Comparison

Stylab vs TryPoint

TryPoint vs Stylab — enterprise-oriented try-on vs a self-serve Shopify app with quotas, toggles, and built-in A/B testing.

TryPoint and Stylab may both appear in a merchant’s longlist for virtual try-on. TryPoint often fits conversations that start with sales teams and custom scope. Stylab fits merchants who want to install from Shopify, toggle products themselves, and read analytics in admin without a project timeline.

Compare time-to-pilot: Can you test on five SKUs within two weeks and read add-to-cart signals? That cadence matters more than logo count on a slide deck.

Side by side

Feature comparison

TryPoint provides virtual try-on for fashion retailers, often in sales-led or high-touch deployments.

Self-serve Shopify install

Stylab

Yes

TryPoint

Verify — may be sales-led

Built-in A/B testing

Stylab

Yes

TryPoint

Rare — verify

Pay only on success

Stylab

Yes

TryPoint

Check billing model

Scale plan (high volume)

Stylab

4,000 try-ons/mo (Scale $149)

TryPoint

Contact vendor

Per-product controls

Stylab

Yes

TryPoint

Verify

Merchant dashboard

Stylab

Included

TryPoint

Verify scope

When Stylab is a better fit

Choose Stylab for a complete merchant workflow you control: product toggles, usage limits, cart analytics, and A/B testing without a custom statement of work.

When TryPoint may fit

Choose TryPoint if your organization requires enterprise procurement, custom integrations, or vendor-led rollout beyond standard Shopify app scope.

Comparison based on publicly available product information as of May 2026. Features, pricing, and policies may change. Verify details on each vendor's website before making a decision.

Practical guide

How to evaluate both options

Do not pick a try-on app from a feature checklist alone. Run a short, structured pilot on your catalog and your traffic.

5-step side-by-side evaluation

  1. Pick 2–3 hero SKUs — hoodies, jerseys, or graphic tees with steady PDP views (not brand-new listings with zero history).
  2. Use the same reference photos — if flat-lays improve output, upload them in both tools before judging quality.
  3. Test on mobile first — most apparel shoppers try on from phone. Upload the same shopper photo in each widget.
  4. Compare admin workflows — per-product toggles, usage quotas, analytics, and how billing counts successful vs failed generations.
  5. Measure, do not guess — if you choose Stylab, run a 30-day A/B test. See our A/B testing guide and usage calculator.
Honest rule: The best app is the one that produces acceptable try-on quality on your images and gives you enough data to decide whether to expand — not the one with the longest feature list.

Common mistakes

Avoid when comparing

  • Waiting on enterprise timelines when a Shopify app pilot could produce learning in 14 days

Add AI try-on to your Shopify product pages

Start with a few products, measure shopper engagement, and see whether try-on helps customers buy with more confidence.