Etsy updated its Creativity Standards in 2024 and reinforced them in 2026. The short version: AI-generated digital products are fully allowed on Etsy, but they require specific disclosure. This guide explains exactly what the rules are, what you need to do, and what happens if you don’t comply.
Are AI-generated digital products allowed on Etsy?
Yes, explicitly. Etsy’s 2026 Creativity Standards confirm that sellers can list and sell digital products created with AI assistance. The policy does not ban AI — it regulates disclosure. A planner, wall art print, sticker sheet, or greeting card created using AI image generation is fully permissible as long as you follow the disclosure requirements.
This is a meaningful shift from 2023, when Etsy’s position was ambiguous. The platform recognised that AI tools are now a standard part of the creator workflow and updated its policies accordingly.
What Etsy requires for AI-generated listings
Etsy requires two things for AI-assisted digital products:
1. Attribute “Designed by seller” in listing attributes. When creating or editing a listing, you’ll see an attribute field asking who designed the item. Select “Designed by seller” — this is accurate because your creative direction (choosing the product type, style, colour palette, and any keywords) constitutes your design input. AI is the tool, not the designer.
2. Include an AI disclosure in your listing description. Add this line somewhere in your description, typically at the end: “This design was created with AI assistance under the creative direction of the seller.”
That’s it. Two requirements. Both straightforward.
What “designed by seller” actually means
This is where sellers get confused. Etsy’s interpretation is broader than many expect. The platform acknowledges that tools are part of the creative process. Just as a photographer using Lightroom is still “designed by seller” despite using software, an Etsy seller using AI image generation is still the designer because they provide the creative brief.
Your creative input includes: choosing what product to make (a habit tracker vs a wall art print), selecting the visual style (watercolour, minimalist, geometric), specifying any keyword or theme, and deciding which outputs to use. The AI generates options; you select and curate. That constitutes design authorship under Etsy’s current standards.
What is NOT allowed
Etsy draws the line at reselling AI outputs without meaningful creative direction. If you are running bulk generation with zero curation — generating thousands of images with identical prompts and listing them all without review — you are at risk. Etsy has tools to detect listing spam, and shops generating hundreds of nearly-identical listings have been suspended.
Also not allowed: listing AI-generated products under the “handmade” category without disclosure. All digital products should be in the Digital category with appropriate attributes.
What happens if you don’t disclose
Disclosure is not optional, so it is worth understanding the downside of skipping it. A listing that uses AI without the disclosure line and the “Designed by seller” attribute is out of policy. Etsy can act on listings that breach its Creativity Standards — ranging from removing or deactivating the listing to, for repeated or large-scale violations, suspending the shop. Etsy does not publish a fixed penalty for a single missed disclosure, so the safe approach is to treat the two disclosure steps as a standard part of every listing rather than something to risk.
The reassuring part is that meeting the requirement is genuinely small. Because your creative direction — the product you choose, the style, the keyword or theme, and the outputs you select — is what makes the work “designed by seller,” using AI (or an AI tool that generates from templated, pre-built prompts) does not put you in a grey area. You are not bending the rules; you are simply declaring how the work was made, which is exactly what Etsy asks for.
How this affects your workflow
For most Etsy digital product sellers, compliance adds about 30 seconds to each listing: write one sentence of disclosure and select the right attribute dropdown. That’s it.
If you use PromptlessPress, both requirements are handled automatically. The AI disclosure text is pre-written and included in every listing kit it generates. The listing description it produces includes the disclosure in the correct position. You just copy-paste the content directly into Etsy.
What about the ETSY_LISTING_GUIDE.html in your ZIP download?
If you’re using PromptlessPress, each ZIP download includes an ETSY_LISTING_GUIDE.html file that walks you through the upload process step by step. The guide now includes a dedicated step for AI disclosure — including which dropdown to select and exactly what text to paste into your description. No guesswork required.
Are these rules likely to get stricter?
The direction Etsy has taken is toward regulated inclusion rather than banning AI outright. The 2026 standards are more permissive than many sellers expected. The platform benefits from AI-assisted sellers producing more listings — more listings means more search results and a healthier catalogue. A complete ban would be economically counter-productive for Etsy.
The most likely direction is continued refinement of disclosure requirements and potentially automated detection of AI content — but not a ban. Sellers who follow the current disclosure rules are building on solid ground.
Practical compliance checklist
| Requirement | Where to do it | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Designed by attribute | Listing attributes | Select “Designed by seller” |
| Description disclosure | Listing description | Add: “This design was created with AI assistance under the creative direction of the seller.” |
| Category | Listing setup | Use Digital, not Handmade |
| Curation | Your workflow | Review and select which AI outputs to publish (don’t bulk-publish without review) |
The bottom line
Etsy’s AI policy in 2026 is workable for any seller using AI tools thoughtfully. Two disclosure requirements, both minor, both easily handled. The sellers who treat this as a reason not to use AI are leaving a significant competitive advantage on the table — the sellers who use AI tools properly and comply with the disclosure rules are the ones building the largest digital product catalogues on the platform.