Shopify vs Wix in 2026: The Honest Comparison
TL;DR Wix is fine for a brochure site or a mini-store with fewer than 20 products. Shopify is built 100% for e-commerce and crushes Wix as soon as you actually want to sell. My verdict: if your goal is to build a real store that runs, Shopify, no hesitation. Wix otherwise.
I've supported dozens of merchants at launch, and the question keeps coming up: "Wix or Shopify?"
The short answer: it depends on what you want to do. But in 90% of cases where the goal is to sell products, Shopify wins.
Here's why, no fluff.
The fundamental difference: an e-commerce tool vs a generalist site builder
Shopify is a pure e-commerce tool. Wix is a generalist site builder that added an e-commerce layer. This origin difference shows up everywhere: interface, native features, update cadence.
It's the starting point for everything.
Wix is a generalist website builder. It added e-commerce features over time, but that's not its DNA. Shopify, on the other hand, was designed from day one to sell online, and only for that.
Concretely: when Shopify ships an update, it's to improve the merchant experience. When Wix ships an update, it's often to improve the site-building experience.
It's not a value judgment. It's just two different philosophies for two different uses.
Comparison table: the criteria that actually matter
| Criterion | Wix | Shopify |
|---|---|---|
| Onboarding | Very easy (drag & drop) | Easy, slight learning curve |
| E-commerce features | Basic, sufficient to start | Complete, advanced, extensible |
| Number of available apps | ~800 apps | 13,000+ e-commerce specialized apps |
| Scalability | Limited beyond a certain volume | Built to scale to millions of orders |
| SEO | Good native SEO, integrated tools | Good SEO, some URL constraints |
| Multichannel sales | Limited, app-dependent | Native: TikTok, Instagram, Amazon, Google |
| Support | Phone callback, no live chat | 24/7 chat, email, phone |
Wix: who it suits (and its real limits)
Wix is relevant for a brochure site, a portfolio, or a side store with fewer than 50 products. Beyond that, its e-commerce limits become blocking.
Let's be honest: Wix isn't a bad platform. It's just poorly suited to serious online selling.
Wix is relevant if you have
- A brochure site with a few products (under 50)
- A services or online booking business
- A portfolio or blog with a small side store
- A very tight budget and a project not ambitious in volume
The limits that hurt in e-commerce
The app ecosystem is more restricted. Wix offers around 800 apps per official Wix figures, some non-e-commerce-oriented. The Shopify App Store exceeds 13,000 specialized apps.
Scalability is less developed. On high-end plans, Shopify (Plus) handles very high volumes of simultaneous transactions Wix doesn't cover. When you start having serious volume, the difference becomes critical.
Product variants are constrained on Wix. Per Wix docs, the number of variants per product is limited, quickly hit if you sell products with multiple options (size, color, material). Shopify offers wider headroom.
Multichannel sales are limited. Shopify natively connects your store to Amazon, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, and Google Shopping from a single dashboard. With Wix, it's more complicated and more dependent on third-party apps.
Migration is painful. If you grow and want to move to Shopify later, the process isn't trivial. Wix designs aren't transposable, you have to rebuild everything. That's time and money lost.
Shopify: why it's the reference for selling online
Shopify powers several million stores worldwide, from small creators to major brands. The dominance doesn't come from marketing, it comes from the fundamentals: ecosystem, scalability, multichannel, checkout.
Here's what makes the difference concretely.
An app ecosystem with no equivalent. Over 13,000 e-commerce-specialized applications per the Shopify App Store: loyalty programs, subscriptions, upsell, returns management, ERP integrations. Almost everything you need already exists.
Native multichannel sales. You can sell on your site, in physical stores (Shopify POS), on Instagram, TikTok, Amazon, and Google, all from a single back-office. Your inventory syncs in real-time.
Real scalability. Shopify handles massive traffic spikes without flinching. Whether you do 10 orders a day or 10,000, the platform holds.
Serious analytics. Shopify offers detailed dashboards on your sales, customers, conversion rates. Wix remains very basic on this point.
Optimized checkout. Shop Pay, Shopify's one-click payment system, posts one of the best conversion rates in the market. It's a direct advantage on your sales.
International selling. Shopify lets you sell in over 130 currencies per its official documentation, with local payment gateways in around twenty countries. Wix Payments covers a more restricted geographic zone.
The real cost of both platforms
On paper, entry prices are close. But over 3 years, real cost diverges: with Wix you'll stack apps to compensate for missing features, and migrate if you grow. With Shopify, more predictable.
This is often where people get it wrong. Wix seems cheaper at startup. But total cost is something else.
Shopify (annual billing): tiered subscriptions by your size, see official pricing. Transaction fees with Shopify Payments start around 2.9% + 30¢ on Basic, decreasing by plan. If you don't use Shopify Payments, additional fees apply (2% on Basic). I broke down the full budget (apps + theme + hidden fees) in Is Shopify free?.
Wix (e-commerce plans): public grid on the Wix site. Wix doesn't charge additional transaction fees, a real advantage on paper.
But here's what's often forgotten:
With Wix, you'll quickly pay for apps to compensate for missing features. With Shopify, many features are native. And especially: if your Wix store plateaus and you have to migrate to Shopify in 18 months, you pay twice.
The real cost is the total cost over 3 years, not the monthly subscription price.
Final verdict: Wix or Shopify?
Choose Wix if
- You want a brochure site with a few products
- You don't intend to make e-commerce your main activity
- You want something simple, quickly done, with a minimal budget
Choose Shopify if
- You want to build a real online store
- You plan to scale (more products, more orders, more channels)
- You want a tool built to sell, not to make pretty sites
- You want to avoid a painful migration in 12 months
My opinion is sharp: if you want to sell online, start on Shopify. The slight initial learning curve is well worth the months of struggle you avoid afterward.
To take action on Shopify, my guide to creating your Shopify store covers the 7 launch steps, including picking the right theme by niche. If you also compare with other platforms, I wrote Shopify vs WooCommerce and Shopify vs PrestaShop.
Going further
Want to launch your Shopify store without fighting the tech? Scale Ova generates a complete site (theme, product pages, collections, offers) in minutes from a simple description. Exactly what a beginner needs: Shopify's power, without the initial technical complexity. Discover Scale Ova
FAQ
Is Wix really cheaper than Shopify?
At base subscription level, prices are close. Wix doesn't charge transaction fees, which is an advantage. But Shopify offers more native features, reducing the need for paid apps. Over 2-3 years, the total cost difference is often less than you think.
Can you migrate easily from Wix to Shopify?
It's doable but not trivial. Wix designs aren't transposable to Shopify, you have to rebuild the theme. Products and customer data can be exported via CSV or tools like Cart2Cart. Better to pick the right platform from the start.
Is Wix good for SEO?
Wix has made big progress on SEO in recent years: server-side rendering, image compression, sitemap management, Google Search Console integration. It remains competitive for a brochure site. Shopify is also solid on SEO, with some URL structure limitations.
Is Shopify too complicated for a beginner?
No. There's a slight learning curve compared to Wix, but Shopify remains accessible without technical skills. AI generation platforms even let you build a complete Shopify store via conversation, without touching code.
Shopify vs Wix: which is better for dropshipping?
Shopify is clearly superior for dropshipping. It has native integrations with major platforms (DSers, Spocket, Zendrop) and a specialized app ecosystem. Wix offers some options, but the offering is much more limited.
Can you sell internationally with Wix?
Yes but with limitations: Wix Payments covers a more restricted geographic zone than Shopify Payments, and multi-currency management is more rudimentary. If international is part of your strategy, Shopify is better equipped.
Shopify or Wix for a blog with a small store?
Wix is better suited for a site where the blog is core and the store is a complement. If the reverse is true (main store + side blog), Shopify is still better, its native blog is minimal but enough for simple SEO content.



