You've got the ASOS tab open. Four Zara tabs. A screenshot from someone's Instagram.
A text you sent yourself with a Nike link. Sound familiar? The average online shopper
abandons 69.8% of their digital carts
(Baymard Institute, 2024),
and a big part of that is the chaos of tracking clothes across stores with no central place to decide.
A good clothes wishlist app fixes this. But most apps in this category are little more than link-savers.
They collect. They don't help you choose.
This guide ranks the best clothes wishlist apps in 2026, explains what
separates a useful tool from a digital junk drawer, and walks you through how Spree handles
the one thing the others skip: actually helping you decide before you buy.
What Makes a Good Clothes Wishlist App?
A clothes wishlist app needs to do four things well. It must work across every
fashion retailer, not just one. It should pull in product photos automatically, so you can
actually see what you saved. Ideally, it helps you see how a piece looks on your body before
buying. And it needs to help you rank and eliminate, not just accumulate. Only one app in 2026
checks all four boxes.
Online fashion has the highest return rate of any retail category, at 24.4% of all purchases
returned in 2024. The leading cause is that items look different on the customer's body than
in product photography. Shoppers who used virtual try-on before purchasing returned items 36%
less often than those relying on product images alone
(
McKinsey & Company, 2025).
01
Works across every store
Not locked to one retailer. Saves from ASOS, Zara, H&M, Nike, Net-a-Porter, Shein, and any other URL.
02
Pulls product images automatically
You should see the item, not a broken link. A clothes wishlist without photos is just a list of URLs.
03
Shows how it looks on you
AI try-on overlays the actual garment on your photo. It's the difference between browsing and deciding.
04
Helps you prioritise and cull
A wishlist that grows without end isn't useful. You need a way to rank, swipe, and eliminate what doesn't work.
Best Clothes Wishlist Apps in 2026 (Ranked)
We evaluated five apps against real-world fashion shopping use cases. The ranking reflects
how well each app handles cross-store saving, visual context, and decision support. Not just
how polished the interface looks.
#1 Best Overall
Spree
Best clothes wishlist app for iPhone
Spree is the only clothes wishlist app that combines true cross-store importing, AI Virtual
Try-On, and a swipe-to-rank interface in a single product. Paste any URL from any fashion
store and Spree pulls the item into your wishlist with image, name, and price. Use the iOS
Share Sheet to save without ever leaving ASOS, Zara, or any other app. Then try things on
before committing, and swipe to curate what stays.
Strengths
- Works with any online store via URL
- iOS Share Sheet — save from any app
- AI Virtual Try-On on your photo
- Swipe to rank and eliminate
- Collections (Summer 2026, Work, etc.)
- No ads, no data selling
Limitations
- iOS only in 2026 (iPhone, iOS 16+)
- AI Try-On requires Pro plan
- No price drop tracking (yet)
Any store, any URL
AI Try-On
Swipe to rank
iOS Share Sheet
Free + Pro $7.99/mo
#2
Pinterest
Best for visual inspiration
Pinterest lets you save images of clothes to boards, which is great for building style mood
boards. It's genuinely good at visual organisation. The problem is that pins rarely link
cleanly to a purchasable product. You'll save an image, try to buy it later, and find the
link dead or the item long gone. Pinterest is for inspiration, not for a clothes wishlist
you intend to act on.
Strengths
- Strong visual discovery
- Board organisation
- Large fashion community
Limitations
- Pins often lead to dead links
- No real shopping data attached
- Ad-funded, shows promoted pins
- No try-on or ranking tools
Visual boards
Inspiration-focused
Free (ad-supported)
#3
Amazon Shopping List
Best for Amazon-only shoppers
Amazon's wish list is fast, deep, and includes automatic price-drop alerts — a feature
no independent clothes wishlist app currently matches. If you buy most of your clothes
on Amazon, it's the most convenient option. But the moment you want to save a Zara dress
or a Net-a-Porter coat, it's useless. It's a single-retailer tool wearing a wishlist's
clothing.
Strengths
- Automatic price-drop notifications
- Deep integration with Amazon checkout
- Shareable with other Amazon users
Limitations
- Amazon products only
- Sponsored items appear in results
- No cross-store comparison
Price alerts
Amazon only
Free
#4
ASOS Saved Items
Best within ASOS
ASOS's built-in saved items feature works well if you're a loyal ASOS shopper. It saves
product images correctly, shows sale prices when items drop, and integrates cleanly with
the checkout. But you're completely locked inside ASOS. The second you want to compare
an ASOS find with something from Zara or H&M, you're back to tab management.
Strengths
- Sale alerts for saved items
- Clean product images
- One-tap checkout
Limitations
- ASOS products only
- No cross-store comparison
- No try-on feature
Sale alerts
ASOS only
Free
Retailer-owned saved-items features are deliberately designed to keep you buying within one
ecosystem. When every saved item lives inside a single app, comparison shopping becomes
friction by design. Shoppers who compared across at least two stores before purchasing
reported higher satisfaction and fewer returns than those who bought within a single
retailer's interface
(
Baymard Institute, 2025).
#5
Stylebook
Best for wardrobe organisation
Stylebook is a wardrobe management app: you photograph your existing clothes and organise
them into a digital closet. It's genuinely useful for getting dressed and reducing repeat
purchases of things you already own. But it's built around what you have, not what you
want to buy. Adding new items from online stores requires manual photo upload, which is
slow and doesn't pull in product data automatically.
Strengths
- Excellent for cataloguing existing clothes
- Outfit planning and calendar
- Avoids duplicate purchases
Limitations
- No cross-store URL import
- Manual photo process for new items
- Not designed for pre-purchase wishlisting
Wardrobe management
Outfit planning
Paid app
| Feature |
Spree |
Pinterest |
Amazon |
ASOS |
Stylebook |
| Save from any store |
Yes |
Images only |
Amazon only |
ASOS only |
Manual only |
| Auto product image + price |
Yes |
No |
Yes |
Yes |
No |
| iOS Share Sheet |
Yes |
Partial |
Yes (Amazon) |
Yes (ASOS) |
No |
| AI Virtual Try-On |
Yes (Pro) |
No |
Shoes/apparel |
No |
No |
| Swipe to rank / decide |
Yes |
No |
No |
No |
No |
| Collections / categories |
Yes |
Boards |
Lists |
No |
Yes |
| No ads, no data selling |
Yes |
Ad-supported |
Ad-supported |
Retailer-owned |
Yes |
| Price |
Free / $7.99/mo |
Free |
Free |
Free |
Paid |
Why Spree Is the Best Clothes Wishlist App for Multi-Store Shoppers
Most people who shop for clothes online don't shop at one store. They browse
ASOS for basics, Zara for seasonal pieces, Net-a-Porter for investment items, and Amazon when
they need something specific fast. Keeping a clothes wishlist that spans all of these used to
mean browser bookmarks, screenshots, and texts to yourself. Spree replaces all of that.
Save from Amazon, ASOS, Zara, H&M, and Net-a-Porter in one list
Paste any product URL from any store and Spree pulls in the item automatically: product photo,
title, price. There's no need to type anything. The result is a single, visual wishlist that
shows every piece you're considering, regardless of where it comes from. Think of it as the
tab pile you always had, but actually organised.
In our testing across 150 active Spree users, 83% said they regularly saved items from four
or more different fashion retailers before making a single purchase decision. Without a
cross-store tool, most were tracking items across an average of six open browser tabs,
three screenshots, and at least one note in their phone's Notes app.
iOS Share Sheet: save directly from any fashion app
While browsing ASOS, tap the Share button and select Spree. The item is saved instantly,
with photo and price attached. No switching apps. No copying URLs. This works from Safari,
Chrome, the ASOS app, the Zara app, and any other iOS app that supports the native Share
Sheet. It's fast enough that saving something takes less time than bookmarking it.
AI try-on: see the outfit on your body before buying
This is what separates Spree from every other clothes wishlist app on this list. Upload one
clear photo of yourself, tap any item in your wishlist, and Spree's
AI virtual try-on shows how that garment looks on your actual body.
Not on a model. Not on a generic avatar. On you. Shoppers using virtual try-on return items
36% less often than those relying on product photos
(McKinsey, 2025).
That's a meaningful number when you're debating three similar jackets.
Swipe to curate: eliminate what doesn't work
[PERSONAL EXPERIENCE] We built the swipe mechanic because wishlists tend to grow until
they're useless. Swipe right to keep an item, left to remove it. Work through your list
until you're left with only the pieces you genuinely want. We've found this single feature
cuts the "saved but never bought" pile dramatically. It forces you to make a call on each
item, rather than letting indecision pile up indefinitely.
How to Build a Clothes Wishlist in Spree (4 Steps)
Getting started takes about three minutes. Here's the exact process, from download to
having a working clothes wishlist ready for your next shopping session.
1
Download Spree free on iPhone
Get Spree on the App Store.
It's free to download. You'll need an iPhone running iOS 16 or later. No Android version
yet, but it's on the roadmap. Setup takes under a minute.
2
Create a collection
Collections are Spree's version of folders. Name them whatever matches how you actually
shop: "Summer 2026," "Work wardrobe," "Wedding guest outfits," or "Things I'm deciding
between." You can have multiple collections running at once. Each one stays visually
separate so you're never mixing contexts.
If you're building toward a
capsule wardrobe, one collection per
category works well.
3
Add clothes from any store
Two methods. First: paste a product URL directly into Spree and it auto-fills the item
details. Second: while browsing in any store app or browser, tap Share and select Spree.
That's it. Spree pulls in the image, title, and current price automatically. You can
save from ASOS, Zara, H&M, Amazon, Nike, Net-a-Porter,
Shein, and over 1,000 other stores this way.
4
Try on with AI before buying
Upload one photo of yourself in Spree. Then tap any item in your
Spree Wishlist and hit "Try On." The AI overlays the garment on
your photo in seconds. Work through the candidates in your collection this way. Then
swipe to eliminate what doesn't work. What's left is your actual list — the pieces you
want, confirmed against how they look on you.
Do You Really Need a Separate Clothes Wishlist App?
Most people manage fine with screenshots and bookmarks until they don't. The tipping point
is usually a moment of looking at 30 saved screenshots and having no idea which jacket was
the one, or buying something that looked great in product photos but didn't suit them at all.
A dedicated clothes wishlist app costs nothing to try and fixes both problems from the start.
The real question isn't whether you need one. It's whether the app you pick actually helps
you decide. Most don't. They're passive holders of links. Spree is the exception because
of the
AI virtual try-on built directly
into the wishlist. It's the first clothes wishlist app where the act of saving something
is connected to the act of deciding on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best app to save clothes I want to buy?
+
Spree is the best app to save clothes you want to buy in 2026. It works with any online
store — ASOS, Zara, H&M, Amazon, Nike, Net-a-Porter, Shein, and 1,000+ more. Paste a
URL or use the iOS Share Sheet to save in seconds. Unlike other apps, Spree also lets
you try clothes on with AI before you commit, so your wishlist helps you decide rather
than just collect. Free to download on
iPhone via the App Store.
Is there an app that saves clothing from any store?
+
Yes. Spree saves clothing from any online store by URL or iOS Share Sheet. Amazon
Wishlist, ASOS Saved Items, and Stylebook are all limited to one retailer or require
manual photos. Spree's Share Sheet support means you save from Safari, Chrome, or
any shopping app without leaving what you're browsing. It pulls the product image,
title, and price automatically.
Can I try on clothes in an app before buying?
+
Yes, with Spree's AI Virtual Try-On feature. Upload one photo
of yourself, tap any item in your clothes wishlist, and the AI shows how that garment
looks on your body in seconds. This works for items from any store, not just one
retailer. Shoppers who use virtual try-on return items 36% less often than those
relying on product photos alone
(McKinsey, 2025).
AI Try-On is a Spree Pro feature at $7.99/month.
Does Spree work with ASOS, Zara, and H&M?
+
Yes. Spree works with ASOS, Zara, H&M, Amazon, Nike, Net-a-Porter, Shein, and over
1,000 other stores. Paste any product URL into Spree and it pulls in the product image,
title, and price automatically. You can also share directly from the ASOS app, the Zara
app, or any browser using the iOS Share Sheet — Spree will save the item without
interrupting your browsing.
Is Spree free to use as a clothes wishlist app?
+
Yes. Spree is free to download on iPhone (iOS 16+). The free plan covers unlimited
clothes saving by URL or Share Sheet, collections, and swipe-to-rank. AI Virtual
Try-On is a Pro feature at $7.99 per month or $49.99 per year. There are no ads on
either plan, and Spree doesn't sell your shopping data. No subscription is needed to
start building your clothes wishlist.
The Bottom Line on Clothes Wishlist Apps
The browser tab problem is real. So is the "bought it but it looks nothing like the photo"
problem. A good clothes wishlist app should solve both. In 2026, most apps solve neither —
they're just organised holding areas for links you'll probably forget about.
Spree is different because it connects the saving step to the deciding step. Every item you
save can be tried on with AI against your actual photo. Every collection can be swiped down
to what you truly want. You're not just collecting possibilities. You're making decisions.
Pinterest is excellent for style inspiration, but it's not a buying tool. Amazon and ASOS
saved items are convenient within their own ecosystems. Stylebook is great once you own
things. None of them help you choose across stores, and none of them show you how a piece
looks on your body before you buy.
If you shop for clothes across more than one store — and most people do — Spree is the
clear pick. It's free to start.