Best TikTok Shop Profit Tracker (2026): What the App Store Data Actually Says

Bottom line up front: if you sell on TikTok Shop US and want per-order or SKU-level profit tracking, the shortlist is smaller and stranger than the “best of” listicles suggest. Of the tools that actually market profit tracking to US sellers, Dashboardly ($29/mo, SKU-level P&L, 14-day trial) is the most defensible self-serve pick on price and store presence — but it inflates its own marketing, and it is not the “only” SKU-level tracker as it claims. Kixmon does the same job but starts at $49.99/mo, despite being described as “completely free” in third-party articles. Lensed and AMS Pilot offer full profit tracking but are quote-only, so you can’t compare price without a sales call. And two of the most-promoted “free” trackers — HiveHQ and Margn — aren’t in the official TikTok Shop US App Store at all.

This page ranks profit trackers by what the data says, not by who pays us. Data checked 2026-07-11 against the official TikTok Shop US App Store and each vendor’s own site the same day. Nothing here is a hands-on review — we don’t fake usage we don’t have. It’s a verification of prices, listings, and claims. Full method in the methodology.

What counts as a “profit tracker”

The term gets stretched, so let’s be precise. On this page a profit tracker is a tool that pulls your TikTok Shop orders and calculates net profit — revenue minus TikTok’s fees, ad/affiliate spend, and cost of goods — ideally down to the individual SKU. That is a different job from an accounting bridge (which syncs your payouts into QuickBooks or Xero for your bookkeeper) and from a reconciliation tool (which checks that TikTok actually paid you what it owed).

Plenty of tools that show up in “best profit tracker” articles are really accounting bridges — they don’t compute per-order margin at all. We flag those below so you don’t buy the wrong category. If you want to model a single sale’s margin by hand before committing to any tool, the TikTok Shop fee & profit calculator does it with sourced 2026 US rates.

The profit trackers, by the data

Here’s every tool in the official store (plus two off-store ones) that markets profit tracking to TikTok Shop sellers, with the official in-store price and the claim check.

ToolIn-store priceProfit trackingIn official US store?Reality check
Dashboardly$29/mo (14-day trial)SKU-levelYesClaims to be the “only” SKU-level tool — it isn’t
Kixmon$49.99/moFullYesCalled “free” in listicles; actually the priciest tracker here
LensedQuote onlySKU-level, incl. ad spendYesNo public price; daily sync
AMS PilotQuote onlyFullYesNo public price
MaxGainerFree (claimed)PartialYesZero independent footprint — unverified
QuixtFreePartialYesFree, limited scope
TrueProfit$29/moConflictListed, but…Its own site says US is not a supported region
HiveHQFree (250 orders) / $39–399FullNoStrong traffic, but not in the official store
MargnFree (500 orders/mo)FullNoNot in the store; site traffic ~zero

Sort, price, and claim data checked 2026-07-11. Now the detail that the table can’t hold.

Dashboardly — the defensible self-serve pick, with an asterisk

Dashboardly is the tool most sellers should look at first, for boring reasons: it’s in the official store, it publishes its price ($29/mo, with tiers at $79/$199/$399 and agency plans from $249–599 for 10–40 shops with white-label), it does genuine SKU-level net profit, and it gives you 14 days to try it. Annual billing knocks 20% off. Among trackers with a public price, that’s the cleanest entry point.

The asterisk: Dashboardly markets itself as the “only” SKU-level net-profit tool for TikTok Shop. That claim does not hold. Kixmon, AMS Pilot and Lensed all list SKU-level P&L too. It’s a small dishonesty, but it’s exactly the kind of vendor overstatement this site exists to flag — and it’s a useful reminder that Dashboardly’s own 2026 fee guide, while genuinely useful, is marketing published by a tool in this comparison, not neutral reference.

Kixmon — same job, 70% more, and not “free”

Kixmon does full profit tracking and claims reconciliation. The problem is the price story. Multiple third-party listicles describe Kixmon as “completely free.” Its official in-store price is $49.99/mo — the most expensive profit tracker in the category, and we found no free tier anywhere. A tool being called free in an article that ranks it #1 is a signal about the article, not the tool. If you’re comparing on price, Kixmon starts 72% above Dashboardly for a comparable job.

Lensed and AMS Pilot — real trackers, but priced by sales call

Both list full profit tracking in the store, and Lensed specifically advertises daily sync and SKU-level P&L including ad spend — on paper the most complete margin picture of anything here. The catch for a self-serve seller is that both are quote-only: there is no published price, so you can’t line them up against Dashboardly or Kixmon without contacting sales. That’s fine if you’re an agency or a larger operation happy to talk to a rep; it’s friction if you’re a solo seller who just wants to sign up tonight. We can’t rank on price what has no public price, so we list them as capable but uncomparable.

MaxGainer and Quixt — free, but know what “free” buys

Both are free and both offer partial profit tracking, meaning they’ll give you some margin visibility but not the full SKU-level cost-of-goods-and-ads picture the paid tools do.

Quixt is a straightforward free/limited tool. MaxGainer is the one to be careful with: it claims “Forever Free TikTok Financial Reconciliation” with real-time order push, but it has zero footprint outside its store listing — no reviews, no discussion, no independent verification of its capabilities anywhere we could find as of 2026-07-11. “Free” plus “unverifiable” isn’t a reason not to try it; it is a reason not to build your books on it before you’ve confirmed it does what it says with your own data.

TrueProfit — listed in the US store, but its own site says US isn’t supported

TrueProfit is the category’s sharpest cautionary tale. It appears in the TikTok Shop US App Store at $29/mo with a 14-day trial and multichannel profit tracking, which makes it look like a natural shortlist candidate. But its own website lists supported TikTok Shop regions as UK, Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand — not the US. Being present in the US store does not mean US TikTok Shop data is supported. We’re recording this as a direct conflict between the store listing and the vendor’s own documentation; if you’re a US seller, verify TikTok Shop US support with TrueProfit in writing before you subscribe. (Note for transparency: TrueProfit runs an affiliate program, and this site does not use its affiliate link — precisely because linking a tool whose US support is in question would put commission ahead of accuracy.)

HiveHQ and Margn — promoted, but not in the store

These two come up constantly in “free TikTok Shop profit tracker” searches, and both do full profit tracking with generous free tiers (HiveHQ free to 250 orders then $39–399/mo; Margn free to 500 orders/mo). The thing the listicles rarely mention: neither is listed in the official TikTok Shop US App Store (verified 2026-07-11). That’s not automatically disqualifying — off-store tools can connect by API or upload — but it changes the trust calculus, because they sit outside TikTok’s app review. HiveHQ has real momentum (roughly 24K monthly site visits), though an average visit around 20 seconds reads more like content traffic than active product use. Margn’s site traffic is effectively zero as of mid-2026. Treat both as “try the free tier and verify against your own numbers,” not as store-vetted defaults.

If what you actually need is an accounting bridge, not a tracker

A lot of sellers search for a “profit tracker” when the real job is getting clean TikTok Shop numbers into QuickBooks or Xero for a bookkeeper or for tax season. That’s an accounting bridge, and none of the trackers above is built for it. Buying a profit tracker for that job means paying for dashboards you don’t need and still not having books your accountant trusts.

In that case the relevant tool is Link My Books (from $17/mo by order volume), which is a solid QuickBooks/Xero bridge across eight sales channels and is accountant-focused. Two honesty notes, applied the same way we’d apply them to any tool: Link My Books does not do SKU-level profit tracking (profit_tracking: none in our dataset), so it is not a substitute for the trackers above if margin analytics is what you want; and its own help center openly states that payout mismatches are “normal,” meaning bank-level auto-reconciliation isn’t fully solved. That last point is a mark in its favor on candor. (That Link My Books link is an affiliate link — disclosed — and it changes nothing about where it sits here: it’s recommended only for the accounting-bridge job, and deliberately kept out of the profit-tracker ranking above, because it doesn’t do that job. See methodology.)

If you need reconciliation specifically — confirming TikTok paid you correctly — that’s a third category again, and the fuller comparison of every TikTok Shop finance app breaks out which tools cover it.

So which profit tracker should you pick?

How we checked this

Every price above is the official in-store listing price from the TikTok Shop US App Store, captured 2026-07-11, not the number on the vendor’s marketing page — because those two disagree often enough to matter. Every claim check was cross-referenced against the vendor’s own site the same day. Reality-check notes are applied identically to tools that pay us a commission and tools that pay us nothing; several tools here have no affiliate program at all and are evaluated exactly the same way. We publish the date on everything so that when a price changes, you know when our snapshot was taken. Details, trademark notice, and full affiliate disclosure are in the methodology.

Data checked 2026-07-11. Prices and store listings change; if you find a mismatch, tell us and we’ll re-verify.