The counterintuitive way to rank higher on Etsy: remove keywords
Everyone tells Etsy sellers to stuff more keywords into their titles. Here's the problem — that advice is outdated, and it's quietly killing your conversion rate.
The keyword stuffing problem nobody talks about
Open any Etsy title-writing guide from the last few years and you'll see the same advice: cram as many keywords as possible into your 140 characters. The logic sounds right. More keywords means more searches. More searches means more traffic. More traffic means more sales.
Except it doesn't work like that anymore — and it damages your shop in two distinct ways.
Problem 1: Buyers see through it
When someone searches Etsy, they read dozens of titles in a few seconds. Titles that look like a keyword list — "Handmade Blue Ceramic Mug Coffee Cup Pottery Gift for Mom Tea Cup Blue Mug" — register as spam before the buyer consciously processes why. The trust signal dies before your photos get a chance. Your click-through rate drops. Your conversion rate drops. And when those numbers drop, Etsy's algorithm demotes your listing.
Problem 2: The algorithm evolved
Etsy's search has moved toward semantic understanding. It knows that "ceramic" and "pottery" are the same material. It knows "mug" and "cup" describe the same object category. Listing both words doesn't signal depth — it signals redundancy. You're not earning extra relevance. You're wasting space that could hold a more specific, differentiating keyword.
The goal of a good Etsy title is not to describe everything your product could be. It's to lead with what your product is — and connect emotionally with the exact buyer who's looking for it.
Paste it into the Humanizer and see your score in seconds.
What is subtractive SEO?
Subtractive SEO is the practice of removing words from a title to increase its effectiveness. Instead of asking "what keywords can I add?", you ask "what words are hurting me?"
There are four types of words that hurt Etsy titles:
- Duplicates — The same word appearing more than once. Etsy reads it once. You've lost characters for nothing.
- Near-synonyms — Words that mean the same thing in Etsy's semantic understanding. "Mug" and "Cup." "Ceramic" and "Pottery." "Handmade" and "Handcrafted."
- Attribute repeats — Words you've already entered in your backend listing Attributes (color, material, occasion). These are factored into search separately. Repeating them in your title wastes space.
- Generic filler — Phrases like "Gift for Mom" or "Perfect for" that every seller uses, mean nothing specific, and convert poorly because they speak to no one in particular.
The first 40 characters: your most valuable real estate
On a desktop browser, Etsy shows roughly 70–90 characters of your title in search results. On mobile — where the majority of Etsy shopping happens — you get approximately 35 to 45 characters before the title is cut off with an ellipsis.
That means your first 40 characters are the only thing most buyers will ever read.
Here's the brutal audit question: if someone saw only the first 40 characters of your title, would they know exactly what your product is and why they'd want it?
"Personalized Gift for Mom | Ceramic Mug..."
The buyer sees "Personalized Gift for Mom" and is still waiting to learn what the product is. By the time the title is cut off, they have no idea if you sell a mug, a necklace, or a print.
"Handmade Ceramic Coffee Mug with Flower..."
The buyer immediately knows the product (ceramic coffee mug), the aesthetic (flower), and can picture whether it matches what they're searching for. The click decision happens in under two seconds.
The tool highlights exactly what buyers see before the cutoff.
Use your backend Attributes — and stop repeating them in titles
Etsy gives every listing a set of structured Attributes: color, material, occasion, style, and more. These attributes are indexed separately and help your listing appear in filtered searches without needing to appear in the title itself.
Most sellers don't realize this — so they enter "Blue" in their Color attribute, then also write "Blue" in the title. They enter "Ceramic" in the Material attribute, then write it in the title again. Each redundant word is a wasted character that could be used for a more specific, descriptive term that does appear only in the title.
The right workflow
- Fill in every Attribute your product qualifies for.
- Then write your title as if those attributes don't exist — because in the search index, they already do.
- Use the reclaimed space to describe the specific aesthetic, the use case, or the emotional benefit of your product.
Before and after: real title transformations
Example 1: Coffee Mug
Handmade Blue Ceramic Mug Coffee Cup Pottery Gift for Mom Tea Cup Blue Mug Handcrafted Gift Ceramic Pottery Coffee Mug Unique Gift Mom
Handmade Ceramic Coffee Mug with Botanical Print, Cozy Home Gift for Her
The humanized version leads with the product, adds a differentiating detail (botanical print), and speaks to an emotion (cozy, gift for her) without repeating a single word.
Example 2: Printable Wall Art
Printable Wall Art Digital Download Bedroom Wall Art Living Room Print Boho Decor Downloadable Print Wall Art Digital Art Instant Download
Boho Botanical Bedroom Print, Instant Digital Download, Neutral Tones
"Wall art" and "print" meant the same thing, yet they appeared four times combined. The clean version puts the aesthetic first (boho botanical), specifies the room, and keeps the download signal once.
How Etsy's algorithm actually scores your listing
Etsy uses a quality score that weighs search relevance against engagement signals. The engagement signals — click-through rate (CTR) and conversion rate (CVR) — are measured relative to how often your listing appears in search.
Here's the part most sellers miss: a listing that appears in 10,000 searches and converts at 1% is ranked below a listing that appears in 3,000 searches and converts at 4%. Etsy's algorithm rewards efficiency, not volume.
Keyword stuffing inflates your search impressions by matching more queries. But it simultaneously tanks your CTR (because the title looks spammy) and your CVR (because the wrong buyers are clicking through). The result is a listing that appears constantly and performs poorly — the worst possible outcome for your ranking.
Subtractive SEO shrinks your search surface area deliberately — matching fewer, more relevant searches, and converting those searches at a higher rate. That signals quality to Etsy's algorithm and earns better placement over time.
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