helpful 2Customer Support 2Lead Generation 1

👎 Cons

Poor Filtering 1

Pricing

TierPriceCredits / moNotes
Premium$75/mo2,000 searches/mo, limited to 2 ecommerce platforms, 1 user; extra users $35/mo; 15% off annual
Pro$250/moUnlimited searches, CSV export, API access, 2 users; extra users $35/mo
Elite$450/moAll stores across all platforms, full feature set, 3 users; extra users $35/mo
Enterprise$950/moAdvanced CRM features, 10 users, dedicated account manager

The honest take

Where it breaks

Store Leads is store-level, not contact-level: it excels at identifying and qualifying ecommerce sites by platform, apps and size, but it does not reliably hand you the verified named decision-maker emails most outbound motions need. Outside the ecommerce universe it has little to offer.

The verdict

For anyone selling into Shopify and the wider DTC ecosystem, Store Leads is the cleanest way to build and segment a list by platform, app stack and store size, and the depth of technographic filtering is genuinely hard to replicate with generic databases. Just treat it as the targeting layer, not the full stack, and plan to pair it with contact enrichment to actually reach buyers.

FAQ

Is Store Leads a contact database like Apollo or ZoomInfo?

No. It is a store-level database. It tells you which ecommerce sites exist and what they run, not the verified personal email of a named buyer. Many teams pair it with a contact-enrichment tool to reach people.

Which platforms does it cover?

It tracks stores across 400+ ecommerce platforms including Shopify, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, Magento and Wix, with technographic detail on installed apps and themes.

How fresh is the data?

Store Leads refreshes its dataset weekly, which is reasonable for technographic and firmographic store data that does not change daily.

What does it cost?

Plans run from Premium at $75/mo to Enterprise at $950/mo, with CSV export and API access starting on the $250/mo Pro tier. Annual billing carries a 15% discount and extra seats are $35/mo.

Can I get emails and contacts out of it?

It is primarily store and technographic data. Contact-level reach typically requires exporting stores and enriching them elsewhere, so budget for a second tool if named contacts are essential.

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