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Why Brands Join (and Leave) Shopify?

Over the last 16 years working with e-commerce, I have been involved in hundreds of conversations with brands that were evaluating Shopify. I have seen it from both sides. I have helped merchants successfully launch on Shopify, and I have also worked with those who decided to leave it for another platform. This article is not based on theory. These points come directly from my work with global brands and my experience leading projects in North America, Europe, and Latin America.

The reasons why brands join and leave Shopify are very different, but both are deeply connected to business realities, not just technical features.

Why Brands Join Shopify

One of the main drivers is the reduction in total cost of ownership and technical debt. For many brands, the savings are visible almost from day one. The infrastructure, hosting, and core platform maintenance are part of the package, which means the business can focus on growth rather than servers, patches, and complex deployments.

Another strong reason is autonomy. Shopify’s app ecosystem is massive, with more than ten thousand apps ready to install and use. In many cases, a merchant can add new capabilities without engaging a development team or writing a single line of code. That is powerful when time to market matters.

The third point I consistently hear from merchants is about innovation. Shopify delivers new features regularly and often integrates the latest market advances directly into the platform. This ranges from AI-driven features to SEO best practices and updated compliance tools. For a brand that wants to stay competitive without building everything from scratch, this is a significant advantage.

Why Brands Leave Shopify

On the other side, some brands decide to leave. In many cases, the trigger is the platform’s variable fees. For businesses with very low product margins, the costs of Shopify Plus or the additional fees when not using Shopify Payments can noticeably impact profitability.

Another scenario is when the project requires too many customizations. Shopify can handle complex needs, but at a certain point, the level of custom work increases the total cost of ownership. It also creates operational complexity, and sometimes merchants start questioning whether the initial promise of simplicity still holds.

Finally, there is the matter of platform policies and roadmap. Shopify is a SaaS product with its own rules and priorities. Certain restricted items and features are prohibited due to policy, while strategic decisions depend entirely on Shopify’s roadmap. For some brands, that level of dependency feels too limiting, especially when they want complete control of their infrastructure and features.

My Take on the Market

In my experience, brands do not leave Shopify because it fails them. They leave because their business model evolves in a direction where the trade-offs of staying no longer make sense. Sometimes it is a margin problem. Sometimes it is a complexity problem. Sometimes it is a control problem.

At the same time, I have seen many brands that could have stayed on Shopify if they had approached the platform with a clearer understanding of its strengths and boundaries. The key is to align business goals with platform capabilities from the beginning. When that alignment exists, Shopify can scale impressively. When it does not, the conversation about replatforming often starts sooner than expected.

As someone who works daily with Shopify, Adobe Commerce, and other platforms, my advice is to look beyond features and focus on the long-term cost, agility, and control you will need. These are the real decision points that determine whether a brand thrives on Shopify or eventually decides to move on.

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