Someone launched a Shopify store last night with $5, a product idea, and a link shared in an Instagram story. By morning they had their first sale. That’s not a fairy tale. That’s what picking the right plan and just starting actually looks like.

The plan question is one that stops more people than it should. They sit on the pricing page comparing tiers, trying to figure out which one is right before they’ve even decided what they’re selling, who they’re selling to, or how they’re going to get anyone to the store in the first place. The plan becomes the obstacle when it should just be the starting point.

The truth is that Shopify’s pricing is reasonable at every tier when you match it to the right stage of your business. The Starter plan exists for a reason. So does Plus. The mistake isn’t picking the wrong one forever, it’s overthinking the decision to the point where you never start, or underthinking it to the point where you’re paying for features you won’t use for another two years. This section cuts through all of that. It covers what things actually cost, what each plan is genuinely designed for, and how to make a decision that makes sense for where your business is right now rather than where you hope it’ll be eventually.

Here’s how to figure out which setup makes sense for you.

What Does a Shopify Website Actually Cost?

The monthly plan fee is the number Shopify puts on the pricing page, and it’s real. What’s harder to see coming is everything around it before you set up your Shopify store.

The theme alone is a decision most merchants underestimate. Free themes are genuinely good now, much better than they were a few years ago, but they have limits. At some point you’ll want to do something your free theme doesn’t support and the choice becomes hiring a developer, buying a paid theme, or living with the limitation. A paid theme typically runs between $150 and $400 as a one-time cost, which sounds manageable until you’re also paying for apps, a domain, and a plan that’s creeping upward as your business grows.

Then there’s the developer question. Most merchants start out convinced they’ll do everything themselves. Some of them are right. Others spend weeks trying to make something work and eventually hire someone anyway, having lost both time and money. Being honest with yourself early about where your skills are and where your time is most valuable saves a lot of frustration. If you want the full picture before you commit to anything, how much a Shopify website actually costs is the honest version of that conversation, with real numbers across DIY, freelancer, and agency builds, and what experienced store owners say they’d spend differently if they were starting over.

Which Shopify Plan Is Right for You?

Shopify has five tiers. The differences between them matter more than the price gap suggests, and getting this wrong early costs you in ways that aren’t obvious until you’re already deep into running the store.

Shopify Starter

At $5 a month, Starter is the lowest friction way to test whether selling online is even right for you. There’s no full storefront. Instead you get shareable product links and a buy button you can drop into social media posts, messaging apps, or an existing website. It’s built for people who want to validate an idea before committing to a full store, or for creators and side hustlers who already have an audience and just need a simple way to take payment. If you’ve been sitting on a product idea and aren’t sure it’ll sell, Starter is a sensible place to find out without spending much to do it. The risk is low enough that there’s really no reason not to try.

Shopify Basic

At $29 a month, Basic is the entry point for solo entrepreneurs ready to run a proper store. It gives you online and in-person selling, Shopify’s checkout, built-in AI tools, and up to $5,000 in credits. The catch is a 2% fee on any payment processor that isn’t Shopify Payments. At low volumes that’s manageable. As your revenue grows it becomes worth revisiting, because that 2% adds up faster than most people realize when they’re doing the math at the start.

Shopify Grow

At $79 a month, Grow is aimed at small teams with consistent sales coming in. The transaction fee drops to 1%, you can add up to five staff accounts, and your credit earning potential goes up to $7,500. Most merchants who upgrade do it because the math tips in their favor, not because they needed a new feature. The moment your monthly sales volume means the fee saving exceeds the plan cost difference, the upgrade pays for itself and then some. If you’re weighing whether Shopify Basic or Grow makes more sense for where you are right now, that comparison cuts through the noise. And if you want to understand what the Shopify Grow plan actually feels like to use day to day, the review goes well beyond the feature list.

Shopify Advanced

At $299 a month, Advanced is a serious tool for stores doing serious volume. Transaction fees drop to 0.6%, you get live third-party shipping rates, up to 15 staff accounts, and the ability to tailor your store by region. The features at this level start paying for themselves if you’re selling at scale or across borders. International pricing in local currencies, advanced reporting that actually tells you something useful, and shipping rate calculations that reflect what carriers are actually charging rather than estimates. If you’re sitting on the fence, Shopify Grow vs Advanced is the clearest comparison available. And the Shopify Advanced plan breakdown gets into the customization options that most merchants at this level don’t realize they have access to.

Shopify Plus

Starting from $2,300 a month, Plus is a different category entirely. Fully customizable checkout, unlimited staff accounts, up to 200 POS Pro locations, unlimited B2B catalogs, and priority 24/7 phone support. It’s enterprise infrastructure built for brands doing serious volume across multiple channels, markets, and sometimes multiple storefronts. The price reflects that, and it’s genuinely not for most people starting out. But understanding what Shopify Plus offers is useful for knowing what you’re building toward, because the merchants who eventually need it usually started somewhere much simpler and grew into it over time.

All plans currently include a free trial and a $1 a month for three months introductory offer for new merchants.

Guides by Business Type

Sometimes the plan comparison isn’t the right starting point. Sometimes the better question is what setup actually makes sense for where your business is right now, not where you hope it’ll be in two years.

Just getting started

If you’re brand new and want to understand what the entry-level plan gets you in practice, starting with Shopify Basic is written specifically for new store owners. Not a feature tour, just what actually matters in the early weeks when everything is new and the decisions feel bigger than they probably are.

Already running a store and trying to grow

Once you’ve got traction and you’re trying to scale rather than just stay afloat, the question shifts from how to set things up to how to use what you already have more effectively. Utilizing Shopify’s standard features for growing businesses is about making proper use of what you’re already paying for before layering more tools on top. Most growing merchants are underusing the platform significantly before they start adding apps, and fixing that is almost always more valuable than the next subscription.

Selling without a full storefront

If you’re not running a traditional store and just want to sell through social media or add a buy button to an existing website, most people don’t realize that Shopify Starter exists as an option. It’s a much lighter setup without a full storefront, and worth knowing about if a complete store is more than you actually need right now. A lot of creators, consultants, and service businesses use this setup precisely because it lets them take payments online without building and maintaining a full eCommerce site.

Running a small business

Small businesses have specific constraints that the standard plan comparison doesn’t always account for. Budget is tighter, time is more limited, and the wrong decision has a more direct impact on whether the business survives its first year. If you’re trying to cut through the noise and figure out what genuinely makes sense for your size and situation, Shopify solutions for small businesses looks at the options without assuming you need the most expensive one or that growth for growth’s sake is always the goal.