Stellar AIO Review 2026: The Retail Bot With 70+ Sites
Widest retail coverage
The breadth king, 70+ supported retailers make Stellar AIO the pick for retail arbitrage, collectibles and price errors rather than pure sneaker heat. Quarterly pricing works out reasonable; the UI has a learning curve.
- Price
- $150/quarter
- Whop rating
- 4.8★ (264 reviews)
- Trial
- No free trial
What we like
- 70+ supported sites, the widest retail coverage we've assessed
- Ideal for retail arbitrage: consoles, cards, collectibles, price errors
- 4.8★ from 264 Whop ratings with 24/7 support
- $150/quarter (~$50/month) is fair for the coverage
- Strong fit with price-error and restock communities
What to watch
- No free trial, you're in for a quarter minimum
- Some users find the UI cluttered and confusing at first
- For pure SNKRS/Supreme heat, specialists are sharper
Most sneaker bots are named honestly: they bot sneakers. Stellar AIO’s ambition is wider, it wants to be the checkout layer for retail, full stop. Its module list spans 70+ sites, from sneaker heat through big-box retail, and that breadth changes who it’s for: this is the bot you buy when your profit comes from PS5 restocks, Pokémon card drops and price errors as much as from Jordans. On Whop it holds a 4.8-star average across 264 ratings at $150/quarter. Here’s our research-based assessment.
Breadth is the entire pitch
Think about where money has actually been made in reselling these past few years: console restocks, trading card releases, collectible drops, price errors at major retailers. Almost none of that happens on SNKRS. A sneaker-only bot watches those opportunities go by; Stellar AIO’s 70+ supported sites are built to chase them. Pair it with a community that runs price-error and restock monitors, the broad groups in our rankings all do, and the bot becomes the “act instantly” half of an alert pipeline.
That’s also the honest frame for comparing it with Hidden AIO: they’re not really rivals. Hidden AIO concentrates on four high-heat platforms; Stellar carpet-bombs retail. Which one you want depends entirely on where your flips live.
What the 264 ratings actually say
The 4.8 average is strong, and the praise clusters around coverage (“it’s supported every site I’ve needed”), checkout success on retail restocks, and the responsiveness of the 24/7 support. The criticism is just as consistent and worth taking seriously: several reviewers find the interface cluttered and unintuitive, “extremely unorganized” in one blunt review, especially compared with slicker modern bots. Nobody calls it broken; plenty call it busy. Budget a learning weekend.
The other recurring theme is the one every bot shares: performance varies by site and by week, because retailers fight bots continuously. The dev team’s update cadence is what reviewers credit for keeping success rates up, which is exactly what you’re really subscribing to.
Pricing: fair, but no safety net
At $150/quarter (roughly $50/month, with an annual option), Stellar sits in the same monthly band as Hidden AIO and below NSB. For 70+ sites, that’s fair pricing. The catch is commitment: there’s no trial, so your minimum cost of finding out is $150. That’s the main reason it sits second in our bot rankings despite the bigger spec sheet, we weight risk-free testing heavily, on bots as on groups.
Costs beyond the subscription
Same arithmetic as every bot: add proxies (£20–50/month for residential on contested releases), accounts and profiles set up properly, and ideally a community feeding you targets, a bot without drop info is automation with nothing to automate. All-in, expect £80–140/month for a serious setup.
Who should buy it (and who shouldn’t)
Buy if: your opportunities span general retail, consoles, cards, collectibles, price errors, and you want one bot to act on all of them; or you’re in a price-error/restock-focused group and keep watching alerts sell out before you can click.
Look elsewhere if: you want to test a bot risk-free before paying (Hidden AIO’s 30-day trial), or you’re a Nike/SNKRS specialist (Nike Shoe Bot).
Our verdict
Stellar AIO is the strongest “one bot for everything” pick we’ve assessed, the automation mirror of what House of Resell is among groups. The UI grumbles are real and the missing trial stings, but 70+ sites at ~$50/month with a 4.8★ record from 264 ratings is a genuinely good deal for the reseller whose profits come from retail breadth rather than sneaker heat. If that’s you, this is your bot.
How we assessed this bot
This review is editorial research, not sponsored content. We verified the bot’s live Whop listing on 11 June 2026, pricing, plans and its review score and volume, and read user feedback on Whop alongside independent bot coverage and the developer’s own documentation. We don’t run task-count benchmarks ourselves; where a performance claim comes from users or third-party testers, the text says so. Remember that bot performance shifts week to week as retailers update their defences, recent reviews matter more than old ones. Our scoring criteria are published on how we rank.
Pricing at a glance
| Tier | Price | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Quarterly | $150/3mo | Full bot, all 70+ site modules, updates, 24/7 support |
| Annual | Annual option | Same access at a saving over quarterly; see the live listing for the current annual price |
Prices verified on Whop at the time of writing, always check the live page before joining.
Frequently asked questions
How much does Stellar AIO cost?
$150 per quarter (about $50/month) on the live Whop listing at our last check, with an annual option also offered. The developer's own site has sold different bundles over time, so check the live Whop listing for current terms.
What is Stellar AIO best for?
Retail breadth, automating checkouts across 70+ retailers for restocks, price errors, trading cards, consoles and collectibles. It's the bot for "buy anything profitable anywhere" rather than only hyped sneakers.
Does Stellar AIO have a trial?
No free trial at the time of writing, which is its biggest drawback versus Hidden AIO's cancel-anytime monthly billing. The quarterly minimum means testing it costs $150.
Is Stellar AIO beginner-friendly?
Functional but busier than average, several reviews mention a confusing UI at first. The 24/7 support and active Discord offset this, but expect a learning weekend before your first contested drop.