Product detail page

  • Written by Ganesh Pawar 3 min read
  • Updated: July 22, 2025

What is a product detail page (PDP)?

A Product Detail Page (PDP) is a dedicated page on an ecommerce website that contains all the information a shopper needs to evaluate and buy a single product. It typically includes product images, pricing, a description, available sizes or colors, stock status, materials, and key features.

The PDP sits between the product listing page (PLP), which displays multiple products from a category or search result, and the cart and checkout flow. It is the page where the shopper actually decides to add the item to their cart, which makes it one of the highest-leverage pages on any store for conversion rate optimization (CRO). A clear, well-designed PDP builds trust, answers common purchase questions, and removes friction at the moment of decision.

PDP best practices

  • Use high-quality, zoomable product images, ideally with multiple angles, lifestyle shots, and short product video or a 360-degree view.
  • Display clear pricing, stock availability, and shipping or delivery timing.
  • Write compelling, scannable product descriptions that lead with benefits, then list specs.
  • Provide variant selectors for size, color, or other options that change the product configuration.
  • Display customer reviews, ratings, and user-generated content as social proof.
  • Offer trust signals such as return policy, guarantees, and security badges.
  • Highlight unique features and benefits that differentiate the product from alternatives.
  • Use clear calls to action like “Add to Cart” or “Buy Now,” placed prominently and visible without scrolling on mobile.
  • Optimize the page for mobile, since most ecommerce traffic and an increasing share of conversions now come from phones.
  • Surface cross-sells and “complete the look” recommendations as a soft upsell without crowding the primary CTA.

Examples of product detail pages

A shopper visits the Nike website and clicks on the Nike Air Zoom Pegasus 40 running shoes. They land on a Product Detail Page with multiple images of the shoe from different angles, a short product description, size and width selectors, color options, and pricing. The page highlights features like cushioning and breathability, surfaces customer reviews with fit feedback, and offers a size guide. Below the “Add to Bag” button, free delivery and free returns are shown, reducing the perceived risk of purchase.

Other strong PDP patterns are visible on DTC brands such as Allbirds (sustainability-led product story with a “Find Your Size” tool) and Glossier (community-driven reviews filterable by skin type and concern). Shopify subscription stores typically add one more layer: a subscribe-and-save widget inside the PDP itself, letting shoppers choose between a one-time purchase and a recurring delivery before they even hit the cart.

Driftcharge Tip

Treat the PDP as a continuously tested page, not a fixed asset. Run A/B tests on individual elements like the hero image, primary CTA copy, variant selector layout, review placement, and trust badges. For subscription stores, also test how the subscribe-and-save option is presented against the one-time purchase option, since the default selection and the savings phrasing materially affect subscription opt-in rates.

Author Image

Ganesh Pawar

Ganesh Pawar is the founder of Driftcharge, a subscription management app designed to help Shopify merchants streamline and scale their subscription businesses. With a deep focus on solving real-world pain points—like legacy account page support, flexible subscription options, and advanced analytics—Ganesh is passionate about building tools that drive growth and retention.

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