How Hostinger’s Radical Shift Is Disrupting Ecommerce Without a Website
Ever wondered if selling online could be as effortless as snapping a photo? Well, Lithuania’s Hostinger just dropped a game-changer with their Quick Links tool — upload a product pic, and boom, AI whips up a product page, complete with description, details, and even a price suggestion. No website necessary, no fuss. It’s like having a magic checkout link ready to share everywhere — social posts, emails, you name it. But here’s the kicker: Is this just a slick shortcut or a sign that ecommerce is sliding away from traditional stores toward a wild, AI-driven, social-first jungle? Merchants aren’t merely racing to keep pace; they’re grappling with where commerce actually begins these days — on your site or scattered across a dozen digital backroads. Intrigued yet? Dive into how this might just be the start of ecommerce’s next big evolution. LEARN MORE.
Lithuania-based hosting firm Hostinger has launched an ecommerce tool that can turn any product photo into a checkout link. It promises to make online sales easy, but it might also indicate something more.
With Quick Links, a seller uploads a product photo, and Hostinger’s AI creates a product page with a description, key details, and a suggested price. The seller can then share a checkout link through a social post, message, email, or another channel.
No Website Needed
The feature is powerful and innovative, but it is not entirely new.
Payment links, link-in-bio tools, and direct-message selling have long helped merchants sell without full ecommerce sites.
Stripe, Square, PayPal, Shopify Starter, TikTok Shop, Instagram, Facebook Marketplace, and WhatsApp have all enabled sellers and shoppers to complete transactions outside a conventional storefront. Several of those companies offer payment link services similar to Hostinger’s, albeit without the AI-powered photo-to-shop generation.
Beyond the technology, Hostinger is repositioning website-free selling as AI-driven, social-first, and fragmented,
“Commerce is moving from simple stores to ecosystems, where people discover products across channels, and AI agents increasingly help them choose, compare, and buy,” stated Auksė Žirgulė, head of Hostinger website builder and ecommerce, in a company release. “For small sellers, the opportunity is huge, but only if their business can move as fast as their customers do. They should not have to guess which channel will matter next.”
Guessing which channel will matter suggests a trend that makes the Hostinger announcement interesting.
Ecommerce platforms are contemplating how to serve shoppers who find products, compare offers, build carts, and complete purchases beyond a merchant’s website.
Hostinger’s answer is not complete, but it is directional.
Ecommerce Platforms
Ecommerce software has long relied on a simple model: Build a store, add products, drive traffic, convert visitors.
That model still works. But it’s likely less dependable.
- Search engines answer questions directly.
- Social platforms keep shoppers inside feeds and apps.
- Marketplaces capture demand and control the rules.
- Generative AI can compare goods before a shopper lands on a product detail page.
- Google’s Universal Cart concept foretells carts across search, YouTube, Gmail, and AI experiences rather than on a seller’s site.
Merchants may still own inventory, fulfillment, and customer service. But they may not control where the shopping journey begins. They may not even control the cart.
This uncertainty could explain some of Hostinger’s positioning. The company is not merely offering a faster checkout link. It signals that ecommerce platforms must help merchants sell on a social post today, a marketplace tomorrow, and an AI agent next month, so to speak.
Retailer Implications
Online retailers might feel that help is on the way.
Hostinger is essentially telling sellers they do not need to solve ecommmerce across AI, social, and marketplaces all at once. They can start with a product, a photo, and a link.
Yet a merchant-owned site still matters for trust, search visibility, content marketing, policies, email capture, customer service, and repeat purchases. It remains the best place to explain a brand or product and to build a customer relationship.
But the first sale may occur elsewhere.
That is the important implication of Hostinger’s new tool. Ecommerce platforms are beginning to separate the store from the transaction. The store remains central, but checkout links, marketplace feeds, social shops, universal carts, and AI agents can become selling surfaces.
Shopify, for example, has been pushing merchants toward broader selling opportunities through tools for social commerce, point-of-sale, Shop Pay, marketplace integrations, and AI assistance.
Hostinger’s announcement is a small-seller version of that idea. It says the ecommerce platform should not only host a store. It should help create the opportunity for retail success regardless of where the transaction occurs.















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