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Shopify vs Shopify Plus: Which Should UK Brands Use in 2026?

The pricing gap is bigger than most realise — but the feature gap is too. A pragmatic decision framework based on real numbers from brands trading £10k–£500k a month.

MC
Head of Growth
12 min read 14 May 2026 Updated 14 May 2026
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Every month we get the same question from UK e-commerce brands: "Should I be on Shopify Plus?" Most of the time the answer is no — at least not yet. But the reasons people give for upgrading are often wrong, and the reasons that should drive the decision are often misunderstood.

We've migrated brands both directions: from standard Shopify up to Plus, and (in one painful case) from Plus back down to Advanced. So this guide is built from real engagements with brands trading between £10k and £500k a month — not Shopify's sales materials.

TL;DR

If you're doing under £80k/month, you almost certainly don't need Plus. If you're doing over £200k/month, you almost certainly do. Between those numbers, the answer depends on three things: checkout customisation, B2B requirements, and your tolerance for app-stack workarounds.

Quick test

Are you regularly hitting Shopify's checkout limitations? Do you need custom scripts at checkout? Are you running a B2B wholesale operation alongside your DTC? If you said yes to any of those, Plus is probably worth it. If you said no to all three, it almost certainly isn't.

The real pricing gap

Shopify's pricing page doesn't tell the whole story. The headline numbers in 2026 are:

PlanMonthlyTransaction feesReal annual cost*
Basic£25/mo2% online, 2% in-person£300 + transaction fees
Shopify (standard)£65/mo1%£780 + transaction fees
Advanced£344/mo0.5%£4,128 + transaction fees
Shopify PlusFrom £2,300/mo0.15% (revenue share above £800k)£27,600 minimum

*Doesn't include third-party apps, payment processor fees, or domain costs. Plus pricing is revenue-share above £800k/mo — so high-volume brands pay more.

The honest comparison most people miss: a brand doing £150k/mo on Advanced pays roughly £750/mo in transaction fees alone (0.5% of £150k). The Plus jump to £2,300/mo adds about £1,550/mo of incremental cost. For that, you get features — but you need to actually use them.

Feature differences that matter

Most "Shopify Plus vs Shopify" articles list 40+ features. Honestly, only six of them move the needle for most brands.

1. Checkout customisation

On standard Shopify, you cannot meaningfully customise the checkout. You get Shopify's defaults plus a handful of checkout extensions through the Checkout Extensibility framework. On Plus, you get full checkout UI customisation — including custom fields, dynamic upsells based on cart contents, and the ability to A/B test entire checkout flows.

This matters if: you sell configurable products, have complex shipping rules, want to test checkout messaging, or need to capture custom data (delivery instructions, gift options, B2B PO numbers).

It doesn't matter if: you sell simple products through a standard checkout. Brands doing £100k/mo selling DTC consumables rarely need this.

2. Shopify Scripts and Flow

Plus brands get access to Shopify Flow for advanced automation, and historically had Ruby-based Scripts for cart logic. Scripts are being deprecated in favour of Functions (which are also on Plus). This is where Plus pays for itself if you're running:

3. B2B wholesale

Plus gives you native B2B functionality — separate price lists per company, net payment terms, quote-to-order workflows, and a wholesale customer portal. We built this exact stack for Memo Wholesale and it replaced three separate systems they were using.

If you're trying to do B2B on standard Shopify, you'll need apps like SparkLayer or Wholesale Club, which work but add £200-500/mo and limit your flexibility. For brands with serious B2B revenue, Plus pays for itself purely on this dimension.

4. Multiple expansion stores

Plus accounts get up to 10 expansion stores. For UK brands looking to expand into EU and US markets with separate currencies, languages, and tax setups, this is significant. On standard Shopify, you'd run separate accounts and lose the unified analytics and customer view.

5. Launchpad and Bulk Discounts

Plus includes Launchpad — a tool for scheduling product launches, theme changes, and discount activations to fire automatically at exact times. If you run flash sales, product drops, or seasonal events, this removes the late-night manual deployment risk.

6. Dedicated launch manager and Merchant Success

Honestly, this is the soft benefit most agencies oversell. You do get a launch manager and access to better support — but in our experience, the agency you work with matters more than Shopify's internal team. The launch manager is useful in the first 90 days and then you barely see them.

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When to upgrade to Plus

Based on dozens of engagements, these are the clearest signals that Plus is worth it:

When to stay on standard

Equally common are the brands who should NOT upgrade yet. If any of these describe you, hold off:

"The biggest waste we see is brands upgrading to Plus for features they never end up using, then paying £20k+ extra per year for the platform."

Scripts, Flow and Functions in practice

If you're going to upgrade for the automation features, you need to actually use them. Here's what real implementations look like in 2026:

Cart-level dynamic discounts

The classic use case: "buy any 2 from collection A and get the cheapest at 50% off." On standard Shopify, this requires an app. On Plus, you can write a cart_transform Function that runs server-side at sub-100ms latency. The functions framework also handles checkout validation, payment customisation, and delivery customisation.

Shopify Flow automations

The workflows we set up most frequently for clients:

B2B and wholesale — the underrated reason

Of the ten brands we've moved to Plus in the last two years, four were primarily for the B2B functionality. The native Plus B2B features include:

Trying to replicate this on standard Shopify with apps is possible but fragile. SparkLayer is the closest equivalent and works well for mid-sized B2B, but as you grow, the limitations show. For brands with £30k+/month in B2B revenue, Plus B2B alone justifies the upgrade.

The decision framework

If you're still reading and not sure, here's how we walk clients through it:

  1. What's your current monthly revenue? Under £80k → stay. Over £200k → upgrade. Between → keep going.
  2. Are you hitting checkout limitations? If yes, Plus. If no, stay.
  3. Do you have B2B revenue or plan to? If serious (£30k+/mo), Plus. If casual, apps work.
  4. Are you expanding internationally with separate storefronts? If yes, Plus. If no, stay.
  5. Will you actually use Scripts/Flow/Functions? Be honest. If you can't name three workflows you'd build in week one, stay.

Three or more "Plus" answers = upgrade. Two or fewer = stay where you are and revisit in six months.

What about the migration?

Worth noting: moving from standard Shopify to Plus is straightforward (it's the same platform, just unlocked features). Migrating from another platform to Plus is a separate decision — see our guide on migrating from WooCommerce to Shopify without losing SEO.

Want a no-bullshit assessment?

We'll look at your store, your numbers and your roadmap, then tell you whether Plus is worth it. 30-min call, free.

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MC

Head of Growth, Groweyo

E-Commerce Strategy

I run growth at Groweyo. Before that, I managed Shopify operations in-house for two DTC brands — one of which went through the Plus migration. The opinions here come from being on both sides of the table.