Over 5 million stores run on Shopify right now. That number sounds impressive – but it also raises a question a lot of people forget to ask before signing up: how does Shopify actually work, and is it the right way to build an online business in 2026?
The honest answer is that Shopify is a genuinely solid platform. It handles hosting, payments, and store design out of the box, and it scales well as you grow. But it is also a subscription-based service with a fee structure that gets more expensive the more you sell – and that changes the math significantly once you compare it to other options.
Quick Answer: Shopify is a cloud-based ecommerce platform that lets you build and manage an online store without coding. You pay a monthly plan starting at $39/month, plus credit card processing fees on every sale. It works for product-based businesses – but your costs and earning potential look very different depending on which business model you choose to run on top of it.
What is Shopify and how does it work?
Shopify is a SaaS (software as a service) ecommerce platform, which means it runs entirely in the cloud. You do not need to set up hosting, install software, or manage a server. You sign up, pick a plan, choose a theme, add your products, and you are essentially ready to sell.
The platform sits between you and your customers, handling the technical side of running an online store. When a customer lands on your store, browses a product, and clicks buy, Shopify manages the checkout flow, processes the payment, and logs the order in your dashboard. SSL security and payment gateway integration are all handled for you.
Here is a simplified breakdown of how Shopify works step by step:
- Sign up and choose a plan – Shopify offers several tiers. The Basic plan starts at $39/month (or $29/month on annual billing). Higher plans – Grow at $105/month and Advanced at $399/month – unlock lower transaction fees and more advanced reporting tools.
- Pick a theme and design your store – Shopify provides free and paid themes. Free themes cover the basics well. Premium themes run $140–$350 as a one-time purchase.
- Add products – Upload images, write descriptions, set prices, and manage inventory directly from the dashboard. Shopify tracks stock and can alert you when items run low.
- Set up payments – Shopify Payments is the built-in processor. Using it means no extra transaction fee on top of your plan. If you prefer a third-party gateway like PayPal or Stripe, Shopify adds an additional 0.6%–2% fee per sale depending on your plan.
- Publish and promote – Once live, you drive traffic through SEO, paid ads, social media, or email marketing. None of these are included – they are separate costs.
The platform also has an app store with over 16,000 apps as of 2026, covering everything from email marketing to upsell tools, review widgets, and loyalty programs. Most useful apps are paid – expect to spend an additional $50–$100/month on apps once your store is running seriously.
How much does running a Shopify store actually cost?
This is where a lot of beginners get a surprise. The monthly plan price is the starting point – not the full picture. Here is what a realistic cost breakdown looks like for a store doing moderate volume in 2026:
A “basic” Shopify store realistically costs $90–$150/month before you spend a single dollar on advertising. That is not a dealbreaker, but it is important to understand upfront – especially when comparing Shopify to alternative online business models that carry lower fixed overhead.
One note on the cost ceiling: These figures assume you use Shopify Payments. If you rely on a third-party payment processor, the per-sale surcharge adds up quickly. A store doing $10,000/month on the Basic plan with a third-party gateway pays an extra $200/month in surcharges alone – on top of everything else.
The fee structure is not a flaw unique to Shopify – every hosted platform charges something. But it does mean your profit on each sale is lower from day one, and those numbers shrink further as your volume grows if you stay on the Basic plan.
How Shopify works for online selling – and where the model has limits
Online selling on Shopify is one of the most popular use cases for the platform. The basic idea is simple: you list products in your store, a customer places an order, and a third-party supplier ships the product directly to the customer. But Shopify itself does not source suppliers or automate order fulfillment – you need a separate app for that, typically DSers, Zendrop, or AutoDS, each carrying its own monthly cost.
How Shopify online selling actually works in practice
Store setup
You build your Shopify store and connect a sourcing app that links to product suppliers. The app imports product listings, syncs pricing, and pushes orders to your supplier automatically when a sale comes in.
The supplier relationship
Your customer pays you the retail price. You pay the supplier the wholesale price. The difference is your gross margin before Shopify fees, the app monthly cost, advertising costs, and any returns. On typical product sourcing, margins run 20%–40% depending on niche and pricing strategy.
Fulfillment and delivery times
This is the friction point most new Shopify sellers encounter. When sourcing from overseas, international delivery times can range from 10 to 30 days. Customers compare their experience to Amazon Prime. Managing expectations – and returns – on that gap is an ongoing challenge, and it directly affects your review scores and repeat purchase rate.
Scaling the store
Shopify scales well technically. The platform handles high traffic without breaking. The harder part of scaling a Shopify store is the economics: as your ad spend increases to drive more traffic, your cost per customer rises, and Shopify fees mean your effective income shrinks on every additional dollar of revenue.
What Shopify does well – and what it does not include
Strengths
Shopify is genuinely excellent at checkout optimization. Shop Pay, its built-in accelerated checkout, consistently outperforms industry conversion averages. The platform is also stable at scale – it processed over $9 billion in Black Friday sales in one recent season, which speaks to its infrastructure reliability. For established brands that want complete control over their storefront design and customer experience, Shopify is hard to beat.
Gaps
What Shopify does not include: supplier relationships, product sourcing, built-in selling automation, or any kind of ready-made store structure. You are buying a blank canvas and a powerful set of tools. Everything you build on top of it – the product selection, the brand, the supplier network, the marketing – is down to you. That is either a strength or a weakness depending on your starting point and how much time you have.
The hidden time cost
New Shopify users consistently underestimate setup time. Picking a niche, finding reliable suppliers, testing products, writing product descriptions, configuring apps, setting up abandoned cart flows, running ad creatives – realistically, getting a functional, converting Shopify store off the ground takes 60–120 hours of focused work before your first profitable sale. That timeline matters a lot if you are comparing options.
How Shopify compares to other online business options
Both Shopify and Sellvia let you run an online store. The difference is in what is included, what you own, and how the cost structure works over time. Here is a side-by-side comparison:
The comparison above reflects two genuinely different approaches to building an online business. Shopify is a powerful platform for sellers who want maximum design control and are willing to invest time and ongoing costs to build and run their store. Sellvia is built to get you earning faster – the digital products, the built-in ad system, and the ready-made store option remove multiple setup barriers at once.
Important note: Neither platform eliminates the work of building a real business. Product selection, customer service, and marketing still require your attention regardless of which platform you choose. The difference is how much of the technical and structural work is done for you at the start.
What you can realistically earn from an online store in 2026
Income from an online store varies enormously. The range you see in forums and YouTube content is huge – from a few hundred dollars a month to five-figure monthly revenue. Most stores that reach real income do so gradually, with meaningful earnings starting to appear after 60–90 days of consistent effort.
Here is a realistic earnings framework by effort level and stage:
One note on these figures: Revenue is not the same as income. A store doing $5,000/month in sales on Shopify might net $1,000–$1,500 after platform costs, app costs, ad spend, and product costs. Income discipline matters far more than top-line revenue at every stage. With Sellvia, you keep 50–70% of every digital product sale – so the same revenue produces a meaningfully different result.
How to decide: is Shopify the right choice for you?
Shopify makes sense in specific situations. It is not the right fit for everyone starting out in online business – and understanding the distinction early saves both time and money.
When Shopify makes sense
Shopify works well if you already have a product – something you manufacture, source wholesale, or create yourself – and you need a polished, scalable storefront to sell it. It also makes sense for established businesses that need deep customization, multi-channel selling across Instagram, TikTok, and Amazon, and enterprise-level analytics. If design control is your top priority and you have budget for the platform plus a developer, Shopify delivers.
When Shopify is not the most efficient starting point
If you are starting from scratch with no product, no supplier relationships, and a limited budget, Shopify adds overhead before you have validated a single product idea. You are paying $39–$100+/month for a platform while also needing to pay for a sourcing app, a theme, and ad spend to drive traffic. The fixed costs pile up before any income comes in.
The beginner case for a ready-made solution
The data on online stores consistently shows that the biggest barrier for new sellers is not motivation – it is the gap between deciding to start and actually having a store that is ready to take orders. Every week spent on setup is a week not spent on product testing, marketing, and learning what your customers actually want.
A platform that gives you a functioning, product-loaded store from day one – with a built-in ad system and no per-sale platform fees – changes that timeline completely. You go from researching to selling in days rather than months.
Why Sellvia is a game-changer for your online store 🚀
Sellvia isn’t just another ecommerce tool. We are a trusted name in the industry, recognized by Forbes and even ranked in Inc.’s list of the 5,000 fastest-growing companies in the U.S. So if you’re serious about starting as a solopreneur, this is a smart place to begin.
Starting an online business can feel overwhelming, but that’s exactly where Sellvia steps in. It takes care of the tricky parts, so you can focus on making sales and growing your brand. Let’s break down what makes it such a great choice.

Get a ready-to-go store hassle-free 🎯
Want to start selling but don’t know where to begin? No worries! Just share your ideas, and Sellvia’s team will build a free ecommerce website that’s fully set up and ready to take orders from day one. No coding, no stress – just a store that works right out of the box.
A $100 gift voucher to grow your business faster 🎁
Starting a business takes momentum – and Sellvia gives you a head start. When you claim your free store today, you also get a $100 gift voucher to put toward growing your business. Use it to upgrade your store, boost your marketing, or unlock new tools. It is a real dollar value, handed to you on day one, with no catch and no hoops to jump through.
A massive catalog of digital products to sell 🏆
One of the biggest struggles in starting an online business is figuring out what to sell. Sellvia solves that completely. Your store comes pre-loaded with digital products – guides, courses, checklists, and tools – all created by Sellvia. You keep 50–70% of every sale. No physical products. No logistics headaches.
Everything in one easy-to-use platform 🔥
Managing an online store shouldn’t be complicated. With Sellvia, you can handle orders, add new products, and even chat with customers – all from a simple and user-friendly platform. No need to mess with confusing tools or deal with unnecessary tech stuff. It’s all smooth sailing.
No upfront costs, just start selling 💰
A big reason people hesitate to start an online business is the cost. But here’s the good news: With Sellvia, you don’t need to invest in stock, storage, or supplies. You can run your store with no upfront costs, keeping things low-risk while still making money.
Support that’s always got your back 🤝
Running a business comes with questions, but you’re never alone. Sellvia’s dedicated support team is available 24/7 to help with anything you need. Whether it’s a small question or a big challenge, they’ve got you covered.
Now that you know how Shopify works – and what a purpose-built alternative looks like – the next step is clear. Claim your free Sellvia store and start building your online income today.