Search Mulebuy Spreadsheet Finds
Enter an item name, category, or source. Review the result on Findsindex, then use our checklist before saving a row.
Search results open on Findsindex in a new tab. Mulebuy Review does not sell or verify the displayed products.
Browse by category
Already know the item type? Open the closest Findsindex directory, compare similar products, then return to the checklist before saving a row.
Directory links open Findsindex in a new tab. A category route organizes browsing; it does not verify individual products or sellers.
A Mulebuy spreadsheet is useful when it helps you move from a broad list of links to a smaller shortlist. Start with the category, check photos, sizing, price context, and shipping weight, then continue only with rows that still make sense.
Why start with a category?
Broad Mulebuy spreadsheet searches mix footwear, clothing, bags, accessories, and source links in one crowded view. That makes a cheap row look interesting even when it is hard to compare.
Choose the product type first. Similar items raise similar questions: footwear needs sole and sizing detail; jackets need measurements and fabric clues; bags need interior and hardware photos. Comparison becomes useful once the rows share a purpose.
How to use this site
- 1
Pick the category first
Decide what kind of item you are comparing so each photo and measurement has a job.
- 2
Compare similar finds
Open a few plausible rows together. Price, detail, and sizing are easier to judge side by side.
- 3
Save only with a reason
Keep the row if you can state why it remains useful. “Popular” is not a reason by itself.
What makes a row worth saving?
A useful row reduces uncertainty. It does not have to answer everything, but it should give you enough to ask the next sensible question.
- The category is clear and relevant
- Photos show details that matter
- Sizing or measurements are visible
- Price is compared in context
- Shipping weight is considered
- Source clues match the destination
- The row offers more than hype
Do not browse without knowing what is missing
Before opening another list, name the thing you still need to learn. It might be the jacket measurements, a clear view of the bag interior, the original marketplace page, or a realistic weight estimate.
That one question gives the next click a purpose. If a new page does not help answer it, close the page and keep the shortlist small.
Read for the question you have
Four focused articles turn common spreadsheet problems into small, repeatable checks.
Compare spreadsheets without counting noise
Check duplicate rows, working links, useful detail, and mobile usability.
Read the guide →Visual checksRead QC photos by category
Focus on useful angles, consistency, and the questions photos cannot answer.
Read the guide →Source linksUnderstand original and converted links
Keep Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian, and 1688 routes separate from the item itself.
Read the guide →Buying servicesCompare spreadsheet links without mixing them up
Tell a list, source page, photo album, and converted route apart.
Read the guide →Use the right page for the question
Know the category? Continue there.
If you already know the category, open the matching Findsindex page. If you are still unsure, read the checklist first and keep the shortlist small.