Italy is where fashion meets ecommerce. It is the country that gave the world Gucci, Prada, and Armani, and Italian consumers carry those elevated expectations into every online shopping experience. When you translate Shopify to Italian, you are not just converting words - you are entering a market where product language is judged with the same scrutiny as product quality. Thirty-eight million Italian online shoppers expect eloquence, formality, and grammatical precision. Anything less, and they will shop elsewhere.
Italy’s Ecommerce Surge
Italy was once considered a lagging ecommerce market in Western Europe, but that narrative has reversed dramatically. At 14% year-over-year growth, Italy’s online retail sector is now one of the fastest-growing in the EU.
Several factors drive this acceleration. Smartphone shopping adoption exploded during and after the pandemic. Italian consumers who were once skeptical of buying online - particularly for fashion and food - now do so routinely. Cross-border purchasing has increased as Italian shoppers discover international brands through Instagram and TikTok.
The categories that perform strongest in Italian ecommerce are precisely the ones where many Shopify merchants operate: fashion, beauty, accessories, home decor, and specialty food. If your products fall into any of these categories, the Italian market deserves serious attention.
But 78% of Italian shoppers prefer buying in Italian. English is far less widely spoken in Italy than in Northern Europe, and even bilingual Italians prefer shopping in their native language. An untranslated store is a closed door to this market.
The Formality Standard in Italian Commerce
Italian ecommerce language follows strict formality conventions that differ from the casual, first-name-basis tone common in English-language stores.
Lei is the default. The formal pronoun “Lei” (with a capital L) is the standard form of address in Italian ecommerce. Product descriptions, checkout flows, shipping notifications, and customer service pages all use Lei unless the brand has a deliberately casual identity. This is comparable to the German “Sie” but even more consistently expected in Italian retail contexts.
Register matters for brand perception. An Italian shopper encountering “tu” (informal) on a fashion or beauty store will perceive the brand as unprofessional or foreign in a negative sense. The only exceptions are streetwear brands, youth-targeted DTC brands, and some tech/gadget stores where informality signals modernity.
Consistency is non-negotiable. Switching between Lei and tu within the same store - formal in product descriptions but informal in the checkout - immediately signals automated, unreviewed translation. Italian shoppers are linguistically attentive and notice these inconsistencies.
LocaleFlow’s custom prompts let you set the formality level once. It applies across every translated resource - products, pages, navigation, emails - ensuring a consistent voice throughout your Italian store. For more on how tone affects ecommerce conversion across languages, see our guide to common Shopify translation mistakes.
Gendered Grammar in Product Content
Italian is a grammatically gendered language, and getting the gender right in product descriptions is essential for credibility.
Every noun in Italian has a grammatical gender - masculine or feminine - and all associated adjectives, articles, and pronouns must agree. This creates a challenge for automated translation because the correct form depends on the specific noun being described.
Fashion examples: A “shirt” (camicia, feminine) requires feminine adjectives: “camicia bianca” (white shirt). A “coat” (cappotto, masculine) requires masculine adjectives: “cappotto nero” (black coat). A “pair of shoes” (paio di scarpe) is masculine for the pair but feminine for the shoes. Mix these up and your product listings read like machine output.
Product attribute complexity. When product descriptions reference materials, colors, and features, each adjective must match the gender of the noun it modifies. “Soft leather bag” requires different adjective forms than “soft leather wallet” because “borsa” (bag) is feminine while “portafoglio” (wallet) is masculine.
LocaleFlow’s AI handles gender agreement contextually, analyzing the noun being described and applying the correct adjective forms throughout. This is one area where the difference between generic translation tools and purpose-built ecommerce translation is most visible. For fashion-specific translation strategies, see our guide on translating Shopify stores for fashion.
Italian Search Behavior
Italian shoppers search differently than English speakers. Long-tail queries in Italian tend to be more descriptive and question-oriented. “Dove comprare” (where to buy), “migliore” (best), and “recensioni” (reviews) are common modifiers in Italian product searches.
LocaleFlow translates all SEO fields - meta titles, meta descriptions, and URL handles - into natural Italian. Your translated pages get indexed correctly by Google.it through Shopify Markets’ hreflang implementation, making your products discoverable to Italian shoppers searching in their own language.
Use our ROI calculator to estimate what the Italian market could mean for your store’s revenue.
One Price, Unlimited Italian Content
LocaleFlow is $150/month flat. Italian is included alongside every other language you want to add. No per-word pricing, no translation credit systems, no extra charges as your product catalog grows. Translate 50 products or 5,000 - the price stays the same.
Ready to bring your brand to Italy’s 38 million online shoppers? Install LocaleFlow from the Shopify App Store and start translating to Italian today.
Written by Kwadwo Adu, Co-founder of LocaleFlow