Free SKU Generator for Shopify
Generate SKU’s for your Shopify store at random. You can optionally add prepended and appended tags.
What are SKU's?
Stock Keeping Units or “SKU”s, are unique identifiers used by retailers and manufacturers to track individual items in inventory. They can include information about various attributes such as product type, brand, model, size, and color, facilitating effective inventory management.
SKUs are essential for tracking stock levels, managing orders, and identifying when items need to be reordered. Additionally, they are used in sales reports and analysis to understand item performance. Unlike standardized barcodes, SKUs are internally created by companies and can follow any format suitable for their inventory system.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
A SKU (Stock Keeping Unit) is a unique code assigned to each product or product variant in your inventory to help you track and manage stock efficiently. For example, a blue t-shirt in size medium might have the SKU “TSHIRT-BLU-M” while the large would be “TSHIRT-BLU-L”. You need SKUs to organize your inventory, prevent stock errors, track sales by specific variants, manage reorders efficiently, and integrate with inventory management systems or fulfillment services. Without proper SKUs, it’s nearly impossible to accurately track which specific products are selling, what needs restocking, or identify items during order fulfillment, especially as your catalog grows beyond a handful of products.
Good SKU codes are short (8-12 characters ideally), readable, consistent, and meaningful. They should include abbreviations that make sense to your team, like category, color, size, or material. For example: “SHO-RUN-BLK-09” could represent Shoes-Running-Black-Size9. Avoid confusing characters like O and 0, or I and 1. Don’t use special characters or spaces that could cause system errors. Start with broader categories and get more specific (category > subcategory > attribute > variant). Keep it uppercase for consistency. Most importantly, document your SKU system so anyone on your team can understand and follow it. A well-designed SKU structure scales with your business and makes inventory management significantly easier.
Yes, you can change SKUs in Shopify at any time, but proceed with caution. Changing SKUs can create issues if you’re integrated with other systems like inventory management software, Amazon, eBay, accounting tools, or fulfillment services, these integrations rely on SKUs to match products across platforms. If you change a SKU, you may need to update it everywhere manually. Additionally, historical sales reports and analytics will reference the old SKU, potentially causing confusion. If you must change SKUs, do it systematically: update Shopify first, then immediately update all connected systems, keep a reference document mapping old SKUs to new ones, and inform your team of changes. For new stores, it’s worth investing time upfront to create a solid SKU system you won’t need to change later.
