What We Found When We Checked 9,354 German Online Retailers

We spent the past week running a systematic health check across every German online retailer in our database. 9,354 shops. One request each, repeated daily. Here is what we found.

Of 9,354 shops monitored, 9,091 are active and responding — 97.2%. 16 are under observation (unreachable for 1–7 days). 248 are in quarantine (unreachable for 8–30 days). Zero are inactive.

The 97.2% figure is not a marketing claim. It is the output of a daily automated HTTP check, logged with timestamps, publicly visible at app.inputintel.com/database-health.

When we ran the first version of this check in late March, the apparent offline rate was closer to 11%. That figure was misleading. A significant portion of shops flagged as unreachable were returning HTTP 403 — the standard response when a server blocks automated requests. Saturn, Amazon, Bauhaus, and hundreds of other operational retailers block HEAD requests from unknown user agents as routine security policy.

After correcting for this and adding a retry pass with a browser-realistic user agent, the genuine problem population dropped to what you see above.

While running the health check, we also cross-referenced our database against the German Handelsregister — the official commercial register containing 5.3 million registered entities.

The result was direct: 29.7% of the German online retailers in our database appear in the Handelsregister. The remaining 70.3% do not.

This is not a data quality problem. It is a structural feature of the German retail market.

The majority of German online retailers operate as sole traders (Einzelunternehmer), civil-law partnerships (GbR), or micro-businesses below the €600,000 annual revenue threshold that triggers mandatory registration in the commercial register. They are legally operating, actively selling, and in many cases highly loyal to the brands they carry — precisely because they are not large enough to attract the attention of major brand managers.

Every major B2B database covers the Handelsregister. That is 30% of German e-commerce.

We cover the other 70%, too.

The conventional approach to entering the German market focuses on registered entities: GmbH, AG, established chains. This makes sense if the objective is volume through a single channel.

It makes less sense if the objective is breadth of market presence, brand recognition, or low-risk product testing.

Consider the arithmetic:

One large retailer. Minimum order 500 units. 90-day payment terms. A category buyer who receives 40 supplier pitches per week.

Versus: fifty small retailers, 10–20 units each, owner-operated, decision made in the same conversation.

For brands from markets newly entering preferential trade agreements — Mercosur, India, Indonesia — the small retailer tier is structurally more accessible than it has ever been. Reduced tariff friction on small consignments changes the economics of wide distribution. A brand can achieve market presence across 50 retail points before it has negotiated a single framework agreement with a major category buyer.

This is not a fallback strategy. For early-stage market entry, it is often the correct one.

Our health check uses a two-step approach: HEAD request first, followed by GET where HEAD is blocked. This eliminates false positives from shops that block automated requests as standard security policy.

The Handelsregister cross-reference uses FTS5 full-text search against the OpenRegister dataset (March 2026 release, 5,305,727 entries). Matching is performed on company name after stripping legal form suffixes. The 29.7% figure is therefore a lower bound — shops operating under a trading name different from their registered company name will not match.

We publish these findings not as marketing, but because the data is factually interesting and because transparency about data quality is, in our view, part of what intelligence means.

A database that claims 9,200 active German retailers without telling you how many are actually reachable today is not an intelligence product. It is a list.

We intend to be the former.


ii-scope.com | Verified German E-Commerce Intelligence

Related tool

Find the right German retailers — verified, enriched, actionable.

ii-scope gives you 9,200+ verified German e-commerce retailers with AI-enriched profiles. Browse free, subscribe when you're ready.

Explore ii-scope →