ShopifyPricing.com is an independent pricing guide. This site is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Shopify Inc. All pricing data is sourced from Shopify's public documentation and verified as of April 2026. Shopify is a registered trademark of Shopify Inc.

Updated April 2026

The Real Cost of Running a Shopify Store in 2026: Beyond the Subscription

Shopify advertises $39/month. Your actual cost will be $200-$2,000+/month depending on revenue, apps, and how you process payments. This page shows you the real numbers with an interactive calculator.

Monthly Cost Calculator

Enter your store details to see the real monthly cost on each plan, including transaction fees.

$15,000
$50
Starter
$845
/month total
Subscription$5
Processing$840
Best Value
Basic
$564
/month total
Subscription$39
Processing$525
Grow
$600
/month total
Subscription$105
Processing$495
Advanced
$864
/month total
Subscription$399
Processing$465
Plus
$2,713
/month total
Subscription$2,300
Processing$413

Based on 300 transactions/month at $50 average order value. Does not include app or theme costs.

Cost Category Breakdown

Your total monthly Shopify cost breaks down into five categories. The subscription is the most visible but often the smallest. Transaction fees are the largest for most stores. Apps are the most controllable. Understanding each category helps you optimize spending without sacrificing functionality.

Subscription
$5 - $2,300
5-30% of total

Fixed monthly fee based on your plan. The only cost that appears on Shopify's pricing page.

Transaction Fees
$50 - $5,000+
40-60% of total

Credit card processing on every sale. Varies by plan and revenue volume. Usually the largest cost.

Apps
$30 - $300+
10-25% of total

Third-party apps for email, reviews, SEO, upsells. The most variable and controllable category.

Theme
$0 - $30
1-5% of total

Free themes are excellent. Premium themes amortized monthly add $10-$30 equivalent.

Domain & Email
$2 - $15
1-3% of total

Domain renewal ($12-$15/year) plus any premium email beyond Shopify's free tier.

Cost Benchmarks by Store Size

The following benchmarks represent typical total monthly costs for Shopify stores at different revenue levels. These include subscription, transaction fees, and a realistic app stack. They do not include advertising, inventory, or personnel costs. Use these as a sanity check: if your costs are significantly above these ranges, you may be overspending on apps or using the wrong plan for your revenue level.

Monthly RevenueBest PlanSubscriptionTxn FeesAppsTotal% of Revenue
$5,000Basic$39$175$50$2645.3%
$10,000Basic$39$350$80$4694.7%
$25,000Grow$105$825$120$1,0504.2%
$50,000Grow$105$1650$150$1,9053.8%
$100,000Advanced$399$3100$200$3,6993.7%
$200,000Advanced$399$6200$250$6,8493.4%
$500,000Plus$2300$13750$400$16,4503.3%

Cost-Saving Tips

Most Shopify merchants overspend on at least one cost category. The following strategies can reduce your monthly costs by 15-30% without sacrificing store functionality or customer experience. The key principle is to eliminate waste before reducing capability.

Use Free Themes

Shopify's Dawn theme is excellent. Premium themes ($150-$380) are rarely worth the cost unless you need specific features like mega-menus or advanced filtering. The design quality of free themes has improved dramatically.

Audit Apps Quarterly

Most stores accumulate 2-3 apps they no longer use. Each unused app costs $10-$50/month. Set a calendar reminder to review your app list every 3 months and uninstall anything that does not directly contribute to revenue.

Use Annual Billing

After 3-4 months of consistent revenue, switch to annual billing to save 25%. On Basic, that saves $120/year. On Grow, $312/year. The breakeven is 9 months, so only commit when you are confident in your long-term plan.

Use Shopify Payments

Avoid the third-party gateway surcharge (0.2-2%) by using Shopify Payments. For a $20K/month store on Basic, using a third-party gateway adds $400/month in surcharges. There are very few scenarios where a third-party gateway is worth this cost.

Leverage Built-In Features

Shopify has added many features that previously required apps: email marketing (10K free/month), discount codes, gift cards, abandoned cart recovery, basic analytics. Check if a built-in feature covers your needs before installing a paid app.

Right-Size Your Plan

Do not stay on a higher plan out of inertia. If your revenue drops below the breakeven threshold, downgrade. If you are on Basic at $50K/month, you are overpaying. Review your plan against the breakeven math at least twice a year.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the real cost of running a Shopify store?

A typical Shopify store costs 2-5 times the advertised subscription price when you include transaction fees, apps, and themes. A $10K/month store on Basic typically spends $300-$500 per month total. A $50K/month store spends $800-$1,500 per month. A $200K/month store spends $2,000-$4,000 per month. The subscription is usually only 10-30% of the total monthly cost.

What are the hidden costs of Shopify?

Hidden costs include apps ($50-$300/month for a typical store), premium themes ($150-$380 one-time), third-party payment surcharges (0.2-2% if not using Shopify Payments), currency conversion fees (1-1.5%), POS Pro ($89/location/month), email marketing overage beyond 10,000 free emails, domain renewal ($12-$15/year), and professional photography or content creation for your store.

How can I reduce my Shopify costs?

Use a free theme like Dawn instead of paying $150-$380 for a premium theme. Audit your app stack quarterly and remove apps you no longer use. Use annual billing to save 25% on your subscription. Use Shopify Payments to avoid the third-party gateway surcharge. Use Shopify's built-in email marketing instead of a separate service. Upgrade plans only when the fee savings math justifies it.

What percentage of revenue should Shopify cost?

Industry benchmarks suggest total platform costs (subscription, fees, apps) should be 2-5% of monthly revenue. Below 2% is excellent. Between 2-5% is normal. Above 5% means your platform costs are too high relative to revenue, which usually indicates too many paid apps, the wrong plan for your revenue level, or a third-party payment gateway adding unnecessary surcharges.