This is the classic ecommerce fork in the road: Shopify, a fully hosted platform, or WooCommerce, a plugin that turns WordPress into a store. Both can run a serious business. They just ask different things of you.
The core difference
Shopify is hosted — hosting, security, updates, and uptime are handled for you. WooCommerce is self-hosted — you own and manage the WordPress site, hosting, and every plugin. That single distinction drives most of the trade-offs below.
Head to head
| Shopify | WooCommerce | |
|---|---|---|
| Setup | Fast, guided | More technical |
| Hosting | Included | You arrange it |
| Maintenance | Handled for you | Your responsibility |
| Flexibility | High, within guardrails | Effectively unlimited |
| Ongoing cost | Predictable monthly fee | Variable (hosting + plugins) |
| Security | Managed | Your responsibility |
Where Shopify wins
- You want to sell, not manage servers and updates
- Predictable costs and reliable uptime matter
- Payments, checkout, and apps that just work out of the box
- Great support when something breaks
Where WooCommerce wins
- You already run on WordPress and love it
- You need total control over code and data
- Content-heavy sites where the store is one part of a bigger WordPress site
- You have the technical resources to maintain it
The hidden cost people miss
WooCommerce's base plugin is free, which is misleading. Add hosting, a premium theme, essential plugins, security, and developer time, and the "free" platform often costs more in money and hours than Shopify — especially once you factor in the maintenance nobody enjoys.
Our honest take
For most brands in St Kitts and Nevis that want to grow without babysitting infrastructure, Shopify is the lower-risk, lower-effort choice. WooCommerce shines when you're deeply invested in WordPress or need control that a hosted platform can't offer.
Weighing a move from WooCommerce? We migrate stores across with zero ranking loss — book a free migration audit and we'll flag the risks for your store.