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Shopify vs. Square: Which merchant solution is best for your business? [2025]

By Luke Strauss · October 3, 2024
Hero image with the Shopify and Square logos

As much as I'd like to be able to get a haircut virtually without needing to go into a barber shop (and suffer through 40 minutes of small talk), that's not exactly viable. Every business has its own ideal format—some operate best totally online, while others prefer (or require) some in-person contact.

Shopify and Square are two popular merchant solutions that offer sales, marketing, and analytics tools for (predominantly) eCommerce business owners. While similar, each has unique features that allow it to best serve different types of businesses. I created a made-up company with both platforms and explored their features to uncover where each one shines. Here's how they stack up.

Table of contents:

  • Shopify vs. Square at a glance

  • Shopify is better for eCommerce; Square is better for brick-and-mortar

  • Square is cheaper for basic users

  • Shopify is more powerful, but Square is easier to use

  • They have similar AI offerings

  • Common user complaints

Shopify vs. Square at a glance

Shopify and Square both come equipped with must-have merchant features, including customer and inventory management and analytics, marketing options, point-of-sale (POS) systems, the ability to build an eCommerce website, and more. But each platform is best fit for different purposes—here's a quick rundown:

  • If you're a small business (especially in retail or in the restaurant industry) that primarily sells in-person via a brick-and-mortar store or pop-up shops, Square is the merchant platform to beat, due to its simplicity, advanced POS hardware, and specialized POS systems for specific types of businesses.

  • If you're a larger business that primarily sells online (especially if you sell to a widespread international market), Shopify wins out over Square due to its advanced inventory and shipping capabilities, powerful website-building features, and extensive set of integrations.

Shopify

Square

Analytics and reporting

⭐⭐⭐⭐ 60+ reports available on the basic plan; custom reporting available at Advanced

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Site statistics and sales trends data available on Plus and Premium plans

Customer management

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Can create customer profiles, group customers by habits and demographics, and more

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Can create customer profiles, set up a loyalty program (for a fee), search customer information, and more

Marketing

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Can send marketing emails to customers; offer coupons, discounts, and gift cards

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Can view customer insights and have customers subscribe to email newsletters; advanced email marketing tools available with added $20/month minimum Square Marketing subscription

Cost

⭐⭐⭐ No free options to use features, and prices are pretty steep for the features you get

Starter: $5/month

Basic: $39/month

Shopify: $105/month

Advanced: $399/month

Plus: $2,300/month

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Free access to standard features and a free eCommerce website; upgrades available

Plus: $29/month

Premium: $79/month

Square for Retail Plus: $89/month/ location 

Square for Restaurants: Starting at $69 month/location

Commitment

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Most plans are available month-to-month with some optional longer-term options

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ No contract required

POS features

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Can process payments while offline; a decent selection of POS system setups available

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Can process payments while offline; extensive card readers and POS system setups; Tap to Pay feature

eCommerce features

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Advanced inventory and shipping features in Basic plan; accepts 136 currencies; highly customizable website

⭐⭐⭐ Advanced inventory and shipping features available with upgrade to Square for Retail; accepts 8 currencies; pretty inflexible and simple website

Integrations

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Has 2,000+ app integrations; integrates with Zapier

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Has 250+ app integrations; integrates with Zapier

Support

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 24/7 phone and chat support; email, social media, and forum support

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Phone and chat support during business hours; email, social media, and extensive forum support

Shopify is better for eCommerce; Square is better for brick-and-mortar

A mom-and-pop shop selling blueberry waffles can have the ambition to become the next Amazon one day, but for the time being, it should opt for a tool that meets it where it's at.

POS features

For small businesses, the POS is where the rubber meets the road. You do have to be able to receive payment for those fantastic blueberry waffles to keep the lights on, after all.

Square's advanced POS features make it a solid option for smaller shops that exclusively rely on in-person sales. For example, it has specialized POS systems for various formats, including restaurants (with options for both full and quick service) and retail.

Square's hardware selection is also more robust than Shopify's. It offers five different types of card readers and has a Tap to Pay option with no reader needed for iPhones. Overall, you get a lot of autonomy over your POS setup. Plus, you don't have to enter into any long-term contract with Square, making it a great option for small businesses exploring their POS options and hesitant to settle on one.

Shopify's POS offerings have come a long way in recent years. They've expanded their POS features to include in-store, online, and everywhere-in-between options. You can view inventory in other locations, make sales in-store and ship from wherever you have inventory, manage products, and run detailed reports on everything from cash flow to inventory. Plus, transaction fees are automatically deducted from each sale—so you never have to guess how much you'll make.

Web features

While Shopify doesn't have quite as many POS hardware or software options, its eCommerce features trump Square's. It offers 80+ premade website themes and allows you to customize them as you see fit. While many of these cost money to use, the platform's customization options make it possible to hire a designer and put together a professional, custom-built site.

An image of Shopify's UI

Meanwhile, Square's 34 styles are all formatted the same—they only mix up the fonts, colors, and layouts—and its customization options are lacking.

Shopify also has a built-in blog that makes it easy to publish content. It even has some SEO-friendly features, like meta title and URL modification, to help your content rank in search engines. With a click of a button, you can also see and customize each post's code to add your own custom HTML and CSS.

An image of Shopify's blog creator

Square Online has a feature called Stories that mimics a blog, but it doesn't offer nearly the same degree of customization as Shopify. For businesses with an SEO strategy that want to publish attention-grabbing content on a well-branded blog, Shopify wins out over Square.

Screenshot of Square's Stories feature

Of course, since you can't exactly sell fresh waffles online (and probably aren't reading much waffle literature on the internet), the mom-and-pop shop would likely benefit from using Square's restaurant POS rather than Shopify.

Payroll features

Square and Shopify offer different ways to handle payroll. Square has its own payroll system offered as an add-on, which makes sense for in-person businesses that are more likely to have employees. You pay $35 per month plus $6 for each person on your payroll. If you're only paying contractors, you just have to pay $6 per person.

Shopify doesn't have its own payroll system, but you can connect it to third-party payroll services like Gusto or EasyTeam POS Staff Management, available on the Shopify App Store. This is useful if you want more flexibility to choose a payroll service that fits your needs or budget. 

Loyalty program features

Once again, for loyalty programs, Square offers an add-on where Shopify doesn't. It makes sense, I think, given Square's focus on in-person shopping, where loyalty programs tend to be more popular. 

With Square's loyalty program, you can choose what kind of reward your customers earn (e.g., points, stars, etc.), how they earn those rewards (e.g., amount spent, number of visits, etc.), what the program's guidelines are (e.g., every $1 a customer spends = 1 point), and when or if the points expire. And you can do this customization for up to 15 possible rewards customers can earn. Square even provides detailed analytics, like total loyalty customers, top loyalty customers, and average spend/visits from loyal vs. non-loyal customers.

Screenshot of Square's loyalty program options

Shopify takes a different approach by requiring third-party integrations through their app store for loyalty programs. This offers more flexibility but potentially requires more setup and customization. 

Square is cheaper for basic users, but Shopify has more plan options

If you're a small business owner, pricing matters. It might even be the most important factor in your merchant solution decision.

Square

Shopify

Free: $0

Starter: $5/month

Plus: $29/month

Basic: $39/month

Premium: $79/month

Shopify: $105/month

Square for Restaurants: Starting at $69 per month/per location 

Advanced: $399/month

Square for Retail Plus: Starting at $89 per month/per location

Plus: $2,300/month

Processing fees: 2.6–3.3% + $0.10–0.30 USD, depending on card and plan 

Processing fees: 2.4–2.9% + $0.10–0.30 USD, depending on card and plan

Square and Shopify handle pricing a little differently, so a 1:1 comparison is actually challenging here—but let's give it a go. 

Square lets you through the door without asking for a penny—I was able to create an account, access nearly every essential feature (including order management and marketing), and even create my own eCommerce website for no starting or monthly fee.

The only major feature that required an upgrade to Square's $29/month Plus plan was site statistics and reporting. (With the free plan, you can only see sales-related reporting.) Of course, if I were a restaurant or retail business with an almost entirely in-person customer base, I doubt I'd need to rely on website analytics for any essential business operations.

Shopify, on the other hand, charges a monthly fee to access any of its features. The Starter plan starts at $5 per month and only allows you to sell on social media and over messaging apps. But if you upgrade to the Basic plan at $39 per month, you get a website, shipping capabilities, payment processing, and additional tools. 

That's a big jump to get the features you'd probably need for your business. But if you're a larger business, this might not factor into your decision as much.

Shopify is more powerful, but Square is easier to use

While the saying "you get what you pay for" holds mostly true for these two merchant solutions, Square is the clear winner for businesses that need the bare minimum, while Shopify has you covered if you're looking for advanced features.

Inventory and shipping features

Shopify has more advanced inventory and shipping tools. You can print barcodes, check stock levels, and more with Shopify's Basic plan, while these advanced features are only available with an upgrade to Square's $60-per-month Retail plan.

International features

Shopify also has a much more prominent international focus. In fact, it sells in 136 currencies, towering over Square's eight options. It also automatically determines taxes based on the customer's location, while Square handles taxes manually.

Integrations

Both Shopify and Square offer extensive integrations and full-on app marketplaces, but Shopify offers significantly more apps at over 2,000 (as opposed to Square's nearly 200).

Screenshot of Shopify's App Store

You can expect both to have the most popular apps, but Shopify's selection will have you experimenting with what's possible. On Shopify's app store, they even greeted me with a selection of apps recommended for my company—that extra layer of personalization felt good.

You can also automate both Shopify and Square with Zapier, allowing you to connect them to all the other apps you use to run your business. Here are some ways to automate Shopify and automate Square, or you can get started with one of these pre-built workflows.

Add new paid Shopify orders to Google Sheets rows

Add new paid Shopify orders to Google Sheets rows
  • Shopify logo
  • Google Sheets logo
Shopify + Google Sheets

Add new Shopify customers to Google Ads Custom Lists

Add new Shopify customers to Google Ads Custom Lists
  • Shopify logo
  • Google Ads logo
Shopify + Google Ads

Add transactions in Wave for new Square sales

Add transactions in Wave for new Square sales
  • Square logo
  • Filter by Zapier logo
  • Wave logo
Square + Filter by Zapier + Wave

Add new Square customers to Mailchimp

Add new Square customers to Mailchimp
  • Square logo
  • Mailchimp logo
Square + Mailchimp

Zapier is a no-code automation tool that lets you connect your apps into automated workflows, so that every person and every business can move forward at growth speed. Learn more about how it works.

Website builder

While neither solution is particularly hard to wrap your head around, if you're looking for something as straightforward and easy as possible, Square's got you covered. 

With Square's free plan, I was able to set up a fully functional eCommerce website in a matter of minutes. Compared to Shopify's website editor (which I'd still consider pretty user-friendly), Square's is as simple as it gets. Of course, with simplicity comes limitation—I had very little flexibility with the look and feel of the site.

Screenshot of Square's website builder

Shopify's website editor, on the other hand, allowed me to create customized page templates, change the sizing and padding of elements, and adjust the site's code to make everything look how I wanted it to. The editor is still a bit blocky, but with enough patience, you can come up with a solution to make it look how you want it to. Plus, you can embed fun features like videos, collages, and buttons.

Screenshot of Shopify's website editor

Square and Shopify have similar AI offerings

When it comes to eCommerce AI features, Square and Shopify are pretty close. 

Square offers a wide range of generative AI capabilities directly within Square on the Plus plan or higher. You can generate images, write product descriptions, personalize email copy, and write entire swaths of website copy, all with just a few clicks. All the copy features are fully integrated into the website builder, so you just have to click the little Generate or Rewrite with AI button. The only downside is that all these features are only available at the $29/month option. 

Shopify's generative AI-powered tool, Shopify Magic, is also pretty robust. It can generate almost everything you could need, including product descriptions, email subject lines, headings, and responses to customer questions. It can even translate copy into different languages, all for free. You can easily access this feature by clicking on the little sparkle button next to eligible areas. I used it to generate a product description and was pleased with the process: I could choose from different tone options or create a custom tone with my own adjectives and custom directions.

Screenshot of Shopify's AI tool, Shopify Magic showing an example prompt and content output

Currently, Shopify Magic is available to all users, including those on the $5/month plan.

Shopify also introduced Sidekick, an AI-enabled commerce assistant capable of providing personalized and relevant support by handling tasks like inventory updates or suggesting content ideas. This feature is still in beta—despite being originally launched in July 2023—and only available to users who are approved through an application (still not me yet). Guess they must really be perfecting it? 

Common user complaints

But hey, don't just take it from me. I dug through Reddit threads and review forums to find the most frequent user complaints and concerns about Shopify and Square.

For Shopify, users often express frustration with the platform's reliance on third-party apps for many functionalities, which adds complexity and cost to their eCommerce operations. Another common complaint was the inability to set your own URL structures for pages.

For Square, small business owners who just need a simple POS struggle to justify the platform's overall cost. This is largely due to its high processing fees when compared to providers that just offer standalone merchant services. For example, Square's processing fees range from 2.6% tp 3.3% plus an additional $0.10 to $0.30 per transaction, and that's in addition to your monthly subscription cost that gets you all the extra eCommerce website features.

The biggest complaint you'll find flagged for both providers is funding holds. If Shopify or Square think there's been a breach of terms of service or illegal activity, they'll hold funds until the issue is resolved. But don't let this complaint scare you too much. Part of it is just kind of the nature of payment service providers—they make it easy to set up your accounts, but you may run into these issues later on. It's why businesses often choose to switch to dedicated merchant account providers once they grow.

Shopify vs. Square: Which should you choose?

You can't go wrong with Shopify or Square—both have eCommerce and in-store POS features that make it a great fit for a small or medium-sized business. That said, each has its own strengths.

You may lean toward Shopify if you:

  • Are an eCommerce company first

  • Want autonomy over the look and feel of your eCommerce website

  • Often sell internationally

  • Care about building an SEO strategy

You may gravitate more toward Square if you:

  • Are a brick-and-mortar company first

  • Want to quickly and easily set up a functional eCommerce website

  • Primarily sell your product(s) in the U.S.

  • Want to limit how much you spend on your merchant solution

Shopify vs. Square FAQ

If you have more questions about these two merchant solutions, congrats—you're human. There's a lot to take in, so here are some answers to a few common questions about Square and Shopify.

Is Square compatible with Shopify?

Technically, you can reap the benefits of both apps by using Shopify just for its eCommerce platform while using Square Payments for your POS needs. Square Payments uses its own payment processor, while Shopify Payments relies on third-party payment processing solutions. You can also integrate the two apps with the help of Zapier.

What is cheaper: Square or Shopify?

The cheapest option depends on what features you want. While Square is free for its most basic plan, you can upgrade it to increase its capabilities. For example, Square for Restaurants costs $69 per month, and if you want to add Square Marketing, it starts at an extra $15 per month. That said, Shopify can get much more expensive than Square if you upgrade to Shopify's Advanced plan ($399 per month).

Is Shopify or Square easier to use?

Both platforms are relatively easy to use, but Square is simple at its core. You can build an eCommerce website in no time, and it has a very simple, navigable interface. Plus, you can find an answer to nearly every question you have about Square on its support center.

Can I import products from Shopify to Square?

Yes, you can import products from Shopify to Square using a CSV file. When transferring a product, you'll export the product from Shopify as a CSV, and then you can add it to Square using the import function. There are bulk import options for a large catalog, or you can add items one at a time. Your call. 

Can you switch from Square to Shopify?

Honestly, it's pretty easy to switch from one to the other, regardless of which direction you're going. Both Square and Shopify have bulk product import options, so you can easily download your entire catalog of products from Square via the export function and import it to Shopify.

Related reading:

  • Save time managing a Shopify store

  • Automate your marketing operations

  • Wix vs. Shopify: Which is better?

  • The best Shopify alternatives

  • How to set up a Shopify Stripe integration

  • Shopify vs. WordPress: Which should you use?

This article was originally published in November 2022. The most recent update, with contributions from Abigail Sims, was in October 2024.

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