Shopify

The dominant dedicated e-commerce platform, powering millions of stores worldwide, with a hosted admin, customisable themes, one of the fastest checkouts on the web, and a massive app ecosystem.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Shopify For?
  2. The Shopify Admin
  3. Themes & Storefronts
  4. Checkout, Payments & POS
  5. Apps & Ecosystem
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Shopify For?

Shopify is the dominant dedicated e-commerce platform, powering millions of online stores worldwide and processing hundreds of billions of dollars in gross merchandise volume each year. Unlike general-purpose website builders, Shopify is built from the ground up to sell products — every decision in the product is made with commerce in mind.

It's a strong fit for anyone whose primary goal is selling products online. Small brands, DTC (direct-to-consumer) businesses, Instagram-born retailers, subscription box services, and most new e-commerce ventures default to Shopify because it handles the hard parts — checkout, payments, inventory, shipping, taxes — without needing plugins or custom development.

It suits growing brands that expect to scale. Shopify handles stores from 10 products to 10,000+ on the same platform. The jump from Basic to Plus is significant in cost but smooth in migration, so there's no "platform wall" when a store grows.

It's a fit for physical retailers who also want an online presence. Shopify POS unifies in-person and online sales into a single inventory, customer database, and order stream.

It's a strong choice for developers and agencies building custom e-commerce experiences. Shopify's Liquid templating language, Storefront API, Hydrogen (React framework), and Oxygen (hosting) let advanced teams build fully custom headless storefronts on top of Shopify's commerce engine.

Shopify is less compelling for content-heavy sites. A blog or magazine site with a small store attached is usually better served by WordPress or a general website builder with an e-commerce module bolted on. Shopify's CMS is serviceable but isn't designed for long-form editorial work.

It's also less suited for businesses with a handful of sales per month. The subscription fee can outweigh the value for very low-volume sellers, and for those users, marketplaces (Etsy, eBay) or simpler tools like Gumroad and Wix Stores may cost less until volume picks up.

The Shopify Admin

The Shopify admin is the most polished e-commerce dashboard on the market. It's clean, fast, and covers virtually every operational need a store has without feeling cluttered.

The admin's strength is that it's designed for daily use. Whatever operational task you're doing — fulfilling an order, adding a product, running a discount, reviewing sales — the path is short and the interface is responsive. The polish compounds over time into meaningful productivity.

Themes & Storefronts

Shopify separates the storefront (what customers see) from the admin (what you see), and the storefront is built on customisable themes using Shopify's Liquid templating language.

The theme ecosystem is mature and polished. For most stores, picking a good theme and customising it in the theme editor produces a storefront that looks professional without needing a developer. For stores that need something custom, Hydrogen and the Storefront API open the door to almost anything.

Checkout, Payments & POS

Shopify's biggest single competitive advantage is its checkout. It's widely regarded as the best-converting checkout in e-commerce, and it's the reason Shopify Plus stores stay on the platform even when custom builds would be technically feasible.

For conversion rate, Shopify's checkout is genuinely difficult to beat. It's the piece of the platform that most direct competitors struggle to match, and it's a big reason why major brands pay Shopify Plus prices rather than building custom.

Apps & Ecosystem

Shopify's app ecosystem is enormous. The Shopify App Store has thousands of apps covering virtually every e-commerce need a store could have.

The app ecosystem is both Shopify's strength and one of its main cost sinks. Most stores end up paying for three to ten apps each month, and those subscriptions can easily match or exceed the Shopify plan cost itself. The upside is that you can extend your store to do almost anything without custom development.

Pricing & Plans

PlanStarterBasicShopifyAdvancedPlus
Price (monthly)~$5/mo~$39/mo~$105/mo~$399/moFrom ~$2,300/mo
Full online storeLimitedYesYesYesYes
Staff accounts12515Unlimited
Online credit card rate~5%~2.9% + 30¢~2.7% + 30¢~2.5% + 30¢Custom
Transaction fee (non-Shopify Payments)Higher2.0%1.0%0.5%Custom
ReportsBasicBasicStandardAdvancedCustom / BI
Checkout customisationNoLimitedLimitedLimitedFull
API call limitsLowStandardStandardHigherHighest

The Starter plan at ~$5/month is for social media sellers who want a simple buy button or link in bio, not a full store. Useful for Instagram-first sellers and link-in-bio monetisation, limited for anything more.

Basic at ~$39/month is the real entry point for new stores. Full online store, standard features, and competitive credit card rates. Most new Shopify stores start here.

Shopify at ~$105/month is the mid-tier, aimed at growing stores. Lower credit card rates, more staff accounts, and standard reports. The step up from Basic makes sense when transaction savings from the lower rate outweigh the plan cost increase — typically somewhere between $10k and $20k/month in sales.

Advanced at ~$399/month adds advanced reports, lower transaction fees, and more API bandwidth. Worth considering once stores are doing significant volume and need the reporting depth.

Shopify Plus from ~$2,300/month is the enterprise tier with custom checkout, unlimited staff, dedicated support, and access to Plus-only features like wholesale channels and launchpad scheduling. Typically used by stores doing ~$1M+ per year in sales where the platform stability and feature depth justify the cost.

Compared with self-hosted alternatives like WooCommerce, Shopify costs more in monthly fees but usually saves money on operational overhead, checkout conversion, and developer time. For serious e-commerce, the platform economics typically favour Shopify unless you have specific reasons to own your stack (strict data control, custom tech, specialised needs). For most brands, Shopify is the default for a reason.

Shopify

Dedicated e-commerce platform with best-in-class checkout, a polished admin, customisable themes, and a massive app ecosystem.

Open Shopify →