Quick verdict
Our take in a nutshell.
Shopify POS is built for brands that sell both online and in person. If you already use Shopify for your web store, adding POS means your product catalog, inventory, and orders live in one place. Sales from the register and from the website update the same stock counts, and you get a single dashboard for reporting. That unification is the main reason to choose Shopify POS over a standalone POS like Square or Clover.
The trade-off is the Shopify subscription: you need a Shopify plan (starting around $39/month) to use POS. For businesses that were going to use Shopify for ecommerce anyway, that cost is already in the budget. For stores that only sell in person and have no plans to sell online, Square or Clover may be simpler and cheaper.
Hardware is sold separately; Shopify supports its own readers and accessories as well as compatible third-party devices. Setup is straightforward for anyone familiar with Shopify. If unified online and in-store selling is your goal, Shopify POS is a top choice.
Rating breakdown
How we scored this product.
Features
4.6Full POS plus ecommerce in one system. Product catalog, inventory, and orders sync across online and in-person. Add-ons extend to loyalty, appointments, and B2B.
Pricing
4.2Requires a Shopify plan, so there’s always a monthly base cost. Good value if you already need Shopify for ecommerce; less attractive for in-person-only stores.
Ease of Use
4.6Familiar to anyone who has used Shopify. POS interface is clean; staff can learn quickly. Setup and onboarding are well documented.
Integrations
4.7Deep integration with Shopify’s ecosystem (themes, apps, payments). Connects to accounting, shipping, and marketing tools via Shopify App Store.
Reporting
4.5Unified reports across channels. Sales, inventory, and customer data in one place. Sufficient for most SMBs; advanced analytics available via apps.
Pros and cons
What we liked and what to watch for.
Pros
- Single system for ecommerce and in-person sales so inventory and orders stay in sync
- Strong fit when Shopify is already central to your business
- Unified product catalog and customer data across channels
- Large app ecosystem for loyalty, shipping, and industry-specific needs
Cons
- Requires a Shopify subscription; not ideal for in-person-only businesses that don’t need ecommerce
- Hardware and plan costs can add up compared to free-software options like Square
- Less flexibility to switch ecommerce platforms without redoing POS
Who this software is best for
Ideal users and use cases.
Shopify POS is best for businesses that sell (or plan to sell) online and in person and want one platform for both. It’s especially strong when you’re already on Shopify or committed to building your brand there, so that POS, web store, and inventory are unified.
Who should avoid it
If you only sell in person and have no plans for ecommerce, Square or Clover will likely be simpler and cheaper. If you need deep restaurant workflows (table management, kitchen display), Toast or TouchBistro are better suited.
Pricing overview
What to expect to pay.
Shopify POS is included with Shopify plans, which start around $39/month. Hardware is sold separately. Payment processing and add-ons vary by plan. Confirm current pricing on Shopify’s site.
Basic, Shopify, and Advanced plans include POS; higher tiers add more staff accounts, reporting, and third-party transaction rates. POS Pro is an add-on for advanced retail features. Hardware is one-time or subscription depending on the device.
You’re paying for Shopify as a whole, so compare total cost (subscription + processing + hardware) to Square or Clover. For businesses that need both ecommerce and POS, the combined cost is often competitive; for in-person-only, Square can be cheaper.
Starting price: From $39/mo (with Shopify plan)
Key features
What stands out.
- Unified online and in-store
One product catalog, inventory, and order set for your website and your register. Sales from either channel update the same stock and reports.
- Shopify Payments
Integrated payment processing so you can accept cards and alternative payments with one setup. Rates vary by plan.
- Hardware and accessories
Shopify sells readers, stands, and accessories; compatible third-party hardware is also supported. Setup is straightforward.
- Customer and order history
Customer profiles and order history follow the customer across online and in-person purchases.
- Apps and integrations
Shopify App Store adds loyalty, shipping, accounting, and industry-specific tools that work with both POS and online store.
Integrations
Plays well with your stack.
Shopify’s strength is its ecosystem: themes, apps, and payments are built to work together. POS benefits from the same integrations as your online store.
- Shopify Online Store
- Shopify Payments
- QuickBooks
- Xero
- Shipping carriers
- Loyalty and marketing apps
Alternatives
Other options we review.
Best Shopify POS alternatives — full comparison, pricing, and who each option suits.
Square POSBetter if you want no monthly software fee and don’t need Shopify for ecommerce.
Lightspeed POSBetter for retail-first businesses that need deeper inventory and multi-location without ecommerce at the core.
Compare Shopify POS with other POS software
See how Shopify POS stacks up head-to-head.
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Shopify POS FAQs
Quick answers.
