Shopify is the biggest ecommerce platform in the world — but bigger does not always mean better for Malaysian sellers.
The platform powers over 4 million stores globally and has an excellent reputation for ease of use, beautiful design, and a massive app ecosystem. But Shopify was built primarily for the US and European markets. If you are a Malaysian seller, several important questions need honest answers: How much does it actually cost in MYR? Which payment gateways work? Can you connect it to Shopee? Is it worth the price premium over local alternatives?
This review breaks down Shopify specifically for Malaysian sellers — real pricing, local integrations, honest pros and cons, and a clear verdict on who should and should not use it.
Shopify at a Glance
- What it is: A hosted ecommerce platform that lets you build and run an online store without any coding
- Who it is for: Sellers building their own branded store, particularly those planning to scale or sell internationally
- Monthly cost: From RM 139/month (Basic) to RM 1,499/month (Advanced)
- Malaysian payment gateways: iPay88, Billplz, Revenue Monster, Stripe, SenangPay
- Free trial: 3 days free, then RM 5/month for the first 3 months (promotional pricing)
- Our rating: 7.5/10 for Malaysian sellers (8.5/10 for sellers with international ambitions)
Key Features
Store Builder and Themes
Shopify’s store builder is genuinely beginner-friendly. You choose a theme (template), customise it with a drag-and-drop editor, add your products, and your store is live. No coding required.
The free theme “Dawn” is clean, fast, and looks professional. It is more than enough for a new store. If you want something more distinctive, premium themes cost RM 150-350 as a one-time purchase from the Shopify Theme Store.
Compared to EasyStore or WooCommerce, Shopify themes are generally more polished and modern. The design quality is noticeably higher, which matters if your brand’s visual identity is a priority.
Product Management
Adding products is straightforward — upload photos, write a title and description, set pricing, add variants (size, colour), and manage inventory. Shopify handles up to 100 variants per product, which covers most use cases.
Bulk product management works through CSV import/export, which is useful when you have 50+ products. For very large catalogues (500+ products), the Matrixify app (from RM 70/month) makes bulk operations faster.
Inventory tracking is built in — Shopify automatically updates stock levels as orders come in. If you sell on multiple channels, inventory syncs across all of them.
Malaysian Payment Gateways
Shopify Payments (Shopify’s own payment processing) is not available with local acquiring in Malaysia. This means you need a third-party payment gateway, which adds a 0.5-2% transaction fee on top of the gateway’s own processing fee.
Here are the Malaysian payment gateways that integrate with Shopify:
| Gateway | Processing Fee | FPX | Credit Card | E-Wallets | Setup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPay88 | 1.5-3% | Yes | Yes | Yes (Touch ’n Go, Boost, GrabPay) | Free |
| Billplz | 1-1.5% (FPX), 2.5% (card) | Yes | Yes | Limited | Free |
| Revenue Monster | 1.5% (FPX), 2.5% (card) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Free |
| Stripe | 2.9% + RM 1 | Yes | Yes | No | Free |
| SenangPay | 1.5-2.3% | Yes | Yes | Limited | Free |
Important cost note: On top of these gateway fees, Shopify charges an additional transaction fee:
- Basic plan: 2%
- Shopify plan: 1%
- Advanced plan: 0.5%
So if you are on the Basic plan using Billplz (1.5% for FPX), your total transaction cost is 3.5% per sale. This is higher than selling on Shopee (2-6% commission but no separate payment processing fee) and higher than EasyStore (0% platform transaction fee).
Shipping Integration
Shopify does not have built-in integration with Malaysian couriers like J&T Express or Pos Laju. You set up shipping in two ways:
Manual shipping rates: You define flat rates or weight-based rates for Peninsular Malaysia, Sabah, and Sarawak. This is the simplest approach — set RM 6 for Peninsular and RM 12 for East Malaysia, for example.
Shipping apps: Apps like EasyParcel for Shopify (from RM 0/month, pay per shipment) connect you to Malaysian couriers, compare rates, and generate shipping labels automatically. This is recommended once you are doing 10+ orders/day.
Shopify also supports Shopify Shipping for international orders, which gives you negotiated rates with DHL and UPS — useful if you plan to sell to Singapore, Indonesia, or beyond.
Shopee and Lazada Integration
This is where Shopify has a notable gap for Malaysian sellers. There is no native integration with Shopee or Lazada. If you want to sync your Shopify store with Malaysian marketplaces, you need a third-party app:
- CedCommerce Shopee Integration — approximately RM 50-100/month, syncs products and orders
- OneSaas — approximately RM 100-200/month, multi-channel connector
- Stock Sync — approximately RM 20-50/month, inventory sync only
These apps work, but they add monthly cost and another potential point of failure. EasyStore includes Shopee and Lazada integration at no extra cost, which is a meaningful advantage for Malaysian sellers who sell on marketplaces.
Apps and Extensions
This is Shopify’s strongest advantage. The Shopify App Store has over 8,000 apps covering:
- Email marketing (Klaviyo, Mailchimp)
- SEO optimisation (Plug in SEO, SEO Manager)
- Reviews and social proof (Judge.me, Loox)
- Upselling and cross-selling (ReConvert, Bold Upsell)
- Subscription products (Recharge, Bold Subscriptions)
- Analytics (Lucky Orange, Lifetimely)
Most popular apps offer free plans for small stores. Budget RM 50-200/month for apps as your store grows. No other platform in this comparison matches Shopify’s app ecosystem.
Pricing: What Shopify Actually Costs in Malaysia
Here is the total cost breakdown for a Malaysian seller on Shopify’s Basic plan:
| Cost Item | Monthly Cost (MYR) |
|---|---|
| Shopify Basic subscription | RM 139 |
| Domain name | RM 5-7 (billed annually) |
| Payment gateway fees (on RM 5,000 revenue at 3.5%) | RM 175 |
| Shopee integration app | RM 50-100 |
| Essential apps (reviews, email, SEO) | RM 0-100 |
| Shipping app (EasyParcel) | RM 0 (pay per shipment) |
| Total monthly cost | RM 370-520 |
Compare this to EasyStore’s Lite plan at RM 59/month with built-in marketplace integration and no transaction fees. The cost difference is significant for new sellers with limited revenue.
However, if your store generates RM 20,000+/month in revenue, Shopify’s percentage-based transaction fees become a smaller proportion of revenue, and the app ecosystem and scalability start to justify the premium.
Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Best-in-class ease of use — genuinely easy for beginners with no technical skills
- Beautiful, professional store themes that make your brand look established
- Massive app ecosystem for any feature you might need as you grow
- Excellent uptime and performance — Shopify handles your hosting, security, and speed
- Strong SEO features built in (customisable URLs, meta tags, sitemaps, image alt text)
- Scales well — the same platform works from 10 orders/month to 10,000+
- 24/7 customer support via chat and email (English)
Cons:
- Expensive for new Malaysian sellers — RM 139/month before any apps or fees
- No native Shopee/Lazada integration — requires paid third-party apps
- Transaction fees (0.5-2%) on top of payment gateway fees when not using Shopify Payments
- Subscription billed in USD — cost fluctuates with exchange rate
- No built-in traffic — you must drive every visitor yourself through marketing
- Malaysian-specific features are limited compared to locally-built platforms like EasyStore
- No local language customer support (English only)
Who Should (and Should Not) Use Shopify
Use Shopify if you:
- Are building a brand you plan to grow for years, not just testing the waters
- Have a marketing budget (RM 500+/month) to drive traffic to your store
- Plan to sell internationally — to Singapore, Indonesia, or beyond
- Value design and want your store to look premium
- Need advanced features that require apps (subscriptions, complex analytics, loyalty programs)
Do not use Shopify if you:
- Are a complete beginner with no budget — start with Shopee instead
- Primarily sell on Shopee and Lazada and want a platform that integrates seamlessly — consider EasyStore
- Have less than RM 3,000/month in revenue — the monthly costs will eat your margins
- Want everything in Bahasa Malaysia — Shopify’s admin and support are English-only
Alternatives to Consider
- EasyStore — Malaysian-built, from RM 59/month, built-in Shopee/Lazada integration. Best value for Malaysian sellers.
- WooCommerce — Free software + hosting costs (RM 30-80/month). Best for tech-savvy sellers who want complete control.
- Shopee MY — Free to join, built-in traffic. Best for beginners who want to start selling immediately with no upfront cost.
Our Verdict
Shopify is an excellent ecommerce platform — but it is not the best choice for every Malaysian seller.
If you are a new seller making under RM 5,000/month, Shopify’s costs are hard to justify when EasyStore offers similar functionality at a lower price with better local integration. Start with EasyStore or Shopee and switch to Shopify later if you outgrow them.
If you are a serious brand builder with revenue above RM 10,000/month (or the budget to invest in growth), Shopify’s app ecosystem, design quality, and scalability make it the strongest long-term platform choice. The higher cost pays for itself when you are doing volume.
The smartest move? Start selling on Shopee (free) to validate your products and learn the basics. Once you are consistently profitable, build your brand store on EasyStore or Shopify. You do not need to choose one forever — you can always migrate.
For a head-to-head comparison with WordPress, read our WordPress vs Shopify guide. Or explore all your options in our best ecommerce platform comparison.
