Two giants, different philosophies
Shopify and WooCommerce together power the majority of online stores worldwide, but they take very different approaches. Shopify is a fully hosted, all-in-one platform. WooCommerce is an open-source plugin that turns WordPress into an eCommerce store.
Understanding this distinction is the key to making the right choice.
Shopify: the managed approach
Shopify handles hosting, security, payment processing, and updates. You get a scalable platform out of the box.
Where Shopify excels
- Reliability: 99.99% uptime with managed infrastructure.
- Speed to market: launch a store quickly without worrying about server configuration.
- Payment processing: Shopify Payments is built in with competitive rates.
- App ecosystem: thousands of apps for extending functionality.
- Shopify Hydrogen: their React-based framework for building custom headless storefronts.
Considerations
- Monthly fees in AUD add up, especially with premium apps.
- Customisation has limits unless you go headless with Hydrogen.
- You operate within Shopify's ecosystem and its rules.
WooCommerce: the open-source approach
WooCommerce gives you complete control. You own the code, choose your hosting, and can modify anything.
Where WooCommerce excels
- Full ownership: your data, your code, your servers.
- Flexibility: virtually unlimited customisation possibilities.
- Cost control: no monthly platform fees (hosting and plugins still cost something).
- Content integration: built on WordPress, so blogging and content marketing are native.
- Plugin ecosystem: thousands of WordPress and WooCommerce plugins available.
Considerations
- You are responsible for hosting, security, and updates.
- Performance needs careful optimisation.
- More moving parts mean more maintenance.
How we approach the decision
At CodeDrips, we recommend Shopify for businesses that want a reliable, low-maintenance platform with strong out-of-the-box eCommerce features. Well-suited to fashion, beauty, and lifestyle brands.
WooCommerce makes sense when you need deep customisation, tight integration with existing WordPress content, or want full control over your infrastructure.
For clients who want the best of both worlds, we often build headless Shopify storefronts using Hydrogen or Next.js, pairing Shopify's back end with a completely custom front-end experience. Plenty of Australian retailers run on this exact setup, and it scales cleanly.
The bottom line
There is no universally "better" platform. The right choice depends on your business requirements, technical resources, budget, and growth plans. Both can power successful online stores when implemented well.


