Amazon contains valuable data — product listings, prices, ratings, review counts, and more. Scraping this data directly means dealing with anti-bot detection, CAPTCHAs, IP rotation, and constantly breaking selectors. The Scavio API handles all of that and returns clean, structured JSON from a single POST request.
This tutorial shows you how to scrape Amazon using Java and the Scavio API. By the end, you will have a working Java script that fetches real-time Amazon data and parses the results.
Prerequisites
- Java installed on your machine
- A Scavio API key (free tier includes 500 credits/month — no credit card required)
Step 1: Install Dependencies
HttpClient is built into Java, so there is nothing to install.
# HttpClient is built into Java 11+Step 2: Make Your First Amazon Search
Send a POST request to the Scavio Amazon API endpoint with your query. The API returns structured JSON with product listings, prices, ratings, and more.
import java.net.http.*;
import java.net.URI;
var apiKey = "your_scavio_api_key";
var body = "{\"query\":\"" + query + "\",\"marketplace\":\"us\"}";
var request = HttpRequest.newBuilder()
.uri(URI.create("https://api.scavio.dev/api/v1/amazon/search"))
.header("x-api-key", apiKey)
.header("Content-Type", "application/json")
.POST(HttpRequest.BodyPublishers.ofString(body))
.build();
var client = HttpClient.newHttpClient();
var response = client.send(request, HttpResponse.BodyHandlers.ofString());
System.out.println(response.body());Step 3: Example Response
The API returns structured JSON. Here is an example response for a Amazon search:
{
"search_metadata": { "status": "success" },
"products": [
{
"position": 1,
"title": "Keychron K6 Pro Wireless Mechanical Keyboard",
"asin": "B0BXQM1GY4",
"price": "$89.99",
"rating": 4.6,
"reviews_count": 2847,
"is_prime": true,
"image": "https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/..."
}
]
}Every field is structured and typed — no HTML parsing, no CSS selectors, no regex extraction. Your Java code can access any field directly.
Step 4: Full Working Example
Here is a complete, runnable Java script that searches Amazon and prints the results:
import java.net.http.*;
import java.net.URI;
/**
* Scrape Amazon search results using Scavio API.
* Requires Java 11+.
*/
public class AmazonSearch {
private static final String API_URL = "https://api.scavio.dev/api/v1/amazon/search";
private static final String API_KEY = System.getenv("SCAVIO_API_KEY");
public static String search(String query) throws Exception {
var body = "{\"query\":\"" + query + "\",\"marketplace\":\"us\"}";
var request = HttpRequest.newBuilder()
.uri(URI.create(API_URL))
.header("x-api-key", API_KEY)
.header("Content-Type", "application/json")
.POST(HttpRequest.BodyPublishers.ofString(body))
.build();
var response = HttpClient.newHttpClient()
.send(request, HttpResponse.BodyHandlers.ofString());
if (response.statusCode() != 200) {
throw new RuntimeException("Scavio API error: " + response.statusCode());
}
return response.body();
}
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
System.out.println(search("mechanical keyboard"));
}
}Why Use Scavio Instead of Scraping Amazon Directly?
- No proxy management. Direct scraping requires rotating proxies to avoid IP bans. Scavio handles all of this server-side.
- No CAPTCHA solving. Amazon aggressively blocks automated requests. Scavio returns clean data every time.
- Structured JSON output. No HTML parsing or CSS selector maintenance. Get typed, consistent data from every request.
- Multi-platform in one API. Search Google, Amazon, YouTube, and Walmart from the same API key with the same authentication pattern.
- Free tier included. 500 credits/month with no credit card required. Each search costs 1 credit.