Platforms
WordPress vs Shopify: Which Platform Fits Your Business?
By the Coast Creative team6 min read
We build on both platforms every month, so we don't have a horse in this race. The right answer depends on what your website is for — and it's usually obvious within two questions.
Question 1: Is selling products the main job?
If yes — physical products, variants, inventory, shipping — Shopify wins. It's a commerce engine first: checkout, payments, taxes, abandoned carts, and fraud protection are solved problems you never think about. Rebuilding that on WordPress with WooCommerce is possible, but you become the mechanic of your own store.
Question 2: Is the site mostly content, services, or lead generation?
If yes — service business, portfolio, local company, publication — WordPress wins. It's more flexible for page design, dramatically better for content and blogging, and stronger for the kind of local and topical SEO that service businesses live on. You also own the whole thing outright.
The trade-offs nobody mentions
Shopify charges monthly forever and takes transaction fees unless you use their payments; you're renting, and the rent is fine as long as sales cover it. WordPress is free software, but it needs hosting, updates, and security attention — unmaintained WordPress sites are how horror stories start. Both are manageable; they're just different kinds of responsibility.
The hybrid answer
Plenty of businesses run WordPress for their main site and Shopify for their store, linked so cleanly customers never notice the seam. Content and SEO live where they're strongest; commerce lives where it's safest.
Our honest default
Service business or professional practice: WordPress. Product business where the store is the business: Shopify. If your situation is genuinely mixed, that's exactly the conversation a discovery call is for.
