Gather knowledge about the latest insights, updates, tips, and tricks in the Ecommerce industry.

5 Min • 20 March 2026
delivery customization Challenges Solutions drive results Scale business delivery customization Challenges Solutions drive results Scale business delivery customization Challenges Solutions drive results Scale business delivery customization Challenges Solutions drive results Scale business Anua is a globally recognized Korean skincare brand known for its minimalist philosophy and focus on gentle yet effective formulations. Built on the idea of simplifying skincare routines, Anua develops products that deliver visible results while avoiding harsh or irritating components, making them suitable for sensitive skin types. Initially using a traditional full cart experience, Anua transitioned to iCart’s side cart solution in August 2025, to create a more seamless and engaging shopping journey. This shift allowed customers to easily explore complementary skincare products without disrupting their browsing flow, making it more intuitive to discover items that fit into a complete routine. By surfacing relevant recommendations directly within the cart, the brand enhanced product visibility across its range. Challenges Before implementing iCart’s side cart solution, Anua faced limitations with their existing full cart experience, which created friction in the customer journey. The traditional cart setup redirected users away from product pages, interrupting their browsing flow and reducing opportunities to explore additional products. As a skincare brand built around routines rather than single-item purchases, this made it difficult to effectively showcase complementary products and encourage customers to build complete regimens. Additionally, the lack of in-cart personalization and strategic upsell opportunities meant that customers were often unaware of related products that could enhance their skincare results. This limited the brand’s ability to increase average order value (AOV) and fully leverage its diverse product range. Anua needed a more dynamic and intuitive cart experience that could seamlessly introduce relevant recommendations while maintaining a smooth and engaging shopping journey. ❌ Cart Value Barriers Low average order value (AOV) due to single-item focus Most customers completed purchases with one primary product instead of building multi-step routines. Cart abandonment near shipping thresholds Customers were not clearly informed or motivated to reach free shipping or discount thresholds. Missed savings opportunities Customers were unaware of potential value in purchasing bundled routines or multiple complementary products. ❌ Absence of Progress-Based Incentives No free shipping or discount progress bar Customers were not motivated to increase their cart value due to lack of visible incentives. Missing tiered rewards system There were no structured milestones (e.g., “Spend more to unlock offers”), reducing upsell opportunities. ❌ Ineffective Cart UI/UX (Pre-Side Cart) Full-page cart disrupted shopping flowCustomers had to leave their browsing journey, increasing friction and drop-offs. No quick add/remove functionality Users couldn’t easily modify their cart or add suggested products without navigating away. Solution To overcome these challenges, Anua implemented iCart’s side cart solution to transform their traditional cart into a high-converting, interactive experience. By replacing the full-page cart with a seamless side cart, the brand ensured that customers could continue browsing while viewing their cart, significantly reducing friction in the shopping journey. Additionally, features like product recommendations & progress bars for free shipping and discounts motivated customers to increase their cart value. By combining personalization, incentive-driven messaging, and a user-friendly interface, Anua successfully turned their cart into a powerful revenue-driving touchpoint rather than just a checkout step. To maximize their cart effectiveness, they implemented two powerful features: ✅ Progress Bar with Multi-Reward Incentives Implemented a tiered progress bar to encourage higher cart value Customers are guided with a clear message like “Add $3.10 to unlock secret offer,” motivating them to continue adding products. Generated over $5M+ in revenue through incentive-driven cart progression Used product-based rewards to align with customer intent Instead of generic discounts, Anua incentivized purchases with relevant skincare items like Dark Spot Pads and mini serums. Built visual motivation for routine expansion As customers add products, they can clearly track progress toward unlocking multiple rewards, encouraging them to build a complete skincare routine. ✅ Product Recommendations Implemented “Frequently Bought Together” recommendations Customers adding a single product (e.g., toner) are shown complementary items like serums, moisturizers, or pads to complete their routine. Generated over 275K revenue through in-cart recommendations Encouraged full skincare regimen building Instead of isolated purchases, the cart suggests step-by-step product combinations aligned with common skincare routines. Increased product discovery at the final stage By surfacing relevant items directly in the cart, Anua ensured customers explore more of their catalog without leaving the checkout flow. Results Achieved in Last 180 Days 22932 Total Store Orders 45101 Total iCart Orders 5X iCart Generated AOV 65.70% Upsell Affected Conversion Rate These improvements reflect a clear shift in customer behavior on Anua’s store. Cart abandonment reduced as shoppers discovered complementary skincare products and felt encouraged to build complete routines. Engagement also increased, with customers interacting more with in-cart recommendations and exploring relevant product pairings. Results & Impact And...Results is Our Main Clarification By implementing iCart’s cart drawer, product recommendations, and progress bar, Anua transformed its cart into a high-performing conversion touchpoint. Shopping Experience Enhancement The improved cart experience encouraged customers to discover complementary products and understand the value of sustainable beauty routines. For instance, the clear presentation of subscription savings alongside one-time purchase options helped customers make more informed decisions about their long-term hair care needs. As Anua continues to optimize its cart experience, the brand is closely monitoring: Routine-based purchasing behavior - tracking how customers move from single items to multi-step regimens Engagement with in-cart recommendations - measuring interaction with suggested products Cart value progression - analyzing how incentives influence higher spending [related_cases_slider] Ready to Write Your Success Story? Try icart App Join successful businesses like Anua and Master your delivery scheduling Delight customers with precise timing Grow your special occasion orders Expand your delivery reach
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13 Min • 18 June 2026
Shopify dropped its Spring '26 Edition on June 17, 2026, and branded it "Everywhere" for good reason. Your products can now show up inside ChatGPT, Microsoft Copilot, Google AI Mode, and the Shop app, all without you touching a setting. Over 150 updates shipped in a single release, but only a handful are worth acting on immediately. And one of them is a hard deadline you cannot miss if you want your checkout to keep working after June 30. Here is the practical breakdown. What Is the Shopify Spring '26 Edition? Shopify releases two major product showcases each year under the "Editions" label. Spring '26 is the ninth Edition overall, and it launched on June 17, 2026. The theme is simple: if you are on Shopify, your products get there first, wherever commerce goes next. The 150+ updates span agentic commerce, Sidekick, marketing automation, checkout, payments, point of sale, analytics, B2B, and developer tooling. Some updates are enabled automatically. Others require action on your end. A few are gated behind Advanced or Plus plans. For context on where things stood before this release, see my breakdown of the Shopify Winter '26 Edition released just before this. Shopify Catalog & UCP: Your Products Are Discoverable by AI Image Source: Shopify Two pieces of infrastructure power the "Everywhere" theme: Shopify Catalog and the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP). Shopify Catalog is a global, structured product database spanning billions of products across millions of merchants. UCP, co-developed with Google, is the open standard that gives AI agents one shared language to communicate with merchants, covering everything from product discovery to checkout, including discounts, subscription terms, and special conditions. Both are live for eligible Shopify merchants by default. Here is the part most guides will skim past: enabled and optimized are not the same thing. Your products are in Catalog by default, but whether an AI agent surfaces them over a competitor's depends entirely on your data quality. Shopify states that AI searches powered by clean Catalog data convert at roughly 2x the rate of searches using scraped data. New in this Edition: The Catalog API now supports Sign in with Shop, so signed-in shoppers see personalized results. Developers have also gained access to bulk lookup and image search endpoints. The Knowledge Base feature is the most underreported update in Spring '26 for me. It lives in the Agentic Storefronts section of your Admin. Shopify now shows you the questions AI agents are actively asking about your brand, things like retail locations, bulk ordering terms, and customer service policies, and lets you fill in the answers directly. I recommend that merchants spend a few minutes here to improve how AI assistants describe your business to potential buyers. Understanding the broader role AI in ecommerce plays in 2026 gives useful context for why getting this right matters beyond just Shopify's own channels. Sidekick Gets Smarter Across Every Device Image Source: Shopify Sidekick has expanded significantly in Spring '26. Three updates are worth knowing about in practical terms. Sidekick App Extensions connect third-party tools directly to Sidekick. Over 15 partner apps are supported at launch, including Klaviyo, Loop, Judge.me, and Smile. Instead of switching between your Shopify Admin and a separate Klaviyo dashboard to check campaign performance, you ask Sidekick and get the answer in one place. Sidekick Pulse powers the redesigned Admin home. It analyzes your store's sales, traffic, and inventory data in the background and surfaces your next best actions proactively. Sidekick on more devices is now live across every screen in the Shopify app. Merchants can use typing or voice to make changes to their online store from a phone. Sidekick now runs on Apple Watch as well, so quick business lookups work without opening a screen. For a closer look at getting real value from the tool, my guide on how to use Shopify Sidekick covers every use case. Campaign Autopilot Image Source: Shopify Campaign Autopilot is Shopify's structural answer to that problem. It runs paid and organic campaigns across Facebook, Instagram, Shop, and email using your store's commerce data to optimize results within the guardrails you set. ▶ Shop Campaigns has also expanded. It now reaches ChatGPT, Pinterest, and the open web through Microsoft Monetize. You can set custom bids for specific customer segments, like new versus lapsed buyers, and all billing lands on your Shopify invoice. More channels are coming soon, including Microsoft Advertising, ChatGPT Ads, and Snapchat. A new AI sales associate lives inside Shopify Inbox. It answers buyer questions, suggests products, and handles order inquiries using your catalog, inventory, and store policies. Shoppers who sign in with Shop get personalized recommendations in the chat window. ▶ WhatsApp is now a native marketing channel inside Shopify Messaging. Consent management sits alongside email and SMS, making it easier to keep your messaging preferences organized in one place. If you are already running paid campaigns for your Shopify store, Campaign Autopilot fits naturally into a broader multi-channel strategy. Shop Pay Goes Beyond Shopify Stores Image Source: Shopify Shop Pay expanding outside of Shopify is another big structural shift in Spring '26 for me. Any brand on any platform can now offer Shop Pay at checkout, gaining access to a Shopify-stated network of 250M+ shoppers and one-click purchasing. Shopify is positioning its wallet, sign-in, and payments infrastructure as the checkout layer for commerce across the internet. ▶ Sign in with Shop reinforces that direction. A buyer's profile, purchase history, and saved details follow them across surfaces, and builders can integrate the same trusted sign-in into any experience they create. For merchants operating beyond their Shopify storefront, like selling through a separate website or marketplace, activating Shop Pay there is now an option worth exploring. On the Shopify side, managed payment methods is a latest update in this edition. Shopify Payments now dynamically reorders payment options at checkout to surface whatever method is most likely to convert for that specific buyer, rather than showing a fixed list. My guide on Shopify Shop Pay covers how enabling it affects checkout conversion for merchants who haven't set it up yet. The Checkout Redesign Is Live on Every Plan Right Now The Spring '26 checkout redesign is mobile-first and available across all plans immediately. This is where things got interesting while I read the latest edition, specifically the three new Shopify updates. Ship and pick up in one checkout solves a problem omnichannel merchants have lived with for years. Before Spring '26, a customer who wanted to ship one item and collect another in-store had to place two separate orders. That is gone now. For any merchant with a physical location and an online store, enabling this should be a priority. Unified branding means you set your logo, colors, and typography once, and it applies consistently across checkout, customer account pages, and sign-in screens. The "set once, applies everywhere" model is a trust-and-cohesion win merchants can ship without developer support. 365-day customer account sessions reduce the friction of being signed out between visits, making it easier for returning customers to pick up where they left off. My guide to Shopify checkout optimization covers the additional steps worth layering on top of the redesign to push conversion further. POS v11: Shopify's Fastest In-Store Update Yet POS v11 is Shopify's fastest-ever point of sale. Shopify states that staff save over a minute on complex cart transactions. On a busy trading day with a line at the register, that time difference is meaningful. The cart now stays visible throughout the entire transaction. Discounts, edits, and customer lookups open in a side panel so staff never lose their place. Multi-select on line items allows bulk edits without repeated taps. Customer search is faster across the board. Returns, exchanges, and new sales can all be processed within a single cart using modular workflows. That removes a genuine source of friction for retail staff managing mixed transactions. ▶ New hardware: The Verifone Victa Mobile scans barcodes, takes card payments, and doubles as a countertop terminal when docked to a tablet. It is currently in Early Access for pre-order in the US and Canada. Analytics That Tell You What to Act On Most merchants are not short on data. The harder problem is knowing which numbers deserve a response. Spring '26 addresses that gap directly inside Shopify Analytics. ▶ Daily insights flag the trends worth your attention each day. Metric annotations explain why a specific number moved, removing much of the guesswork about sudden changes. You can set metric targets and track progress against them inside the platform. New visualization types have been added too: scatter plots, radar charts, bubble charts, and sunbursts. Paired with Sidekick Pulse, your Admin home now opens with recommendations drawn from your actual store data. Shopify Flow can now query sales, traffic, and inventory using ShopifyQL and trigger follow-up actions based on those results. For merchants comfortable with Flow, the automation possibilities have expanded. My Shopify analytics guide covers the core metrics worth tracking and how to use that data to make decisions that actually move revenue. Rollouts: Native A/B Testing Is Now Built Into Shopify Storefront testing has required third-party apps for years. Rollouts change that. It gives merchants native A/B testing for themes, checkout configurations, and customer account setups, all managed inside the Admin. You can also schedule a publish for a specific time without staying up late to flip the switch manually. For any merchant paying for a standalone A/B testing app, Rollouts is a direct cost replacement. More importantly, your test data sits inside Shopify's ecosystem alongside conversion and revenue reporting. A tool is not a strategy, though. Someone still needs to decide what is worth testing and interpret the results clearly. The Agentic Plan: A New Option for Businesses Not on Shopify Spring '26 introduces a standalone Agentic plan for businesses that are not on Shopify's main platform. These merchants can now sync their product catalog to Shopify Catalog and sell through AI channels and the Shop app without migrating their existing setup. For current Shopify merchants, the relevant implication is that the Catalog ecosystem is growing. More sellers joining means more data for AI agents to work with, and more reasons for those agents to prioritize Catalog-powered results. 1 Deadline You Cannot Miss: Shopify Scripts Ends June 30, 2026 Shopify Scripts stops running on June 30, 2026. Any checkout customizations still built on Scripts will break after that date. The replacement is Shopify Functions, and the migration needs to happen before the deadline. If your store uses Scripts to apply discounts, control shipping options, or run any checkout logic, those customizations will silently stop working the moment Scripts is shut off. Auditing what your store runs on Scripts and getting the migration scheduled now is the only responsible move. Checkout logic that fails mid-promotion is the worst time to find out about a deadline you missed. What You Should Actually Do First? Spring '26 ships 150+ updates. Prioritizing realistically matters more than trying to act on everything at once. Here is where most merchants should start. Clean up your product data. Shopify Catalog feeds every AI channel, and incomplete listings will not surface well against competitors with clean data. Start with titles, descriptions, dimensions, and variant attributes. This is the highest-leverage action in this entire edition. Fill in your Knowledge Base. Find the Agentic Storefronts section in your Admin, check the Knowledge Base, and answer the questions AI agents are already asking about your brand. It takes minutes and directly improves how AI assistants describe your business. Handle the Shopify Scripts migration immediately. If Scripts is running in your store, migrate to Shopify Functions before June 30, 2026. Enable unified branding and ship-and-pickup. Both are live on all plans and require no developer support. Start Campaign Autopilot on one channel. Set conservative guardrails, measure results, then expand. Connect Sidekick to your third-party apps. If you use Klaviyo, Loop, or any of the 15+ launch partners, connect them through Sidekick App Extensions. Reviewing your Shopify pricing plan is also worth doing now. Some Spring '26 features are restricted to certain plans and an upgrade might unlock more value than an additional app would. FAQs 1. What is the Shopify Spring '26 Edition? Shopify Spring '26 Edition is Shopify's twice-yearly product showcase, launched on June 17, 2026, with over 150 updates. Themed "Everywhere," it focuses on agentic commerce, Shopify Catalog, the Universal Commerce Protocol, AI-powered marketing through Campaign Autopilot, a redesigned checkout, POS v11, expanded payments, B2B expansion, and new analytics tools. 2. What is Shopify Catalog and do I need to set it up? Shopify Catalog is a global structured product database that AI agents search to find and recommend products. Eligible Shopify merchants are included by default, so no manual setup is required. 3. What is the Universal Commerce Protocol (UCP)? UCP is an open standard Shopify co-developed with Google. It gives AI agents a shared language to communicate with merchants, covering product discovery, cart building, and checkout in a standardized way. Shopify merchants are UCP-enabled by default, meaning any surface built on UCP can incorporate your checkout rules and discounts automatically. 4. What is the Shopify Scripts deadline, and what happens if I miss it? Shopify Scripts stops running on June 30, 2026. Any checkout customizations still using Scripts will stop working after that date. Merchants need to migrate those customizations to Shopify Functions before the deadline. Check your Admin now to confirm whether your store uses Scripts. 5. Is Campaign Autopilot available on all Shopify plans? Campaign Autopilot is currently in early access. Check your Admin for current availability on your plan. Shop Campaigns, which now includes ChatGPT, Pinterest, and Microsoft Monetize as surfaces, has broader general availability. 6. Can any brand now use Shop Pay, even without a Shopify store? Yes. Brands on any ecommerce platform can offer Shop Pay at checkout through Shopify's simplified onboarding. Access to a Shopify-stated network of 250M+ shoppers and one-click purchasing comes with it. 7. What is the Agentic plan announced in Spring '26? The Agentic plan is a new standalone option for businesses not on Shopify's platform. It lets them sync their product catalog to Shopify Catalog and sell through AI channels and the Shop app without migrating their existing store setup. 8. What changed in Shopify POS with Spring '26? POS v11 is Shopify's fastest-ever point of sale. It saves staff over a minute on complex cart transactions, keeps the cart visible throughout the transaction, supports returns and exchanges in one cart, and introduces the Verifone Victa Mobile as new hardware in Early Access for the US and Canada. 9. How does the ship-and-pickup in one checkout work? Previously, customers who wanted to ship some items and pick up others had to place two separate orders. Spring '26 fixes this. One cart now supports mixed fulfillment within a single checkout session. The feature is available on all plans.

9 Min • 30 June 2026
Made-to-order products are a great fit for Shopify stores that sell custom, handmade, personalized, fresh, or production-based items. Instead of keeping every product ready in stock, you create the item after a customer places an order. This model works well for custom cakes, flower bouquets, handmade jewelry, engraved gifts, tailored clothing, personalized hampers, furniture, artwork, printed products, and many other custom items. But there is one challenge many merchants face: customers do not just want to know that the product is made for them. They also want to know when it will be ready. In this guide, we will cover how to add made to order on shopify, how to set up delivery scheduling, and how to manage production timelines without confusing your customers. What Does Made-to-Order Mean on Shopify? A made-to-order product is a product that is created only after the customer places an order. Unlike regular ready-stock products, these items usually need extra time for preparation, customization, packaging, or delivery planning. For example: A bakery prepares a custom cake after receiving the order. A florist creates a fresh bouquet for a selected date. A jewelry brand engraves initials after purchase. A clothing store stitches or customizes the item after order confirmation. A gift store prepares a personalized hamper based on selected products. The main point is simple: the product is not instantly ready to ship. It needs a clear production timeline and a clear delivery or pickup schedule. Shopify lets merchants create products, add variants such as size or color, and manage product details through the admin. Shopify’s own variant setup allows merchants to add options, values, images, prices, quantities, SKUs, and other product details for different variants. So when people search for how to add made to order on Shopify, they are usually looking for more than a product listing. They want a complete setup where customers understand the customization, production time, and delivery date before placing the order. Why Delivery Scheduling Matters for Made-to-Order Products Made-to-order products depend on timing. A customer ordering a birthday cake, wedding bouquet, custom gift, or event-based product cannot wait for a vague delivery estimate. They need confidence that the product will arrive on the right date. Delivery scheduling helps you: Show available delivery or pickup dates. Add preparation time before customers can choose a slot. Block holidays or unavailable dates. Limit orders per day or time slot. Manage same-day or next-day delivery with cutoff times. Give your team enough time to prepare each order properly. This is especially useful for stores selling fresh, personalized, or event-specific products. Without proper scheduling, customers may choose dates your team cannot fulfill. That creates pressure, delays, refund requests, and poor customer experience. A strong order scheduling Shopify setup solves this problem by connecting the customer’s preferred delivery time with your store’s real production capacity. Use Stellar Delivery Date & Pickup to Make Scheduling Easier For Shopify merchants who sell made-to-order products, the Delivery Date & Pickup Stellar app can make the scheduling process much easier. The app lets customers select a delivery date and time for local delivery, store pickup, and shipping directly from the cart or product page. It also supports estimated delivery date and time, same-day delivery cutoff time, time slot limits, blackout dates, holidays, and route planning. This is helpful because made-to-order stores often need more control than a normal shipping setup. For example, a bakery may want to accept only 20 cake orders per day. A florist may want to block Valentine’s Day slots once capacity is full. A handmade gift store may need three preparation days before showing available delivery dates. For made-to-order stores, this turns delivery scheduling from a manual follow-up task into a smoother buying experience. What You Need Before Setting Up Made-to-Order Products Before you start the setup, prepare the basics. This makes the product page clearer and reduces customer confusion. 1. Clear Product Details Write a product description that explains what is made to order, what customers can customize, and how long production takes. Include details like: Available customization options Materials or ingredients used Size, color, or design choices Production time Delivery or pickup instructions Return or cancellation policy for custom products 2. Product Images or Samples Even if the final product is custom, customers still need visual confidence. Add sample images, past order photos, mockups, or style references. 3. Production Timeline Decide how much time you need before an order can be delivered. For example: Custom cake: 2 days Handmade jewelry: 5–7 days Printed T-shirt: 3 days Custom furniture: 15–20 days Personalized hamper: 1–2 days This production time should be reflected in your delivery schedule. 4. Capacity Limits Do not accept more orders than your team can handle. Decide your daily or slot-wise limit. For example: 10 custom cakes per day 5 flower deliveries per time slot 20 gift hampers per day 3 furniture deliveries per week Stellar’s order limit feature lets merchants control how many orders can be accepted daily or per time slot for shipping, store pickup, and local delivery. How to Add Made to Order on Shopify and Schedule Delivery Dates Now let’s move to the practical setup. Step 1: Create a New Product in Shopify Go to your Shopify admin and open: Products > Add product Add your product title, description, images, price, category, and product status. For the product title, make it clear that the item is made to order. For example: Custom Birthday Cake - Made to Order Personalized Name Necklace - Made to Order Fresh Flower Bouquet - Made to Order Handmade Wooden Frame - Made to Order In the product description, mention that the item is prepared after purchase. Add the estimated production time and delivery instructions. Example: “This product is made after your order is placed. Please allow 3-4 working days for preparation. You can choose your preferred delivery date at checkout.” This small detail sets the right expectation before customers add the product to cart. Step 2: Add Product Variants for Basic Choices If your product has standard options, add them as variants. Variants are useful for choices like: Size Color Material Flavor Finish Style Quantity pack For example, a made-to-order cake may have variants for size and flavor. A personalized bracelet may have variants for metal color and chain length. Shopify allows merchants to add product options like size or color from the Variants section and add option values for the product. Keep your variants simple. Too many options can overwhelm customers. If you need detailed personalization, use custom fields or a product options app instead of creating too many variant combinations. Step 3: Add Customization Fields Made-to-order products often need customer input. For example: Name to engrave Message for cake Preferred flower color Uploaded image Gift note Custom measurement Design reference You can collect this information through product options, line item properties, or customization apps. The goal is to make sure the customer gives all required details before checkout. Use clear labels like: “Enter the name you want printed” “Upload your design file” “Add your cake message” “Choose your preferred delivery occasion” “Mention any special instruction” Also, add character limits where needed. This prevents long text that may not fit on the product. Step 4: Set Inventory Based on Your Production Model Inventory for made-to-order products can be tricky because you may not have finished stock ready. You may only have raw materials, production capacity, or supplier availability. Step 5: Add Production Time to Your Delivery Schedule This is where many Shopify stores make mistakes. They add made-to-order products but forget to adjust delivery availability. For example, if a custom cake needs two days to prepare, customers should not be able to select today or tomorrow as the delivery date. Set a preparation buffer before the first available delivery date. This protects your team and keeps expectations realistic. Example setup: Product ordered on Monday Preparation time: 2 days First available delivery date: Thursday Unavailable dates: Sunday and public holidays Time slots: 10 AM-12 PM, 2 PM-4 PM, 5 PM-7 PM Step 6: Use Cutoff Times for Same-Day or Next-Day Orders Cutoff time means the last time a customer can place an order for a certain delivery option. For example: Orders before 11 AM qualify for next-day delivery. Orders after 11 AM can only choose delivery from the following day. Same-day pickup is available only before 2 PM. Weekend delivery closes every Friday at 5 PM. Stellar Delivery Date & Pickup supports cutoff time settings so merchants can hide same-day delivery slots after a set deadline. This helps stores manage logistics more smoothly and show only realistic delivery slots. This is very useful for made-to-order products because production teams need time to prepare, pack, and dispatch orders. Step 7: Set Order Limits Per Day or Time Slot If your team can make only a fixed number of products per day, order limits are necessary. For example: Product TypeDaily LimitSlot LimitCustom cakes20 orders5 per slotFlower bouquets50 orders10 per slotHandmade gifts15 orders5 per slotTailored clothing5 ordersNot required Without order limits, too many customers may select the same date. That can lead to delays and quality issues. With a proper scheduling setup, customers only see dates and slots that your team can actually handle. Conclusion Setting up made-to-order products on Shopify is not just about adding a product and writing “custom” in the description. You need a complete process that covers customization, production time, inventory logic, delivery scheduling, cutoff times, capacity limits, and customer communication. When customers know what they can customize and when they can receive the product, they feel more confident placing the order. Your team also gets a clearer workflow for preparing and fulfilling each order on time. FAQs 1. How to add made to order on shopify? To add a made-to-order product on Shopify, create a product, mention “Made to Order” in the title or description, add variants or custom fields, set inventory based on your production model, and add delivery scheduling rules. 2. Can Shopify handle made-to-order products? Yes, Shopify can handle made-to-order products using product listings, variants, product options, inventory settings, and delivery scheduling apps. For advanced personalization or scheduling, apps make the process easier. 3. What is the best way to set delivery dates for made-to-order products? The best way is to use a delivery date picker with preparation time, cutoff time, blocked dates, and order limits. This ensures customers can select only realistic delivery or pickup dates. 4. Why is order scheduling shopify important for custom products? Order scheduling shopify is important because custom products need production time before delivery. A proper schedule helps merchants avoid overbooking, manage capacity, and give customers clear delivery expectations.

11 Min • 24 June 2026
Deciding between Shopify Plus vs Advanced used to be a straightforward revenue question. Cross a certain GMV threshold, upgrade, and move on. In 2026, it will be a little more complicated than that. The platform gap between these two plans has widened significantly, and the features that matter most for enterprise brands, including checkout control, native B2B, and agentic commerce, now come exclusively on Plus. Getting this decision wrong in either direction is expensive. Upgrading before you need Plus means paying for infrastructure you cannot use. Staying on Advanced if your brand doesn't need it means paying for apps for things that Plus handles natively. Here is my updated and honest breakdown of the comparison between the two plans so enterprise stores can make the call. Quick answer: Shopify Plus vs Advanced, which plan wins? Shopify Advanced at $299/month (billed annually) is the right plan for a single-store DTC business that does not need checkout customization, has fewer than 15 staff, and doesn't run a B2B operation. Shopify Plus at $2,300/month (three-year term) becomes the better investment when you need a second storefront, want native B2B, need full checkout logic through Checkout Extensibility, or your annual third-party transaction fees on Advanced exceed roughly $35,000. Quick comparison between Plus and Advanced 2026 Pricing for Shopify Plus vs Shopify Advanced PlanPricingKey feesWhat you getShopify Advanced$399/month or $299/month billed annuallyOnline card rates start around 2.5% + 30¢ in the US. The third-party payment gateway fee is 0.6%.Includes 15 staff accounts, 10 inventory locations, custom reports, enhanced 24/7 chat support, real-time carrier shipping rates, and advanced international selling tools.Shopify PlusStarts at $2,500/month on a 1-year term or $2,300/month on a 3-year term.Third-party gateway fee drops to 0.20%. Shopify Payments users can avoid third-party transaction fees.Includes unlimited staff accounts, up to 200 locations, checkout customization, 9 expansion stores, B2B tools, priority support, and Plus-only features.Shopify Plus trialStarts at $399/month for eligible merchants.Trial pricing varies by currency and region.Gives access to most Plus features for 1–2 months before moving to a full Plus plan. For a full breakdown of pricing, my Shopify pricing guide covers every tier, including the hidden fees most merchants miss on day one. The break-even calculation I run for enterprise stores Before comparing features, I always explain the transaction fee for owners. For me, it is the fastest way to evaluate Shopify Plus and Shopify Advanced. Advanced charges 0.6% on every order processed through a third-party gateway. Plus charges 0.2%. The 0.4 percentage point difference compounds quickly at scale. For example, I have worked with a brand processing $7M annually through a third-party gateway, which pays $42,000/year in Shopify transaction fees on Advanced. They then shifted to Plus and paid $14,000/year. The $28,000 saving alone covers more than the annual plan cost difference between the two tiers. Checkout Extensibility: The feature that changed everything On Shopify Advanced, checkout customization is limited to visual branding. You can change your logo, colors, and fonts. The structure of the checkout itself is locked. Any checkout logic change requires a third-party app. The Easiest Upsell Happens At Checkout The checkout page is one of the easiest places to increase order value because the customer has already decided to pay. Sell More After Every Sale Show irresistible one-click post purchase upsells at the right moment that converts. Install SellMore SellMore lets you use that moment to show targeted upsell offers without adding friction before checkout. On Shopify Plus, Checkout Extensibility gives you more control. You can rearrange sections, add custom fields above or below forms, insert upsell blocks in the checkout right column, apply B2B-specific payment flows, and create dynamic shipping rules based on cart contents. Shopify Functions also lets developers add more backend commerce logic: discount stacking, custom payment conditions, tax exemptions by customer type, and proprietary shipping calculations. All of that requires Plus. Advanced users are limited to whatever predefined Functions are available through public apps. Multi-store, expansion stores, and global markets in 2026 Shopify Advanced supports exactly one store. International growth on Advanced means either running separate Advanced plans per country at $299/month, or using Shopify Markets to localize within a single store. Shopify Markets is available on both plans and handles currency, language, and regional pricing. Advanced includes three markets, with additional markets at $59/month each. Plus includes up to 50 markets at no extra charge. Plus also gives you a different model entirely: your main store plus nine expansion stores, all managed from a single Organization Admin. This is a centralized dashboard that gives you oversight of all stores, users, and settings in one place. Each expansion store is fully independent, with its own domain, theme, product catalog, language settings, staff permissions, analytics, and bank account for payouts. For brands already managing multiple Shopify stores, my Shopify store management guide covers everything you need to know about multi-store operations. Native B2B: The clearest differentiator between plans If your business runs a wholesale or B2B channel alongside DTC, the Shopify Plus vs Advanced decision is settled by this section alone. Advanced has no native B2B functionality. Building a wholesale operation on Advanced needs third-party apps, a separate wholesale store, or both. Shopify Plus includes a full native B2B suite as part of the plan price. You can run B2B and DTC from the same store, or build a dedicated B2B storefront at no extra cost. That B2B store does not count as one of your nine expansion stores. The B2B feature set covers company profiles with assigned buyers and locations, custom price lists with company-specific or tiered pricing, net payment terms (Net 30, Net 60, and pro-forma invoices), minimum and maximum order quantities, draft orders and quote workflows, and one-off shipping address flexibility. The real argument for Plus over Advanced is the operational consolidation. For hybrid DTC plus wholesale brands, removing the B2B setup reduces ongoing complexity more than any single feature on the plan comparison table. Automation: Flow, Launchpad, Functions, and Audiences Several of the most valuable tools in Shopify's automation layer are now Plus-only in 2026. Shopify Flow is available on both plans. It handles rules-based automation across the admin. For example, it automatically tags customers when they cross a lifetime value threshold. Flow now integrates with Klaviyo, Gorgias, Yotpo, Recharge, LoyaltyLion, and several other platforms. Shopify Launchpad is Plus-only. It schedules merchandising changes to fire at a precise time: flash sales, price changes, product drops, theme swaps, and discount activation or deactivation. Brands running major promotional events use Launchpad to execute without manual intervention at midnight. There is no equivalent on Advanced. Shopify Audiences is another Plus-only. It builds high-intent lookalike audiences for Meta, Google, TikTok, and Pinterest using commerce data across the Shopify Plus merchant network. I have written a complete breakdown on Shopify Audiences how it works and how to use it. Enterprise operations: Staff, APIs, security, reporting, & POS Staff accounts and permissions Advanced supports 15 staff accounts with standard admin roles. Plus supports unlimited staff with store-level access controls. API access Advanced supports 4 REST API requests per second and 200 GraphQL points per second. Plus raises that to 20 REST requests per second and 1,000 GraphQL points per second, with prioritized webhook delivery and access to staging environments. Custom apps on Plus can also access PII data, while on Advanced, they cannot access PII. POS Pro Advanced requires $89/month per retail location for POS Pro. Plus includes POS Pro for the first 20 retail locations at no additional cost. If you use Shopify Payments and process at least one retail transaction per month at any location, POS Pro is waived on all retail locations up to a maximum of 200. Inventory locations Advanced supports 10 inventory locations. Plus supports 200. I suggest brands running multiple warehouses definitely go with Plus on this one. Reporting Advanced gives you Shopify's full reporting suite, including custom reports. Plus adds ShopifyQL Notebooks, a custom reporting tool that lets data teams write queries, combine data sources, and build tailored dashboards. Headless storefronts Advanced supports one Hydrogen storefront. Plus supports up to 25 Hydrogen storefronts hosted on Oxygen, making it the right setup for brands launching headless campaign sites, B2B portals, or international storefronts with custom front-end experiences. What is new in 2026: Sidekick, agentic commerce, & MCP Shopify Sidekick, the AI assistant embedded in the admin, is now available across all plans. It writes copy, configures discounts, builds Flow automations, and answers analytics questions in plain language. The gap between Advanced & Plus at the agentic layer. Advanced agentic capabilities, where the AI takes actions across the store, are better supported on Plus because of higher API limits, broader permissions, and staging environments for safe action testing. A merchant asking Sidekick to "set up a flash sale for this weekend across all three regional stores" needs Plus to execute that. MCP (Model Context Protocol) integration, which lets AI tools connect directly to Shopify's backend, is used by enterprise brands that need AI agents with direct admin access. For me, Plus is always better for MCP-based workflows because the API and security controls make those integrations safe to connect. If you are deciding for the next 3 years, Plus is a much better choice just because of the agentic commerce feature. 5 signals your store is ready to move from Advanced to Plus Signal 1: You need a second storefront If you want a separate domain, a dedicated B2B store, or a different storefront under the same brand, Advanced cannot support that. Plus gives you up to nine expansion stores under one contract with one Admin. Signal 2: Your B2B channel is growing If your wholesale revenue is good and your current app stack is creating a problem, native B2B on Plus removes this issue. Company profiles, net terms, custom catalogs, and a buyer self-serve portal are all native and free with the plan. Signal 3: Your checkout has a requirement that it cannot meet Any checkout that needs custom fields, dynamic shipping logic, upsell blocks inside checkout, or discount stacking rules requires Plus. Advanced's checkout only works for visual branding. Signal 4: Your third-party transaction fees exceed $35,000/year At that threshold, the 0.4% fee reduction on Plus covers more than the annual plan cost difference. The upgrade saves your money from day one. When Shopify Advanced is the right call Advanced is the right plan if you Run a single-store DTC business Your team is under 15 people You use Shopify Payments as your primary gateway You have no current B2B operations, and your checkout does not need customization For inspiration on what Shopify Plus stores look like, checkout my article on successful Shopify Plus websites to research on Plus brands. Making the right Shopify Plus vs Advanced decision ▶ Advanced is the best plan for a growing single-store DTC business. ▶ Shopify Plus is the right setup for brands that need more than one storefront, a native B2B channel, full checkout control, automation, or the API and security that enterprise operations demand. At Identixweb, we work with Shopify brands at exactly this decision point and through the implementation that follows. If you want a clear plan, evaluation and an upgrade roadmap built around your actual operational constraints, our Shopify consulting team can give you a direct answer without the guesswork. FAQs 1. Is Shopify Plus better than Shopify Advanced? Yes. Shopify Plus is better in capability, but not better for every store. Shopify Advanced already gives you 15 staff accounts, carrier-calculated shipping, custom reports, international selling tools, and enhanced chat support. Plus becomes better when you need enterprise features like unlimited staff, 200 inventory locations, unlimited B2B catalogs, priority support, checkout customization, expansion stores, bot protection, and higher API limits. 2. Is it worth upgrading to Shopify Plus? It is worth upgrading to Shopify Plus only when the business problem is bigger than what Advanced can solve. The strongest reasons are checkout customization, advanced B2B setup, expansion stores, higher API limits, bot protection, priority support, and high-volume sales events. 3. Is Shopify Advanced worth it? Yes. Shopify Advanced is worth it for stores that are growing internationally, need better reporting, or want more operational control without paying Plus pricing. It gives you custom reports, carrier-calculated shipping, international commerce tools, lower standard transaction fees, 15 staff accounts, and enhanced 24/7 chat support. 4. How much is Shopify Advanced per month? Shopify pricing is localized by country, and subscriptions can be billed in currencies such as INR, USD, GBP, or EUR, depending on location. In the USA, Shopify Advanced currently costs $399/month when paid monthly, or $299/month when paid yearly. 5. Why is Shopify Plus so expensive? Shopify Plus is expensive because it is priced for enterprise-level control, scale, and support. You are paying for things like full checkout customization, unlimited staff, 200 inventory locations, unlimited B2B catalogs, priority support, free expansion stores, bot protection, higher API limits, and feature testing environments.
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