EU and US shoppers see the same English text but need different product images. Per-market overrides for CE marks, FDA labels, and metric vs imperial.
TL;DR: EU and US shoppers both browse your store in English. They need different product images. CE markings, energy labels, FDA disclaimers, voltage stickers, and metric vs imperial units all change the visuals. Shopify won’t show them different images by default. The market-level overrides in our Shopify translation app let you serve EU-compliant images to EU shoppers and US-compliant images to US shoppers, automatically.
It’s the most common assumption international Shopify merchants make. Customers in Berlin, London, Toronto, Sydney, and New York all browse in English. So one English version of the product image covers all of them. Right?
Not quite. The English is the same. The packaging often isn’t.
If you sell internationally and your product photo includes the actual packaging, you’re showing the wrong stickers and labels to one or both of those audiences.
Showing US packaging to an EU customer isn’t just a confusing browsing experience. It can be a legal one.
EU regulators expect products sold into the EU to display required marks (CE, energy labels, allergen warnings) clearly. If your storefront image shows the US version of the box, customers can claim the listing was misleading. Returns and refund disputes become easier for the customer to win. And in regulated categories (cosmetics, food, electronics, supplements), there’s a real risk of consumer protection complaints.
The reverse is also true. US shoppers don’t expect to see CE marks. Some get suspicious about counterfeit goods or grey-market imports when packaging looks “off.”
The fix isn’t legal advice. It’s just showing the right photo to the right audience.
Shopify Markets is solid for region-level commerce setup:
The image, though, is one entity attached to the product. Every market sees the same one. Shopify itself acknowledges this gap. There’s no native “show this image only to the EU market” toggle.
The workarounds merchants try:
localization.country. Works, but breaks every theme update.None of these scale.
The newer release of Image Translate Easy on the Shopify App Store adds a market-level translation mode. Same product, same SKU, but different images per Shopify Market.
For an EU vs US split, the workflow is:
And for the rest of your catalog where the EU and US images are actually identical, you don’t have to do anything. Markets only override where you’ve uploaded an override.
Categories where this is worth setting up:
If you sell into both regions and your product photography includes any of the above, you have an EU vs US image split waiting to happen.
Post-Brexit, the UK is its own thing. UKCA marking has effectively replaced CE for products placed on the UK market. If you sell to the UK as a separate market in Shopify, the same per-market image override approach works: upload a UK-version image with the UKCA mark to your UK market column. EU shoppers still get the CE version. US shoppers still get the FDA-compliant version. Each region sees what’s appropriate for them.
The same logic applies to Australia (RCM mark), Japan (PSE), Canada (CSA / cUL), and any other regulated region. One product, multiple markets, different images per market.
Shopify stores alt text per language, not per market. So if your EU and US images both have English text on the label, the alt text is going to be the same English alt for both. That’s fine for accessibility (screen readers don’t care about regulatory marks).
For SEO purposes, the image URLs are different per market, so search engines crawling each regional version of your site index the right photos. Translated alt text and Shopify SEO covers the language angle in more depth.
Most merchants we talk to spend longer arguing internally about whether the EU vs US image difference matters than they do actually setting it up. The technical part is short:
If you’ve been duplicating products to handle this, deleting the duplicates is honestly the bigger task than setting up the overrides.
Pick one SKU where you know the EU and US packaging differs. Set up market mode for that product. View the storefront from a US IP and an EU IP (or use Shopify’s market preview). See the swap in action. Then decide whether it’s worth rolling out to the rest of your catalog.
The free trial of Image Translate Easy covers your first product, so you can run the EU vs US test before paying anything.