Shopify vs WooCommerce: The core differences
Shopify and WooCommerce are both leading e-commerce platforms, but they have fundamentally different approaches. Shopify is a fully hosted, all-in-one solution where you pay a monthly subscription and everything works out-of-the-box. WooCommerce, on the other hand, is a free WordPress plugin that you install and configure yourself on your own hosting.
This core difference has a major impact on ease of use, costs, flexibility, and technical requirements. Shopify is plug-and-play: within a few hours you have a working webshop without technical knowledge. WooCommerce offers more control and customization options, but requires technical insight or the willingness to hire a developer.
Both platforms have their pros and cons. Shopify is ideal for entrepreneurs who want to start quickly without technical hassle. WooCommerce fits better for those who want full control over their webshop and are willing to invest time (or money for a developer) in it.
Shopify: Pros and cons
Pros of Shopify:
• Ease of use: Shopify is designed for people without a technical background. The interface is intuitive, there are hundreds of professional themes available, and you never have to worry about updates or security – Shopify handles that for you.
• All-in-one solution: Hosting, SSL certificate, payment processing, shopping cart – everything is included. You don't have to arrange separate services or install plugins for basic functionality.
• Fast start: With Shopify you can have a professional webshop live within a few hours. The onboarding is streamlined and there are extensive manuals and videos available.
• Excellent performance: Shopify's infrastructure is built for high speed and availability. Even with traffic spikes (e.g. during Black Friday) your shop stays online.
• Built-in marketing tools: SEO functions, email marketing, discount codes, and social media integrations are standard in the platform.
Cons of Shopify:
• Monthly costs: You pay a fixed monthly amount (from €29) plus transaction fees if you don't use Shopify Payments. These costs increase as you grow.
• Less flexibility: You are bound by the possibilities Shopify offers. Complex adjustments often require expensive apps from the App Store or custom development in Liquid (Shopify's template language).
• Vendor lock-in: Migrating from Shopify to another platform is complex. You depend on Shopify's decisions about pricing, features, and policy.
• App costs: Much functionality requires paid apps. These costs can quickly add up to €100-200 per month extra on top of your Shopify subscription.
WooCommerce: Pros and cons
Pros of WooCommerce:
• Free and open-source: WooCommerce itself is completely free. You only pay for hosting, a domain, and any premium plugins or themes you choose.
• Full control: Because you run WooCommerce on your own hosting, you have 100% control over your webshop. You can modify any code, build custom functionality, and create integrations without limitations.
• WordPress ecosystem: WooCommerce is a plugin for WordPress, the most used CMS in the world. This means access to thousands of plugins, themes, and a huge community of developers.
• No transaction fees: WooCommerce does not charge a percentage per sale. You only pay the fees of your payment provider (e.g. Stripe, PayPal).
• SEO-friendly: WordPress is known for its strong SEO capabilities. With plugins like Yoast SEO you can fully optimize your webshop for search engines.
Cons of WooCommerce:
• Technical knowledge required: You have to install WordPress, configure hosting, arrange security, and manage updates. This can be overwhelming for non-technical entrepreneurs.
• More maintenance: You are responsible for backups, updates, security, and performance optimization yourself. If something breaks, you have to fix it yourself (or via a developer).
• Hosting costs variable: Good WooCommerce hosting costs between €10-100 per month depending on your traffic. With growth you may have to upgrade to more expensive hosting.
• Plugin jungle: There are thousands of WooCommerce plugins, but quality varies enormously. Incompatible or poorly coded plugins can break your webshop.
• Slower setup: Building a professional WooCommerce shop takes more time than Shopify. Expect a few weeks to months depending on complexity.
Cost comparison: What do you really pay?
Shopify costs (typical scenario for small webshop):
• Shopify Basic: €29/month
• Premium theme: €150-300 (one-time)
• Apps (email marketing, reviews, etc.): €50-100/month
• Transaction fees (without Shopify Payments): 2% per sale
Total first year: approx. €1,000-1,500
WooCommerce costs (typical scenario for small webshop):
• Hosting (e.g. SiteGround, Kinsta): €15-30/month
• Domain: €10/year
• Premium theme: €50-100 (one-time)
• Premium plugins (security, backup, SEO): €100-200/year
• SSL certificate: often free with hosting
Total first year: approx. €400-700
In the short term, WooCommerce is cheaper, especially if you have little traffic. But as you grow and need paid Shopify apps, the costs of both platforms run closer together. The big difference is that WooCommerce costs are more predictable (no % per sale), while Shopify scales with your revenue.
Scalability and growth
Both platforms can scale with growing webshops, but in different ways. Shopify scales almost automatically: larger plans (Shopify, Advanced Shopify) offer more features and lower transaction fees. The infrastructure can handle millions of visitors without you having to worry.
WooCommerce also scales well, but requires more technical management. With growth you may have to upgrade to better hosting (VPS, dedicated server, or managed WooCommerce hosting like Kinsta). You also have to keep an eye on caching, CDN, and database optimization to ensure performance.
For entrepreneurs who expect very high volumes (10,000+ orders per month), Shopify offers more peace of mind because infrastructure is fully managed. For entrepreneurs who want to grow into a multi-brand or complex B2B operation, WooCommerce offers more flexibility for custom workflows.
Integration with bol.com, Amazon, and invoicing
An important point in platform choice is how easily you can integrate with marketplaces like bol.com and Amazon, and with invoicing tools like Winkel Factuur. Both platforms support these integrations, but in different ways.
Shopify has native apps in the App Store for bol.com and Amazon Marketplace. These apps synchronize stock, import orders, and upload products – often for a monthly fee. For invoicing you can connect Shopify to Winkel Factuur via the official API, after which all invoices are generated fully automatically.
WooCommerce requires plugins for bol.com and Amazon integrations. There are free and paid options available, with varying quality. For invoicing, Winkel Factuur also connects seamlessly with WooCommerce via the REST API. The advantage is that you have more control over the workflow, but it does require a bit more configuration.
Regardless of your platform choice: with Winkel Factuur you centralize all invoicing from Shopify, WooCommerce, bol.com, and Amazon in one dashboard. This saves a huge amount of time and prevents administrative chaos with multichannel sales.
Which platform suits you?
Choose Shopify if:
• You want to start quickly without technical knowledge
• You want an all-in-one solution without hassle with hosting and maintenance
• You are willing to pay monthly subscription costs for convenience
• You mainly sell via your own webshop (less multichannel focus)
• You have a simple to moderately complex product range
Choose WooCommerce if:
• You are already familiar with WordPress or willing to learn it
• You want full control over your webshop and data
• You have budget for a developer for complex adjustments
• You need a very specific workflow or custom functionality
• You prefer lower fixed costs and no transaction fees
• You already have a WordPress website and want to add a shop to it
Shopify and WooCommerce experiences from Winkel Factuur customers
At Winkel Factuur we work daily with hundreds of webshops running on Shopify or WooCommerce. What stands out is that successful entrepreneurs can be found on both platforms – it's more about how you use the platform than about the platform itself.
Shopify customers especially appreciate the ease and speed with which they can experiment with new products and markets. They can focus on marketing and sales, instead of technical hassle. WooCommerce customers appreciate the flexibility and control, especially when they have complex workflows or need integrations with specific systems.
Our experience is that for most starting webshops Shopify is the safest choice: you have a professional shop within a few days and can start selling immediately. If you grow and get more specific requirements, you can always migrate to WooCommerce – or choose a hybrid approach with multiple shops on different platforms.