On customer support, Shopify and Volusion are not close. Shopify offers 24/7 live chat, phone, and email support to all paid plan users, with a massive help center and active community forum behind it. Volusion - a much smaller platform that filed for bankruptcy in 2020 and was subsequently acquired - provides support that has historically been inconsistent and plan-restricted. For most store owners, this difference matters more than any feature comparison on a spec sheet.

This article breaks down exactly what each platform offers, where they differ, and what real users report about the experience of actually getting help when something goes wrong.

Key Takeaways
1
Shopify offers 24/7 live chat, phone, and email support on all paid plans - no plan restrictions for core support channels.
2
Volusion restricts phone support to Business plan ($299/month) and above; lower-tier users are limited to email and chat.
3
Shopify scores 4.5/5 on SelectHub for customer support; Volusion scores 3.5/5, with inconsistent reviews citing long wait times.
4
Shopify’s help center has over 1,000 articles; its community forum has millions of posts from active merchants and developers.
5
Volusion filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2020 - its support infrastructure has been rebuilt, but it remains a smaller operation than Shopify’s.

Shopify Support Channels: What You Actually Get

Shopify’s support setup is straightforward: all paid plans (Basic at $39/month, Shopify at $105/month, Advanced at $399/month) include access to 24/7 live chat, email, and phone support. You don’t need to upgrade to reach a real person.

In practice, live chat is the fastest route for most issues - response times under two minutes during business hours are common, and even off-hours waits are typically short. Phone support connects you with a Shopify agent directly; there’s no automated menu maze to navigate. Email support is available for less urgent issues, with responses usually within a few hours.

Beyond direct support, Shopify maintains one of the strongest self-service ecosystems in e-commerce. The Shopify Help Center has over 1,000 articles covering setup, troubleshooting, apps, themes, and payments. The Shopify Community forums have millions of posts - most common problems have already been answered there. Shopify also publishes free video tutorials and runs the Shopify Academy for merchants who want structured learning.

For merchants on Shopify Plus (starting at $2,300/month), support is handled by a dedicated Launch Engineer during onboarding and a dedicated account manager ongoing. Response times at this tier are measured in minutes, not hours.

Volusion Support: What’s Available

Volusion offers three support channels - email, live chat, and phone - but access depends on your plan tier. Email and chat are available on all plans (Personal at $35/month, Professional at $79/month, Business at $299/month, and Prime at custom pricing). Phone support, however, is only available to Business and Prime subscribers.

That’s a meaningful restriction. If you’re on Personal or Professional - which covers the majority of Volusion’s user base - and you have an urgent issue with your store, you cannot call Volusion. You’re limited to email and live chat, where response times have been inconsistent according to user reviews.

Volusion does provide a knowledge base and video tutorial library, though it’s substantially smaller than Shopify’s. Their community forum is active but much smaller - fewer users means fewer answers from other merchants, and Volusion’s platform-specific developer community is thin compared to Shopify’s.

It’s worth knowing the context: Volusion filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in June 2020, was acquired, and has been rebuilding. Their support team is smaller than it was at its peak, and the platform’s user base is a fraction of Shopify’s. This doesn’t make Volusion a bad platform for the right use case, but it does affect the depth of support available.

Response Times: Shopify vs Volusion

Shopify’s live chat is genuinely fast. During North American business hours, first response under two minutes is the norm. After hours, you might wait five to ten minutes, but 24/7 availability means you’re never left completely stranded. Phone wait times are similarly short on standard plans.

Volusion’s response times tell a different story, at least according to user reviews on G2, Trustpilot, and Capterra. Chat responses can take significantly longer, particularly during peak periods. Email support on lower-tier plans sometimes stretches to 24-48 hours. Users on Business and Prime plans who have phone access generally report better experiences - but that access point starts at $299/month.

The gap becomes most apparent during high-stakes situations: a payment processing error on a busy weekend, a theme breaking after an update, or a store going down during a sale. Shopify’s 24/7 multi-channel access means you can usually reach someone fast in those moments. With Volusion, the answer depends heavily on which plan you’re on and when you’re reaching out.

Quality of Customer Service Compared

Volume of support options only matters if the quality is there. On this front, the platforms diverge significantly.

Shopify’s support agents are consistently rated as knowledgeable and helpful. Common feedback across review platforms: agents understand Shopify’s ecosystem well enough to diagnose issues without escalating repeatedly, and they’re empowered to give concrete answers rather than just pointing you to documentation. That said, complex technical issues - particularly around custom code or third-party app conflicts - do sometimes require escalation.

Volusion’s support quality gets more mixed reviews. Some users report helpful, knowledgeable agents who resolve issues quickly. Others describe long waits followed by generic responses that don’t address the actual problem, or being passed between agents without resolution. The inconsistency is the recurring theme - Volusion support can be excellent or frustrating depending on when you contact them and which agent you reach.

Quality of Customer Service for Shopify and Volusion - Large screen with support agent, clients in headsets below, retro style.

Part of the quality difference comes down to scale. Shopify supports over 1.7 million merchants worldwide, which means its support team is large, well-resourced, and continuously trained. Volusion operates at a much smaller scale, which limits how much it can invest in support infrastructure.

User Satisfaction and Reviews

Looking at third-party review platforms, the ratings gap is consistent:

  • SelectHub: Shopify 4.5/5, Volusion 3.5/5
  • G2: Shopify 4.4/5, Volusion 3.4/5 (support-specific scores)
  • Capterra: Shopify 4.5/5, Volusion 3.5/5

The pattern is consistent across platforms. Shopify users regularly cite support as a strong point - fast responses, helpful agents, and plenty of self-service resources. Negative Shopify support reviews do exist, most commonly around complex technical issues or disputes with Shopify Payments, but they’re a minority.

Volusion’s reviews are more polarized. A meaningful segment of users has had genuinely good experiences, particularly on higher-tier plans with phone access. But a larger segment reports frustration: slow responses, agents who lack platform knowledge, and issues that take multiple contacts to resolve. Post-acquisition, some longtime Volusion users have noted a decline in support quality compared to the platform’s earlier years.

Self-Service Resources and Documentation

If you prefer solving problems independently before contacting support, Shopify has a significant advantage in self-service resources.

Shopify’s Help Center covers virtually every aspect of the platform - store setup, payments, shipping, taxes, themes, apps, Shopify POS, and developer APIs. Articles are well-maintained, include screenshots, and are updated when platform features change. The Shopify Community forum is genuinely useful: with millions of active merchants and developers, it’s rare to encounter a problem that hasn’t already been discussed and solved there.

Volusion’s knowledge base is functional but smaller in scope. It covers the basics well, but for anything outside standard use cases, you’ll often find limited documentation. Their community forum exists but lacks the depth and activity of Shopify’s - fewer users means fewer answers, and developer resources are particularly thin for merchants who need to customize their store beyond Volusion’s built-in tools.

For developers and agencies managing multiple stores, Shopify’s extensive API documentation, partner resources, and third-party developer ecosystem make self-sufficiency much more achievable. Volusion’s developer resources are more limited.

Which Platform Should You Choose for Support?

If accessible, reliable customer support is a priority - and for most store owners it should be - Shopify is the stronger choice. Here’s a quick way to think about it:

  • Choose Shopify if: You want 24/7 multi-channel support without plan restrictions, need a large self-service knowledge base, or are building on a platform with a wide developer and agency ecosystem.
  • Consider Volusion if: You’re already invested in the Volusion ecosystem, operate on the Business or Prime plan where phone support is available, and your support needs are relatively straightforward.
  • Avoid Volusion’s lower tiers (Personal, Professional) if you anticipate needing frequent or urgent support - the lack of phone access and inconsistent email/chat response times make it a risky setup for stores that can’t afford extended downtime.

It’s also worth noting that Shopify’s ecosystem gives you indirect support advantages: a larger pool of Shopify-certified developers and agencies, more active third-party forums, and more Stack Overflow answers for common technical problems. When you’re stuck at 2am before a big product launch, those community resources can be as valuable as official support.

For a broader platform-by-platform breakdown, see our full Shopify comparison. If Volusion isn’t the right fit, Shopify vs WooCommerce is another comparison worth reviewing - WooCommerce is a more common Volusion alternative for merchants who want greater flexibility.