# The Best AI Product Finders for Ecommerce in 2026

> Compare the top AI product finder tools for ecommerce - how they work, what they cost, and which fits your store.

_Source: https://nobi.ai/blog/best-ai-product-finders-ecommerce_

## What are the best AI tools for finding products on an ecommerce site?

Shoppers who can't find the right product don't ask for help - they leave. The four tools below cover the main discovery jobs: AI search with conversational Q&A, developer-owned search infrastructure, packaged Shopify search, and full-site enterprise discovery. Here's what each one does and when it's the right call:

- **Nobi** - AI site search with a conversational shopping assistant in one platform, with semantic understanding that works out of the box. $25/mo base ($0.01/extra search, $0.10/extra message). Pick it when on-site discovery is the bottleneck and you want concrete per-search pricing.
- **Algolia** - developer-first search infrastructure with NeuralSearch for semantic matching on higher tiers. Usage-based pricing runs $2,000+/mo at mid-market scale. Pick it when an engineering team owns the discovery UX end to end.
- **Klevu** - AI search packaged for Shopify (now a division of Athos Commerce), strong on conversational query matching. Priced by domain count, sessions, and SKU volume - three tiers (Essential, Advanced, Expert); rates aren't published. Pick it when descriptive queries are your main CVR leak on Shopify.
- **Constructor** - enterprise AI-first product discovery with session-signal personalization across search, browse, category, and recommendations. Pricing is revenue-share and scales with GMV. Pick it when CVR work has to span the full site, not just the search bar.

| Product | Primary job | Best for | Pricing (starting) | Standout strength | Key weakness |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Nobi | AI site search with shopping assistant for product discovery | Teams whose finding-products bottleneck is on-site search and pre-purchase Q&A | $25/mo base (2,500 searches + 250 messages); $0.01/extra search, $0.10/extra message | Semantic search with grounded conversational answers in one platform with citation pills on every answer | Personalization is placeholder text and starter prompts only - no behavioral reranking yet |
| [Algolia](https://algolia.com) | Search API for engineering teams | Engineering teams that want full API control over ranking, indexing, and rendering | Usage-based on requests + records; pay-as-you-go rates scale with query volume; NeuralSearch requires the Elevate enterprise plan | Sub-50ms response times and granular API control over every layer of the search stack | Relevance work scales with engineering hours, not contract size; non-technical merchandisers can't drive it alone |
| [Klevu](https://klevu.com) | AI search packaged for Shopify | Shopify brands whose biggest miss reason is conversational, descriptive, or synonym-heavy queries | Tiered by domain count, sessions, and SKU volume (Essential, Advanced, Expert); not published | AI matching catches long descriptive queries and synonym pairs before they resolve to empty pages | Behavioral personalization is included in the Expert tier only, not available on Essential or Advanced plans; sold under Athos Commerce |
| [Constructor](https://constructor.io) | Enterprise product discovery across full site | High-volume retailers with an internal data team, where CVR work spans search, browse, and category | Revenue-share, no published list price; costs scale with GMV | Real-time session-signal personalization and merchandising across search, browse, category, and recommendations on one platform | Revenue-share contracts mean a successful CVR campaign costs more as GMV grows; weeks-to-months implementation |

*Full disclosure: Nobi is our product, and it's included in this list alongside the three competitors head-of-ecommerce buyers most often weigh against it. We've aimed to be honest about Nobi's own limits and explicit about when another tool on this list is the better pick.*

## What is an AI product finder?

An AI product finder is a [search and discovery](https://nobi.ai/blog/the-top-ecommerce-platforms-for-native-ai-search-and-product-discovery) layer that uses semantic understanding instead of keyword matching to surface the right products when shoppers type natural-language queries or browse without knowing exactly what to type. A query like "lightweight rain jacket for hiking" resolves to real products instead of a zero-result page, because the AI reads your catalog and learns relevance from the product data itself. Merchandisers don't have to hand-pin a result for every long-tail search.

The core jobs are the same across all of them: cut the zero-result rate, raise CVR on long-tail queries, reduce merchandiser rule-tuning, and shorten the path from search to add-to-cart.

## How did we evaluate these AI product finders?

We scored each tool on five things a head of ecommerce actually has to defend to the rest of the business: how well it resolves natural-language and descriptive queries against a real catalog, how transparent its pricing is, how long it takes to go live on a working Shopify or headless stack, what it does when a shopper hits a dead-end query, and which jobs it's the wrong pick for. Nobi is one of the tools on this list - we built it - and we flag where a competitor is the better call.

Query resolution is the first filter. A shopper typing "lightweight rain jacket for hiking" or "something like the navy linen one but cheaper" should land on real products, not a zero-result page. We tested each tool against long-tail, conversational, and descriptive queries, not just exact-match strings. Nobi, Klevu, and Constructor all rank using AI by default. Algolia can do this too, but only if your engineering team configures the ranking strategies in code.

Pricing transparency was the second filter. We wanted concrete numbers a buyer could model before a sales call. Nobi publishes $25/month base with $0.01 per additional search and $0.10 per additional message. Algolia publishes per-record and per-operation rates on its pricing page. Klevu and Constructor don't publish pricing publicly - both quote by store size or revenue band, which means a sales conversation before you know what you'd pay.

Time-to-live separated the lightweight installs from the multi-quarter rollouts. A small theme tweak puts Nobi or Klevu live in hours. Algolia takes longer because the engineering team owns the indexing and ranking work. Constructor's full personalization rollout typically takes weeks to months once the data team is wired in.

Zero-result handling was the fourth filter - did-you-mean rewrites, conversational fallback, and graceful redirects rather than a dead end.

The fifth filter is the most honest one: when is each tool the wrong pick? Nobi's biggest gap today is behavioral personalization. Constructor reranks results based on each shopper's click and purchase history; Nobi doesn't yet. If individual-shopper reranking is the conversion lever you need, Constructor will outperform us until we ship it.

## 1. Nobi

Nobi pairs AI site search with a [shopping assistant](https://nobi.ai/blog/best-ai-shopping-assistants-for-ecommerce) on the same platform. A descriptive query like "breathable shirt for humid weather" resolves to real products without anyone writing a rule for it. Shoppers who don't know what to type can ask the assistant in plain language and get answers tied back to your live catalog and policy pages. UNTUCKit ran a two-month A/B test against their previous search tool and saw Nobi reach 17.6% CVR vs. 15.0% on the prior tool - a 17.1% conversion rate lift - plus 21.3% more revenue per searcher, before moving 100% of traffic to Nobi.

**Best for:** Ecommerce teams whose bottleneck is on-site search relevance or pre-purchase product Q&A, and who want published per-search pricing.

**Pricing:** $25/month base (includes 2,500 searches and 250 conversational messages). $0.01 per additional search, $0.10 per additional message.

**Pros:**
- AI site search and a grounded shopping assistant on one platform. Semantic understanding works across the search bar, contextual suggestion pills, and chat answers - no separate tool wired in after the fact
- Inline citation pills on every assistant answer link back to the exact source document, date, and excerpt, so a shopper (or a head of ecommerce auditing a hallucination report) can verify any answer without leaving the chat
- Merchant query overrides let you lock a verbatim answer to any specific question - return policy, warranty, compliance-sensitive topics - so those responses come back word-for-word instead of LLM paraphrasing
- Per-unit pricing means a successful CVR campaign doesn't quietly raise your bill; costs scale linearly with usage, not with GMV
- Connected catalog, policy, and content sources pull from your existing pages without manual re-entry, and refresh twice a day so a price change or stock update lands in answers within hours

**Cons:**
- Personalization today is limited to personalized placeholder text and starter prompts. There's no behavioral reranking that reorders results based on individual click and purchase history yet. If real-time behavioral personalization is your headline requirement, a platform with behavioral reranking will fit better
- Nobi curates the search results page, not category or collection pages. Brands that need site-wide AI merchandising across PLPs and browse will still need a dedicated tool for that work

**Verdict:** Pick Nobi when you want AI search and a grounded shopping assistant from one contract with predictable per-unit pricing; skip it if behavioral reranking on individual shopper history is the headline capability you're buying for.

## 2. Algolia

[Algolia](https://algolia.com) is a search API built for engineering teams. Rules, ranking, synonyms, and merchandising are all configured in code, and response times stay under 50ms even at catalog scale. NeuralSearch adds semantic matching on top of keyword relevance on higher tiers, which is what catches the descriptive queries keyword-only ranking misses. The trade-off is who does the work. Every rule, synonym set, and ranking tweak is engineering time, and usage-based pricing scales with traffic - which means surprise bills during the spikes when CVR pressure is already highest.

**Best for:** Engineering teams that want full API control over ranking and rendering and have the developer hours to keep relevance tuned as the catalog evolves.

**Pricing:** Usage-based on search requests and records indexed; pay-as-you-go rates scale with query volume. NeuralSearch requires the top-tier Elevate enterprise plan.

**Pros:**
- Sub-50ms response times at catalog scale, so faster search directly lifts CVR on impatient shoppers
- Granular API-level control over rules, ranking, synonyms, indexing, and frontend rendering
- NeuralSearch adds semantic matching on top of keyword relevance on higher tiers, catching the conversational queries keyword-only ranking misses
- Large ecosystem of InstantSearch widgets and platform integrations across every major frontend stack

**Cons:**
- Relevance work scales with engineering hours, not contract size, so non-technical merchandisers can't drive ranking changes alone
- Usage-based pricing produces surprise bills during traffic spikes, exactly when CVR pressure is highest
- NeuralSearch is gated to higher tiers, so the cheapest Algolia setup doesn't include the semantic matching most catalogs need to find products on conversational queries

**Verdict:** Pick Algolia when a search engineer owns the rule engine and you want full API control; skip it when a non-technical merch team needs to manage relevance without filing tickets.

## 3. Klevu

[Klevu](https://klevu.com) is AI-powered Shopify search, now a division of Athos Commerce. The AI matching reads your catalog and figures out what a shopper actually meant, so a query like "wide-leg cropped trouser" still surfaces the right product even if your title says "cropped wide pant." Synonym pairs like "tee" and "t-shirt" or "sneaker" and "trainer" resolve to real products instead of empty pages, and a "did you mean" feature catches the typos shoppers make on product names, colors, and brands. When a query has no good match, merchandisers can route it to a category page from the Smart Merchandising dashboard without filing an engineering ticket.

**Best for:** Shopify stores whose biggest CVR leak is conversational, descriptive, or synonym-heavy queries that a basic search engine can't resolve.

**Pricing:** Quote-only; three tiers (Essential, Advanced, Expert) priced by domain count, sessions, and SKU volume. No public price list - contact Athos Commerce for a quote.

**Pros:**
- AI matching catches long, descriptive queries and synonym pairs before they resolve to empty pages
- Smart Merchandising dashboard handles pinning, boosting, and category-page fallbacks without an engineering ticket
- "Did you mean" suggestions handle most typos and misspellings, useful for fashion, jewelry, and beauty queries shoppers often misspell
- Packaged Shopify install gets the team live in days instead of months

**Cons:**
- Behavioral personalization is included in the Expert tier only; Essential and Advanced plans do not include it
- Now sold as a division of Athos Commerce; Searchspring and Intelligent Reach are sibling products under the same parent brand, with each retaining its own contract and pricing tier
- AI matching is only as good as your catalog data; sparse product titles and descriptions weaken the layer that's supposed to prevent empty pages

**Verdict:** Pick Klevu if conversational query mismatch is your main CVR leak on Shopify and you want a packaged install. Skip it if you need to see a published price before a sales call.

## 4. Constructor

[Constructor](https://constructor.io) blends semantic search with real-time session-signal personalization, so products reorder as a shopper clicks, views, or adds items during a visit. The same model runs across search, browse, category pages, and recommendations, not just the search results page. The trade-off is pricing: contracts are revenue-share with no published list, so a successful CVR campaign quietly raises your bill as GMV grows.

**Best for:** large-volume retailers with an internal data team, where merchandising has to move across category, collection, browse, and search together.

**Pricing:** Revenue-share with no published list price. Costs scale with GMV.

**Pros:**
- Session-signal personalization reorders results in real time, so the CVR lever moves on every individual session, not just on average ranking quality
- Merchandising covers the full site - category, collection, browse, recommendations - so finding-products work isn't trapped in the search bar
- A/B testing infrastructure is built in, so you can measure which CVR change is actually working instead of guessing
- Search, browse, category, and recommendations run on one platform, so in-session signals from any surface feed the shared ranking model

**Cons:**
- Revenue-share contracts mean a successful CVR campaign costs more as GMV grows, and bills can scale in surprising ways
- Implementation runs weeks to months and requires internal data science or analytics resources to get full value
- Retailers without significant query volume and data-team bandwidth may not see full return on the revenue-share model

**Verdict:** Pick Constructor when you need behavioral personalization and merchandising across the full site and have the data team and budget to match; skip it if you want transparent per-unit pricing or just the search bar without a full discovery platform attached.

## How should a head of ecommerce pick between these AI product finders?

Match the tool to the finding-products job that's actually costing you the most revenue today. If your bottleneck is on-site search relevance plus pre-purchase product questions and you want per-search pricing you can model before signing, Nobi is the default. If a search engineer wants full API control over ranking and rendering, go with Algolia. If you're on Shopify and conversational query mismatch is your single biggest miss reason, go with Klevu. If finding-products has to span search, browse, and category together and you have a data team plus the GMV to justify a revenue-share contract, go with Constructor.

## Frequently asked questions

**What's the difference between AI search and traditional keyword search?** Traditional keyword search matches strings. If a shopper types "lightweight rain jacket for hiking" and your product is titled "ultralight shell," keyword search returns nothing. [AI search](https://nobi.ai/blog/best-ai-search-ecommerce-2026) reads the catalog and matches on meaning, so descriptive and conversational queries still resolve to real products. Nobi, Klevu, and Constructor all rank with AI by default. Algolia can do this with NeuralSearch on higher tiers, but the engineering team has to configure it.

**How much CVR lift can an AI product finder realistically deliver?** It depends on what you're replacing and how leaky your current search is. Real A/B tests land in the 15-25% range. [UNTUCKit](/customers/untuckit) saw 21.3% more revenue per searcher after a two-month test against their prior tool. [Kilte](/customers/kilte) saw a 21.7% lift against Shopify default search.

**Which of these tools is fastest to install on Shopify?** Nobi and Klevu both go live in hours, not weeks. Drop in a small theme tweak and add a placeholder where the search bar goes. Algolia and Constructor take longer because engineering or data teams own the rollout.

**Do any of these tools handle zero-result queries automatically?** Yes. Nobi, Klevu, and Constructor all resolve descriptive queries semantically, so the zero-result page shows up far less often. Klevu adds "did you mean" suggestions for typos.

**How do these tools price - per search, per session, or revenue share?** Nobi prices per search and per message ($25/month base, $0.01 per additional search, $0.10 per additional message). Algolia prices per record and per operation. Klevu quotes by store size. Constructor is revenue-share.

If your bottleneck is on-site search relevance or pre-purchase product questions and you want per-search pricing you can forecast against traffic, [try Nobi free](https://dashboard.nobi.ai).
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