Shopify Plus starts at $2,300 per month on a one-year commitment, or $2,500 per month if you pay month-to-month. That base rate applies to stores generating up to roughly $625,000 in monthly gross merchandise volume (GMV), the point at which 0.4% of GMV equals the base fee. Above that threshold, your monthly bill shifts to 0.4% of GMV, with a hard cap of $40,000 per month once revenue passes about $10 million per month. So a store doing $2 million per month would pay $8,000.

That puts Shopify Plus in the enterprise category. But the headline number only tells part of the story. What matters is what you get for the money, what extra costs show up on top of the base fee, and whether your business is at a stage where Shopify Plus actually saves you money compared to the alternatives.

Key Takeaways
1
Shopify Plus costs $2,300/month on a 1-year commitment or $2,500/month-to-month. Above $625K monthly GMV, you pay 0.4% of revenue instead, capped at $40,000/month.
2
Total monthly cost typically runs $3,500 to $8,000+ once you factor in apps, payment processing fees, and development.
3
The platform pays off when monthly revenue consistently passes $500,000, you run 5+ retail locations, you need multiple storefronts, or you require checkout customization.

How Shopify Plus Pricing Works

Shopify Plus uses a two-tier pricing model. Every merchant pays at least the monthly base fee: $2,300 on a one-year contract, or $2,500 if you stay month-to-month. This is a flat rate. It does not change based on store size, product count, or traffic.

The variable component kicks in when your store’s monthly GMV crosses about $625,000. At that point, your monthly fee becomes 0.4% of total revenue instead of the flat base rate. Whichever number is higher is what you pay. The variable fee then stops growing at $40,000 per month, which is the cap Shopify applies once GMV reaches roughly $10 million per month.

Here is how the math works at different revenue levels:

  • $400,000/month revenue: You pay $2,300-$2,500 (the base fee, since 0.4% of $400K is $1,600, below the base).
  • $625,000/month revenue: You pay $2,500 (the cross-over point: 0.4% of $625K equals the base).
  • $1,000,000/month revenue: You pay $4,000 (0.4% of $1M).
  • $2,000,000/month revenue: You pay $8,000 (0.4% of $2M).
  • $5,000,000/month revenue: You pay $20,000 (0.4% of $5M).
  • $10,000,000/month revenue: You pay $40,000 (the cap is reached at this revenue level).
  • $20,000,000/month revenue: You pay $40,000 (capped, pricing does not scale beyond this).

Shopify Plus contracts are typically 1 to 3 years. Annual billing is standard, and early termination fees apply. This is not a month-to-month plan you can cancel on a whim. Make sure the numbers work before signing.

1-Year Commitment vs Month-to-Month: The $200/Month Difference

Shopify quietly offers a $200/month discount when you commit to a one-year contract: $2,300/month instead of $2,500/month. Over 12 months that is a $2,400 saving, roughly one extra month’s platform fee. Stores that already know Shopify Plus fits their needs almost always take the 1-year option.

The trade-off is flexibility. If you sign a 1-year contract and decide to migrate to BigCommerce or Adobe Commerce four months in, the remaining contract value usually applies. Month-to-month makes sense only when you are genuinely uncertain about staying past a quarter. Most merchants are not, so the 1-year rate is what they actually pay.

What’s Included in Shopify Plus

The base fee covers a lot more than a standard Shopify plan. Here is what you get that you would not have on lower tiers, as covered in our guide on whether Shopify Plus is for you:

  • Up to 9 expansion stores: run multiple storefronts (different regions, brands, or B2B) under one account at no extra per-store cost.
  • Shopify Flow: a built-in automation tool for inventory management, fraud flagging, customer segmentation, and order routing.
  • Launchpad: schedule and automate product launches, flash sales, and campaign rollouts with theme changes, price adjustments, and inventory toggles.
  • Script Editor: write custom Ruby scripts that run at checkout for personalized discounts, shipping rules, and payment logic.
  • Shopify POS Pro: included at no additional cost for all locations (normally $89/month per location on other plans).
  • Dedicated support: a named Merchant Success Manager plus priority access to Shopify’s support team.
  • Wholesale channel: a separate, password-protected storefront for B2B customers with custom pricing.
  • Higher API rate limits: critical for stores with large catalogs or heavy integration requirements.
  • Checkout customization: access to Checkout Extensibility for modifying the checkout experience, which is locked on standard plans.

For stores running multiple physical locations, the POS Pro inclusion alone can save $1,000+ per month. A merchant with 15 retail locations would pay $1,335/month just for POS Pro on the Advanced plan.

Hidden Costs to Watch For

The base fee is just the platform cost. Your actual monthly bill will be higher once you account for these extra expenses.

Payment processing fees. If you use Shopify Payments, the rate on Shopify Plus is 2.15% + $0.30 per online credit card transaction. If you use a third-party payment gateway instead, Shopify charges an additional 0.15% on top of whatever your gateway charges. On $500,000 in monthly sales through Shopify Payments, that is roughly $11,050 in processing fees alone.

App subscriptions. Most Shopify Plus stores run 15 to 30 apps. Even with Shopify Flow handling some automation, you will likely need apps for reviews, email marketing, subscriptions, loyalty programs, and advanced analytics. Budget $500 to $2,000 per month for apps depending on your stack.

Theme and development costs. Custom theme development for Shopify Plus stores typically costs $15,000 to $50,000 upfront. Ongoing work for custom features, integrations, and maintenance adds $2,000 to $10,000 per month if you retain a Shopify Plus agency or developer.

Implementation and migration. Moving to Shopify Plus from another platform usually involves data migration, custom integration setup, and staff training. Implementation projects commonly run $20,000 to $100,000 depending on complexity. This is a one-time cost, but it affects your first-year ROI calculations.

Transaction fees on third-party gateways. The 0.15% surcharge applies to every transaction processed through a non-Shopify gateway. On high-volume stores, this adds up fast. A store processing $2 million monthly through a third-party gateway pays an extra $3,000/month on top of the gateway’s own fees.

Cost Per Order at Different Volumes

One way to judge whether Shopify Plus is reasonable for your store is the per-order cost of the platform itself (excluding processing). Assuming a $100 average order value:

  • $300K/month (3,000 orders): Platform cost per order is roughly $0.77 on a 1-year contract.
  • $625K/month (6,250 orders): Platform cost per order drops to $0.37.
  • $1M/month (10,000 orders): Platform cost per order is $0.40 (now on the 0.4% variable rate).
  • $5M/month (50,000 orders): Platform cost per order stays at $0.40 (still variable).
  • $15M/month (150,000 orders): Platform cost per order drops to $0.27 (the $40K cap is hit).

The per-order cost actually improves once you blow past the $40K cap, which is why high-volume merchants tend to stick with Shopify Plus long-term: the platform stops getting more expensive as they scale.

Shopify Plus vs Advanced Shopify: Is the Upgrade Worth It?

The most common question for growing Shopify merchants is whether to stay on Advanced Shopify ($399/month) or move up to Shopify Plus. Here is a direct comparison of the key differences:

  • Monthly cost: Advanced is $399/month; Plus starts at $2,300/month.
  • Credit card rates: Advanced charges 2.15% + $0.30; Plus charges the same, though Plus merchants can sometimes negotiate lower.
  • Third-party transaction fee: Advanced charges 0.5%; Plus charges 0.15%. A significant saving if you use a non-Shopify gateway.
  • Staff accounts: Advanced allows 15; Plus allows unlimited.
  • Expansion stores: Advanced offers none; Plus includes up to 9.
  • Checkout customization: Advanced has no access; Plus gives full control.
  • Automation (Shopify Flow): Available on Advanced; also included on Plus.
  • POS Pro: $89/month per location on Advanced; included free on Plus.
  • Dedicated account manager: Not available on Advanced; included on Plus.
  • API rate limits: Standard on Advanced; doubled on Plus.

The break-even point depends on your situation. Stores processing $500,000+ per month through third-party gateways save enough on the lower transaction fee (0.5% vs 0.15%) to offset most of the price difference. Stores with multiple physical locations save on POS Pro licensing. Stores that need checkout customization have no choice: it is Plus-only. If none of those scenarios apply, staying on Advanced Shopify and spending the $1,900/month difference on marketing or inventory usually produces better returns. For a deeper look at what the platform is designed for, see our guide on what Shopify Plus is for.

Comparing Shopify Plus With Enterprise Competitors

Shopify Plus competes against other enterprise ecommerce platforms, not against entry-level or mid-market plans. Here is how pricing stacks up against its actual competitors:

  • Shopify Plus: $2,300/month base on 1-year, scaling to 0.4% of revenue. All-inclusive hosting, security, and updates.
  • BigCommerce Enterprise: Custom pricing, typically $1,000 to $15,000/month depending on GMV and negotiation. Similar hosted model with no transaction fees on any gateway.
  • Adobe Commerce (Magento): License fees start around $22,000/year for Commerce Pro and $125,000+/year for Managed Commerce with cloud hosting. You pay separately for hosting, security patches, and server management unless you use their cloud tier.
  • Salesforce Commerce Cloud: Typically 1% to 3% of GMV with a minimum annual commitment. A store doing $10 million annually could pay $100,000 to $300,000/year.

Shopify Plus is often the least expensive enterprise option for stores in the $1M to $20M annual revenue range. Its pricing model is more predictable than Salesforce’s GMV percentage and requires far less technical overhead than Adobe Commerce. BigCommerce Enterprise is the closest competitor on price, but Shopify Plus has a larger app ecosystem and more agency partners.

What Changed with Shopify Plus Pricing in 2025 and 2026

The current pricing model, 0.4% of GMV above $625,000 per month, replaced an older structure that charged 0.25% of revenue above $800,000 per month. The change affected which merchants tip into the variable tier and how quickly the fee scales. Under the old model, stores between $625,000 and $800,000 in monthly revenue paid only the base fee regardless of volume. Now that threshold sits lower at $625,000, and the percentage is higher at 0.4%, which means mid-tier Plus merchants pay more than they did before the revision. High-volume stores near the $40,000 cap are less affected, since the cap itself did not change.

On the feature side, Shopify expanded Checkout Extensibility significantly in 2024 and 2025. Merchants on Plus can now use checkout apps to add custom UI blocks, post-purchase offers, and payment method logic without touching theme code or the deprecated Script Editor. Shopify has signaled that Script Editor will eventually be phased out in favor of the extensibility framework, so merchants still relying heavily on custom Ruby checkout scripts should start planning a migration. The core functionality carries over, but the implementation approach is different and some edge-case discount logic requires rebuilding.

Shopify Flow also received updates through 2025, adding more native triggers and actions that previously required third-party apps. Inventory reorder automation, metafield-based customer tagging, and order routing rules based on location or product tags are now achievable without extra app spend. For stores that were paying $200 to $500 per month for dedicated automation apps, this makes the Plus base fee marginally more defensible at smaller revenue scales.

What merchants should watch going forward: Shopify has not announced further pricing changes as of mid-2026, but the direction of the past two years suggests the platform will continue tying more features to Plus-only access rather than trickling them down to Advanced. If checkout customization or advanced B2B tools are critical to your roadmap, the gap between Plus and lower tiers is likely to widen, not shrink.

When Does Shopify Plus Make Financial Sense?

Shopify Plus is not the right choice for every growing store. Here are the situations where the upgrade genuinely pays for itself.

You are doing $500,000+ per month in revenue. At this volume, the total cost of Shopify Plus (including the base fee and lower transaction rates) starts to approach or match what you would pay on Advanced Shopify after accounting for the features you would need to replicate through apps and workarounds.

You need multiple storefronts. If you sell in multiple countries, run a B2B wholesale operation alongside DTC, or manage several brands, the expansion store feature alone can save thousands per month compared to running separate Shopify accounts.

You have 5+ retail locations. The included POS Pro saves $89 per location per month. Five locations save you $445/month; fifteen locations save $1,335/month.

You need checkout customization. Upsells at checkout, custom payment flows, or unique shipping logic require checkout access that only Shopify Plus provides. There is no workaround on lower plans.

You run high-volume flash sales. Launchpad and Shopify Plus infrastructure handle traffic spikes that would slow down stores on standard plans. If a single flash sale generates $200K+ in an hour, you need the extra capacity.

If none of these apply, Advanced Shopify at $399/month covers most merchants well. The jump to $2,300/month only makes sense when you need what that money specifically buys. For the most-asked questions about pricing and features, see our Shopify Plus FAQs.