At a glance
Stale Listings (>180d no update) counts the active listings that have gone more than 180 days without any edit. Etsy search rewards freshness, so listings that sit untouched for months tend to drift down in placement even if nothing about them has changed. An Etsy seller cares because reviving a stale listing is one of the cheapest wins available: even a minor edit to a title, a tag, or a photo refreshes the freshness signal and gives the listing a chance to climb again. Good looks like a low count relative to the catalogue. Bad looks like a large share of listings that have been left to go cold and are quietly losing visibility.
| What it counts | Active listings with no edit of any kind for more than 180 days. |
| Sample type | Backend API data from Etsy, refreshed on the standard data refresh. |
| Why it matters | Etsy search deprioritises stale listings; a low-effort edit refreshes freshness and can recover placement. |
| Reading the value | A whole number of stale listings. Lower is better. Read it as a share of your active catalogue. |
| Currency | Number (count of listings). |
| Time window | RT |
| Alert trigger | >10% of catalogue |
| Sentiment key | ets_stale_listings |
| Roles | owner, operations, marketing |
Calculation
Vortex IQ measures the time since each active listing was last edited and flags any that exceed 180 days without a change. Note that the standard 4-month renewal cycle at $0.20 is not an edit, so a listing can auto-renew and still count as stale because nothing about its content was refreshed. The card reports the count of stale listings, and the alert fires when that count passes 10% of your active catalogue so the trigger scales with shop size.Worked example
Illustrative numbers. On 14 Jun 26 a print shop with 150 active listings sees the card read 22, which is around 15% of the catalogue and over the 10% trigger. Checking the flagged set, the owner finds a group of older designs that have auto-renewed for months but were last edited well over half a year ago, and their views have slid. They make a small, genuine edit to each, tightening a title, swapping in a fresher lead photo, and adjusting a tag, which refreshes the freshness signal without misleading buyers. Over the following weeks several listings recover views. They open Vortex Mind to trace which revived listings regained placement and use Ask Viq to ask, in plain English, which stale listings still earned money in the last quarter so those get edited first.Sibling cards merchants should reference together
| Card | Why merchants reach for it |
|---|---|
ets_seo_title_health | A title rewrite both fixes SEO and clears the stale flag at once. |
ets_tag_completeness | Filling empty tag slots is a quick, real edit that refreshes a stale listing. |
ets_listing_quality_score | Stale listings often drag the overall quality score down. |
ets_active_listings | Gives the catalogue base the stale share is measured against. |
ets_views_favourites_conversion | Confirms whether refreshed listings are pulling more views and sales. |
Reconciling against Etsy Shop Manager
Where to look in Etsy Shop Manager: Open Shop Manager > Listings, where you can sort and inspect listings and see when each was last touched as you edit. Use Shop Manager > Stats to confirm which of the stale listings have lost views, so you prioritise the ones still worth saving. Why the Vortex IQ value may legitimately differ:| Reason | Direction | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Renewal is not an edit. A listing that auto-renewed at $0.20 still counts as stale if its content was not changed. | Variable | Make a real content edit, not just a renewal, to clear the flag. |
| Edit recency lag. A fresh edit clears the flag on the next refresh, not instantly. | Marginal | Re-check the count after the next data refresh. |
| Draft and inactive listings. Only active listings are counted, so inactive items will not appear. | Marginal | Reactivate and edit if you intend to bring an item back. |