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Easytools, reviewed honestly.

Easytools (born as Easycart) is a Polish suite of eleven tools for selling digital products, wrapped around a genuinely good one-click checkout. This review covers what it does well, what the pricing actually adds up to, and the one question every seller should ask before signing up.

Last checked July 2026. Every number links to its source.

What it is

Easytools bundles a checkout (Easycart), an AI page builder (Easypage), email campaigns, testimonial collection, gated content delivery, legal document generation, FAQs, timers, cookie banners, pricing tables, and a donation widget. Everything runs on top of your own Stripe account. The positioning is anti-tool-sprawl: one subscription instead of six.

Credit where due: the checkout is fast, the one-click purchase flow is real, reviews are strong (4.6 on Trustpilot), and creators have moved serious volume through it. If you want a European-friendly checkout on your own Stripe with nice UX, it delivers.

What it costs, all-in

PlanMonthlyPer saleLimits
Starter$05%Checkout only, none of the other ten tools
Creator$592%3 projects per tool
Professional$991%Unlimited projects

Then the add-ons, which is where the bill quietly grows:

  • Global tax and invoices: $0.30 to $0.50 per transaction, on top of the plan fee and the percentage.
  • Checkout recovery: takes 10% of recovered sales on Starter, 5% on Creator, free only on Professional.
  • Automation support: $20 per ticket on Starter, $10 on Creator. Paying per support ticket is unusual for the category.
  • Card processing from your own Stripe applies on top of everything above.

A Creator-plan seller doing $1,000 a month with the tax add-on on 40 sales pays roughly $59 + $20 + $16 = $95 before processing. The same volume on a flat 10% platform costs $100, so the subscription only starts winning at real volume.

The tax question

The most important line in Easytools' documentation is the answer to "Are you a merchant of record?":

"In most cases, no. Handling taxes is your responsibility."

The tax add-on calculates rates, watches thresholds, and issues invoices, which is genuine help. But the liability for VAT, GST, and sales tax registration and remittance stays with you. Platforms like Gumroad, Stripe Managed Payments, Polar, and Paddle take that liability on as merchant of record. If tax paperwork is the thing you are trying to escape, this distinction matters more than any fee.

Who should use it

  • Sellers who want a polished checkout on their own Stripe, sell mostly in one or two markets, and are comfortable owning their tax situation.
  • Suite lovers: if you will genuinely use five or more of the eleven tools, the bundle logic works.

Who should look elsewhere

  • Anyone allergic to a $59 to $99 monthly bill before the first sale: pay-per-sale platforms carry no fixed cost.
  • Sellers who want taxes actually handled, not calculated: you need a merchant of record.
  • Anyone who wants the tools to do the work rather than be eleven more things to drive. A suite is still a to-do list.

Sources