You can now treat your Echo Show like a full-on Amazon shopping terminal, not just a smart speaker that happens to reorder paper towels every now and then. With Alexa+ and the new Alexa for Shopping features, the big-screen Echo Show 15 and Echo Show 21 basically turn into a visual version of Amazon.com that you can control with your voice, your fingers, or a mix of both.
Instead of the stripped-down “Alexa, buy this” flow we’ve had for years, Amazon is now putting the entire store interface directly onto Echo Show displays. The layout mirrors the website and app: you can browse the homepage, jump into storefronts, apply filters, scroll long product pages, and dig through customer photos and reviews without ever picking up your phone. If you’ve ever tried shopping by voice and felt blind, this is the fix – you get all the visuals you’re used to from a laptop, but layered on top of conversational AI.
The most interesting part is how voice and touch blend together. You might start with a voice command like, “Alexa, show me 4K TVs under $800 that can arrive by Friday,” then switch to using the touchscreen to scan thumbnails and spec sheets. When you get stuck, you can toss the work back to Alexa with questions like, “Which of these has the best reviews?” or “Compare the Samsung and LG options on the screen.” The assistant will pull out ratings, key pros and cons, and often a short AI summary so you don’t have to manually cross-reference ten tabs.
Under the hood, this is powered by Alexa+, Amazon’s newer, more conversational AI model that’s slowly becoming the default assistant across Echo devices. Alexa+ is designed to learn your habits and preferences over time – the brands you usually buy, the dietary restrictions you care about, the sizes that fit, even the price ranges you tend to stick to. That context is shared between Echo Show and the Amazon app or website, so if you start browsing for a coffee machine in the kitchen, that browsing history and your shortlist follow you when you sit down at your laptop later.

On Echo Show specifically, Amazon has redesigned the shopping interface for “across the room” use. That means big product images, chunky buttons, and larger fonts that are legible from the kitchen counter, couch, or dining table. It sounds like a small tweak, but it matters a lot in practice: smart displays live several feet away from you, unlike a phone that’s inches from your face, so navigation has to be simpler and more forgiving. Reviews are also easier to skim because you can scroll through them like you would on a tablet, then let Alexa read highlights or specific sections out loud if your hands are busy.
Amazon says it’s already seeing people actually complete more purchases on Echo Show since launching Alexa+, claiming roughly triple the purchase completion rate compared to the original Alexa shopping experience. That’s not shocking: when you can see what you’re buying, compare options side by side, and double-check shipping details, you’re more likely to follow through instead of abandoning halfway and “just doing it on your phone later.” Put simply, Amazon is turning the Echo Show from a voice-only impulse-buy gadget into a genuine storefront where you can comfortably research, compare, and commit.
Alexa for Shopping is the other half of this story. It’s an AI shopping layer that sits across Amazon’s website, mobile apps, and Echo Show devices, and it’s built to behave more like a knowledgeable store associate than a basic search box. You can ask things like “What’s a good starter camera for YouTube videos with a budget of $700?” or “I want a quiet treadmill that fits in a small apartment,” and Alexa will generate tailored recommendations, explain its reasoning, and offer side-by-side comparisons. It can show you price history for up to a year, surface deals, and create simple buying guides so you aren’t starting every search from zero.
On Echo Show, those AI smarts show up in small but useful ways. Imagine you’re planning a weekend hike: you ask Alexa for the forecast, see rain on the screen, then say, “Find me a waterproof rain jacket that arrives by Friday.” The display fills with jackets, and from there you can filter by size, brand, or price, check how genuinely waterproof something is in the description, and then ask, “Which one is best for long hikes?” to get a more opinionated answer. When you finally hit “Buy,” Alexa already knows your default payment method and delivery address, so checkout feels like a natural extension of the conversation rather than a separate chore.
Alexa is also increasingly proactive about deals and repeat purchases. You can tell it, “Let me know if this monitor drops below $200,” and Alexa will track the price, ping you on Echo Show when it hits your target, or even auto-buy if you’ve enabled that option. Similarly, you can say things like “Add my regular dog food to the cart” or “Restock the cleaning supplies I usually buy,” and it will dig through your order history, rebuild your cart, and hand you a one-tap checkout on the screen. For Amazon, this is obviously powerful – it makes your Echo Show a persistent, ambient shopping engine that gently steers everyday consumption.
Crucially, this isn’t just about Amazon products anymore. With features like Shop Direct and “Buy for Me,” Alexa for Shopping can also handle purchases from other retailers in certain cases, effectively acting as a broker that completes the transaction on your behalf using stored payment and address details. On Echo Show, that means your shopping surface can reach beyond Amazon’s own catalog, even though Amazon is clearly still at the center of the experience. It’s part of a broader shift where Alexa isn’t just a voice remote for Amazon.com, but a higher-level shopping agent that can navigate multiple stores.
From a hardware perspective, this expansion lands first on Amazon’s larger displays: the Echo Show 15 and the even bigger Echo Show 21. The 21-inch model, in particular, is positioned as a kind of kitchen or living room hub, with a full HD screen, built-in Fire TV interface, and a widget-driven home dashboard that already handles calendars, streaming apps, and smart home controls. Adding a full Amazon storefront to that canvas makes it feel less like a fancy digital picture frame and more like a household control center where watching shows, managing your day, and shopping all live on the same device.
In everyday use, the experience feels most natural in those “I’m already doing something else” moments. You’re cooking and realize you’re almost out of flour, so you glance at the screen and say, “Alexa, reorder my usual flour,” then glance back when the confirmation pops up. Or you’re halfway through a workday in your home office, see a review video for a gadget on your phone, and ask the Echo Show on the wall to pull up the listing so you can quickly compare models and prices on a larger display. The entire point is to remove the friction of switching devices mid-task.
Of course, this deeper integration also raises familiar questions about privacy and data use. To deliver those personalized recommendations and “just restock it for me” automations, Alexa for Shopping and Alexa+ rely heavily on your purchase history, browsing behavior, and ongoing conversations with the assistant. Amazon says users remain in control of their data and can manage or delete voice recordings and shopping history, but practically speaking, the system works best when you allow it to accumulate a detailed picture of your habits. For some people, the convenience of one-phrase reorders and AI-assembled product shortlists will be worth that trade-off; others will prefer to keep Alexa at arm’s length.
It’s also worth acknowledging what this means for the broader retail landscape. Amazon is essentially embedding a live storefront into the ambient fabric of your home – a screen on the wall that’s always one question away from presenting you with things to buy. This isn’t traditional “online shopping” where you sit down and consciously open a browser; it’s a more subtle, always-available layer where everyday problems (“I need a new charger,” “We’re out of snacks,” “I should really start working out”) immediately translate into product suggestions within your line of sight. For consumers, that can feel incredibly convenient; for Amazon, it’s the ultimate in reducing the gap between desire and purchase.
If you already own an Alexa+ enabled Echo Show 15 or 21 in the US, the full visual shopping experience should be live now, with Amazon planning to roll it out to additional Echo Show models over time. You can start using it by tapping the Amazon Shopping app in the Echo Show’s menu or simply by telling Alexa what you’re looking for – from there, you decide how much is voice, how much is touch, and how often you want that big screen in your home doubling as a personal storefront.
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