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Faire’s Best Kept Secret: How to Use Filters to Find Products That Actually Sell



Faire can feel like a goldmine for independent retailers—but only if you know how to search with intention. With so many brands and products available, browsing without a plan can become overwhelming fast. The difference between a pretty product and a product that actually sells often comes down to whether it fits your customer, price point, timing, values, and merchandising strategy.

The most powerful tool for narrowing that search is the filter system. Used well, filters transform Faire from a massive marketplace into a focused buying assistant. This guide shows how to use them strategically so you can source products with a better chance of moving off your shelves.

Retail buyer using Faire filters to source wholesale products online
Image position 1: Use a desktop or laptop sourcing image showing online product research for a retail store.

Why Filters Matter More Than Endless Browsing

Many new Faire buyers begin by scrolling through broad categories and saving anything that looks attractive. That approach can be inspiring, but it can also lead to scattered buying decisions. A product may be beautiful and still be wrong for your store if it has a high minimum, a long lead time, a price point your customers resist, or packaging that does not work on your shelves.

Filters help you move from inspiration to buying discipline. Instead of asking, “Do I like this?” you can ask, “Does this product fit the real requirements of my store?”

1. Start with a Category

Your Faire search should begin by narrowing the universe of options. Core categories such as New, Home Decor, Beauty & Wellness, Women, Food & Drink, and Gifts can help you orient your search before you get more specific.

From there, drill down into subcategories. For example, instead of browsing all of Home Decor, you might move into Candles & Holders, then narrow further into Candles, Holders, Matches, or related accessories. The deeper you go, the more relevant your results become.

  • Broad category: Home Decor
  • Subcategory: Candles & Holders
  • More specific search: Candles, matches, candle accessories, or seasonal scents

2. Master the “All Filters” Tab

Once you select a category or search term, the All Filters area becomes your command center. This is where you can move beyond vague browsing and start filtering by the operational details that matter to a retailer.

Think of this tab as your wholesale checklist. Before adding a product to a board or cart, consider whether it passes your basic requirements for delivery timing, minimum order, location, values, brand reliability, and shipping economics.

3. Filter by Lead Time and Shipping Window

Lead time matters when you are chasing a trend, preparing for a holiday, restocking a fast-moving display, or trying to fill an inventory gap before a weekend rush. A great product is less useful if it arrives after the selling moment has passed.

The Lead Time filter helps you identify brands that can package and ship orders quickly. A Ships ASAP option can be especially helpful when speed is the priority. Use these filters when you need products for:

  • Last-minute seasonal displays
  • Fast-moving gift tables
  • Inventory gaps after unexpected sell-through
  • Trend-based products with a short demand window

4. Filter by Order Minimum

Low-risk testing is one of the smartest ways to keep a retail assortment fresh. Instead of placing a large opening order with a brand you have never tried, use order minimum filters to find opportunities that fit your budget.

Filters such as No Minimum Order or $100 or Less can help new or cautious retailers test products without tying up too much cash. This is particularly useful for seasonal items, new categories, niche gifts, and products you are not yet sure your customers will adopt.

Wholesale buying checklist with filters for lead time order minimum location and values
Image position 2: Use a checklist-style image or graphic representing Faire filter criteria.

5. Filter by Location

Location filters are useful for retailers who want to source from nearby makers, reduce shipping complexity, create local storytelling opportunities, or build community partnerships. If your shop emphasizes regional products, this filter can help you find brands that support that positioning.

You can also use Made In filters when country of origin matters to your assortment strategy. For example, a store focused on local goods, handmade products, or regionally inspired gifts may benefit from sourcing brands that reinforce that story.

6. Filter by Values and Community

Many independent retailers succeed because their stores stand for something. Faire’s value-based filters can help you identify brands that align with your shop’s identity and your customers’ priorities.

Depending on your assortment strategy, you may choose to filter for brands that are:

  • Eco-friendly
  • Handmade
  • Women owned
  • Black-owned
  • LGBTQ+-owned
  • Brands that give back

These filters are not just about values. They also help you create stronger merchandising stories. A shelf or display with a clear purpose is often easier for customers to understand, photograph, share, and purchase from.

7. Look for Top Shop and Insider Badges

Badges can help you evaluate brands more quickly. Top Shop badges are designed to identify brands that perform well in areas such as product quality, shipping speed, and service. Insider-related filters can also help identify products that may qualify for program perks such as free shipping, depending on the buyer’s eligibility and terms.

Badges should not be your only decision factor, but they can help you prioritize brands when comparing similar products. Combine badge signals with customer fit, margin, packaging, reviews, lead time, and your merchandising plan.

A Simple Filter Workflow for Better Faire Buying

  1. Choose a specific category: Avoid starting too broad.
  2. Set your budget filter: Use order minimums that match your test strategy.
  3. Set your timing filter: Prioritize products that can arrive before your selling window.
  4. Add values or location filters: Strengthen your store story.
  5. Compare finalists: Review price, packaging, display potential, and customer fit.

The Bottom Line on Filtering

Faire’s filters are more than search tools. They are a strategic advantage for independent retailers who want to buy with more confidence. When you use filters intentionally, you can move faster, reduce risk, and focus on products that match your store instead of getting distracted by everything available.

Start a Smarter Faire Search

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