Amazon FBA·
tools
Jungle Scout vs Helium 10 - honest comparison
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Anonymous Hustler
5 months ago
I've used both extensively and here's my honest take. TLDR: They're both good, pick one and master it.
Jungle Scout Pros:
- Cleaner, simpler interface
- Supplier Database is excellent
- Better for beginners
- Slightly more accurate sales estimates (in my experience)
Jungle Scout Cons:
- Fewer features overall
- Keyword research not as deep
Helium 10 Pros:
- More tools in one package (Cerebro, Magnet, Frankenstein are amazing)
- Better for PPC optimization
- More advanced features for scaling
Helium 10 Cons:
- Overwhelming for beginners
- Some features feel bloated
- More expensive for full suite
My recommendation:
- New sellers: Start with Jungle Scout
- Scaling private label: Helium 10
- Budget conscious: Both have useful free Chrome extensions
Anyone else want to weigh in?
Jungle Scout Pros:
- Cleaner, simpler interface
- Supplier Database is excellent
- Better for beginners
- Slightly more accurate sales estimates (in my experience)
Jungle Scout Cons:
- Fewer features overall
- Keyword research not as deep
Helium 10 Pros:
- More tools in one package (Cerebro, Magnet, Frankenstein are amazing)
- Better for PPC optimization
- More advanced features for scaling
Helium 10 Cons:
- Overwhelming for beginners
- Some features feel bloated
- More expensive for full suite
My recommendation:
- New sellers: Start with Jungle Scout
- Scaling private label: Helium 10
- Budget conscious: Both have useful free Chrome extensions
Anyone else want to weigh in?
2 replies
Replies (2)
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Anonymous Hustler·5 months ago
Agree with this comparison. Im a Helium 10 user mainly for Cerebro - the reverse ASIN lookup is unmatched for finding keyword opportunities. That said, I started with Jungle Scout and it was much less overwhelming. The learning curve on H10 is real.
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Anonymous Hustler·5 months ago
Hot take: the free Chrome extensions from both are 80% of what most people need when starting out. Dont feel pressured to pay for the full suite right away. Master the basics first, then upgrade when you actually need the advanced features.
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