Taste is one of Shopify’s free in-house themes, aimed at food and drink brands plus specialty merchants who want bold typography and high-contrast layouts. The verdict upfront: Taste works for food and beverage startups with strong product photography and a small catalog, but its 54 percent positive rating on the Shopify Theme Store is well below other Shopify-developed themes. For most stores, Dawn is the better free choice. This review covers exactly when Taste is worth the install and when to pass.

Key Takeaways
1
Taste is free, OS 2.0, and developed by Shopify, with one preset focused on bold food and beverage branding.
2
The Shopify Theme Store rating is 54 percent positive across 13 reviews, the lowest among current Shopify-developed free themes.
3
Strengths: industrial typography, lookbooks, ingredient and nutrition sections, color swatches built in.
4
Weaknesses: limited sections vs Dawn, narrow visual identity, no real customization for non-food niches.
5
Best for: food and drink startups with under 50 SKUs and strong photography. Skip if you sell apparel, electronics, or run a 200+ SKU catalog.

What is the Taste Shopify theme?

Taste is a free Online Store 2.0 theme published by Shopify in late 2022. It runs on the same theme architecture as Dawn (Shopify’s flagship free theme) but with a distinct design preset built around bold headlines, thin strokes, industrial fonts, and a high-contrast color palette. As of June 2026, Taste powers around 23,000 live stores according to BuiltWith data.

The theme ships with one design preset called Taste. Unlike Concept (which includes both Harmony and Inova presets), there’s only one visual style to start from. You can customize colors, typography, and section layouts through the standard OS 2.0 editor.

Taste design and layout

Taste leans hard into bold branding. The default homepage uses oversized headlines, narrow body text, and a contrasty color palette that defaults to white-on-black or black-on-white blocks. Section dividers are sharp rather than gradient, and the typography pairs an industrial sans-serif (something close to a condensed grotesque) with a thin secondary font for body copy.

The design works when your products carry their own visual weight: hot sauce bottles with strong label design, craft chocolate bars, indie coffee, jewelry with bold materials. It does not work when products need soft, lifestyle staging or when you’re selling commodity items where the design needs to do the heavy lifting. Apparel especially feels miscast in Taste’s grid layouts.

One specific quirk: Taste handles product image grids with larger-than-default cards, which is great for hero products but creates excess scrolling on collection pages with more than about 50 SKUs. Tested against Dawn on the same product data, Taste’s collection pages feel sparser and require more swipes on mobile.

Architecture: how Taste compares to Dawn under the hood

Most reviews treat Taste and Dawn as separate themes. They aren’t, really. Taste ships from the same Shopify Online Store 2.0 codebase as Dawn: the same Liquid section structure, the same JSON template format, the same theme settings schema in most places. What differs is the section library, the default settings, and the visual preset. If you know how to edit Dawn, you already know how to edit Taste.

That matters for two reasons. First, any Liquid tutorial, third-party section, or developer hire that targets Dawn will also work on Taste with minor adjustments. Second, the performance ceiling is the same; Taste won’t be meaningfully faster or slower than Dawn on the same content. The differences you see in PageSpeed are driven by image weights and app scripts, not the theme code itself.

The practical takeaway: think of Taste as Dawn with a food-and-drink design preset plus three niche sections (ingredients, nutrition, per-product FAQs). If those niche sections are why you’re looking at Taste, install it. If they aren’t, you’ll get more flexibility from Dawn with custom CSS.

Taste features

Mega menu and sticky header

Taste includes both, with the same OS 2.0 implementation found in Dawn. The mega menu supports multi-column navigation and image previews, which is enough for most catalogs under 500 SKUs. No promo block embedded in the menu by default.

Product videos, color swatches, and image galleries

Standard OS 2.0 implementation across all three. Product pages support up to 50 images, embedded MP4 or Vimeo/YouTube video, and color swatches that can be tied to product variants. The swatch implementation is metafield-driven, so you need to set up product metafields properly to get it working at scale.

Specialty sections (ingredients, nutrition, FAQs)

This is where Taste differentiates from Dawn. It includes built-in sections for ingredient lists, nutritional information panels, and per-product FAQ blocks. Food and supplement brands get these without needing a third-party app, which saves on monthly costs and page weight. The nutrition section in particular formats well on mobile, which most apps fumble.

Lookbooks, size charts, shipping details

Taste includes lookbook sections for editorial-style product storytelling, size charts (useful if you have jewelry or apparel-adjacent products), and shipping detail panels per product. The lookbook is the most flexible of the three.

Enhanced search and filtering

Taste uses Shopify’s native search and filter system. It does not include AI-powered search or recommendation engines out of the box. For most food and drink stores with under 100 products this is fine. For larger catalogs you’ll need an app like Algolia or Searchanise.

Taste performance and Core Web Vitals

Taste is built on the same lightweight foundation as Dawn. Tested on the official demo (theme-taste-demo.myshopify.com), the homepage hits an LCP of around 1.8 seconds, INP under 200ms, and CLS under 0.05 on mobile (PageSpeed Insights, June 2026). That’s good. Product pages with multiple images and a color swatch picker land slightly slower (LCP around 2.4 seconds) but still pass.

Real-world performance depends entirely on the apps you install. Most Shopify performance issues come from third-party apps, not the theme itself, and Taste’s clean section structure makes it easier to spot a bloated app via Shopify’s web performance dashboard. Our guide to diagnosing slow Shopify themes covers the audit process if you want to compare Taste to your current install.

Taste pricing

Taste is free. No upfront cost, no subscription, no licensing fees, and unlimited use across multiple stores you own. Free updates from Shopify ship through the theme library, the same way Dawn updates work.

The catch with any free theme is the cost of customization. If you want a layout that’s meaningfully different from the default Taste preset, you’ll either need to hire a developer (typically $500 to $2,500 for moderate customizations) or learn enough Liquid and CSS to do it yourself. For a comparison of free versus paid theme economics, see our Dawn vs Debut breakdown.

Taste pros and cons

  • Pro: Free, OS 2.0, and developed by Shopify so updates are reliable.
  • Pro: Built-in sections for ingredients, nutrition, and FAQs save app subscriptions for food brands.
  • Pro: Strong default typography that works well for bold branding without theme customization.
  • Pro: Lookbook section is genuinely flexible for editorial-style product storytelling.
  • Con: 54 percent positive rating on the Shopify Theme Store, below Dawn and other free themes.
  • Con: Only one preset, so your starting point is locked to the default visual identity.
  • Con: Sparse collection pages on larger catalogs (50-plus SKUs). Excess scrolling on mobile.
  • Con: Default high-contrast palette is opinionated and a poor fit outside food, drink, and specialty branding.
  • Con: No native AI search or recommendation engine. Larger catalogs need an app.

Who should use the Taste Shopify theme?

Taste is the right pick if you check most of these:

  • You sell food, drink, supplements, or specialty consumables.
  • Your catalog is under 50 SKUs.
  • You have professional product photography (lifestyle or studio-quality).
  • Your brand identity leans toward bold typography and high contrast (think hot sauce, craft beverages, indie chocolate, niche supplements).
  • You’re a startup or early-stage brand without budget for a paid theme.

Skip Taste if any of these apply:

  • You sell apparel, electronics, home decor, or jewelry. Use Dawn instead, or pay for Concept or Impulse.
  • You have more than 200 SKUs. Taste’s collection layout doesn’t scale.
  • You want a softer, lifestyle-led aesthetic. Taste’s bold defaults will fight you.
  • You need conversion-focused features like advanced search, upsells, or quick buy at scale.

Taste vs the alternatives

For food and drink specifically, the closest free alternative is Dawn with custom CSS for nutrition/ingredient sections (more work, more flexibility). Paid alternatives in the same niche: Studio (free, more versatile aesthetic), Sense ($350, premium beauty/wellness-leaning), or one of the themes from our best Shopify food, drink, and restaurant themes roundup.

If you specifically want a free Shopify theme, our Dawn alternatives guide covers the other Shopify-developed free themes (Sense, Studio, Craft, Colorblock, Refresh, Spotlight, Crave, Origin, Publisher, Ride) and which fits which niche.

Conclusion

The Taste Shopify theme is a niche free theme that’s good at one specific thing: bold food and drink branding for small catalogs. It is not a general-purpose theme, and the 54 percent Theme Store rating reflects that. If you’re inside the target niche (food, drink, specialty consumables, small catalog, bold photography) Taste is a strong free option that saves you the cost of nutrition, ingredient, and FAQ apps. If you’re outside it, Dawn or a paid theme will serve you better. For the broader Shopify theme picture, see our complete Shopify theme review guide.