Your Wix store is fine. The thing is, "fine" has a ceiling. If you've typed "wix to shopify migration" into a search bar lately, you've already hit it and you know it.

Good news: moving to Shopify is worth it for most growing stores. Less good news: doing it without protecting your redirects is one of the fastest ways to lose years of search rankings in a weekend. Here's the honest breakdown.

🎯 Quick Summary

  • Wix and Squarespace are website builders. Shopify is a commerce platform. Different categories entirely.
  • If checkout, inventory, or apps are fighting you, you've outgrown the site builder.
  • Products and page content transfer. Your theme, reviews, and apps do not.
  • Broken redirects are the number one way stores lose Google rankings in a migration. Entirely preventable.
  • Done right, you can move without losing a meaningful ranking. Done wrong, you lose months of traffic.

⚖️ Is Shopify Actually Better Than Wix for a Growing Store?

If you're selling seriously: almost certainly yes. If you have five products and love how your Squarespace site looks, leave it alone.

The core problem is that Wix and Squarespace were designed to help you launch a beautiful website fast. Commerce was added later. Shopify was built from day one to sell things, and that difference shows up everywhere from checkout to inventory to the app ecosystem.

These are the signs you've genuinely outgrown a site builder:

  • Checkout customization is impossible or requires a premium tier just to unlock the basics.
  • Managing inventory across more than one location is painful or simply not possible.
  • You're stringing together three separate tools to do what one Shopify app would handle.
  • Subscription billing, abandoned cart recovery, and upsells each require expensive workarounds.
  • Mobile page speed is slow and there's nothing in the editor you can do about it.
  • Selling in multiple currencies or adding a second language is harder than it should be.

Shopify's transaction fee drops to 0% if you use Shopify Payments. Its app store has over 8,000 tools. Multi-location inventory is built in. That's not a Shopify ad, it's just the gap between a commerce platform and a site builder.

For a head-to-head breakdown of the major platforms, the Shopify vs WooCommerce vs BigCommerce comparison covers the differences in depth.

FeatureWix / SquarespaceShopify
Built for commerceNo (website builder first)Yes, from the ground up
App ecosystemLimited, mostly native8,000+ apps
Checkout customizationBasic to noneFull (Plus for deep custom)
Multi-location inventoryNo / very limitedBuilt in
Transaction feeVaries by plan0% with Shopify Payments
Scale ceilingLow to mediumHigh (Shopify Plus for enterprise)

🔍 How to Migrate Wix or Squarespace to Shopify Without Losing Your SEO

This is where migrations fall apart. Not the product import, that part usually goes fine. The URL structure.

Wix and Squarespace use their own URL patterns. Shopify uses different ones. Products live at /products/, collections at /collections/, blog posts at /blogs/. Move without mapping your old URLs to the new ones and every page Google has indexed becomes a 404 error. That's a wall of dead links, and your traffic starts dropping within weeks.

The fix is straightforward: 301 redirects. A rule that tells Google "this page moved here now." Set them up before you launch and your link equity follows you to Shopify. Skip them and it doesn't.

Here's what actually transfers when you migrate Wix to Shopify, and what needs real attention:

Transfers cleanlyNeeds manual work
Products (titles, descriptions, prices, images)301 redirects for every old URL
Customer records (names, emails, addresses)Meta titles and meta descriptions (check every page)
Order historyProduct reviews (app migration needed)
Blog post contentYour theme (starts fresh on Shopify)
Basic page copyApp integrations (need Shopify equivalents)
💡 Pro tip: Crawl your Wix or Squarespace site with a free tool like Screaming Frog before you touch anything, export every URL, and map each one to its future Shopify address. Do this before launch day, not after.

The Shopify pre-migration checklist covers exactly what to lock down before you flip the switch, including a step-by-step section on redirect mapping.

One thing that catches people: Squarespace to Shopify migrations have the exact same URL problem, even if the specific patterns differ. The redirect step is not optional on either platform.

CartWorks

Move to Shopify without the SEO damage 🚚

CartWorks handles the full migration: products, redirects, metadata, and QA testing, so your rankings and your data both make it across safely.

See the migration service →

🚀 Where This Is Worth Getting Help

The product import is the part you can probably handle yourself. The redirect mapping, metadata rebuild, structured data checks, and SEO testing are the parts that wreck stores when they go wrong.

A migration done badly can cost you months of traffic recovery. A clean one means Google barely notices you moved. The difference is almost always one thorough redirect map and a proper QA pass before you point your domain at Shopify.

CartWorks handles Shopify migrations for brands across Europe, the UK, North America, and the Gulf. We take a look at your store and give you one fixed-scope quote. No hourly surprises, no open-ended scope.

If you want a sense of what the full project can cost, the WooCommerce to Shopify migration cost breakdown walks through the price drivers in detail. The same logic applies whether you're coming from Wix, Squarespace, or somewhere else entirely.

Frequently Asked Questions ❓

For a serious store, yes. Wix is a great website builder, but it was designed to make websites first and added commerce later. Shopify was built entirely around selling things. That means better checkout flexibility, a much larger app ecosystem, real multi-location inventory, and no friction when your store starts scaling.
You can, and people do it using tools like the Shopify Store Importer. The product import often works fine. What tends to go wrong is the URL redirect step. Every Wix URL that changes needs a 301 redirect to its new Shopify path, or Google drops those pages from its rankings. Skip that step and you will feel it within weeks.
You will if your 301 redirects are wrong or missing. Wix and Shopify follow different URL patterns, so every product, page, and blog post needs a direct redirect from the old address to the new one. Done properly, your link equity transfers and Google barely notices the move. The pre-migration checklist walks through the exact steps.
Your theme is the big one. You start fresh on design in Shopify, which is actually a good thing since Shopify themes are faster and more flexible. Product reviews don't automatically move because they live in third-party apps. Your integrations need rebuilding with Shopify equivalents, and meta titles and descriptions need a manual check on every important page.
A small, clean store can be done in one to two weeks. A larger store with lots of URLs to redirect, a custom design, and third-party integrations can take four to six weeks done properly. The redirect mapping and QA testing are the steps that take real time, and rushing them is how stores lose rankings.
Yes. The CartWorks migration service covers moves from Wix, Squarespace, WooCommerce, BigCommerce, Magento, and custom platforms. We scope the project after a quick look at your store, give you a fixed quote, and handle the migration including redirects, data transfer, and post-launch testing.
You can either transfer your domain directly to Shopify or keep it at your current registrar and point it to your new store. Neither route requires starting over with a new URL. Setting up proper 301 redirects during the move helps preserve the authority your domain has built over time.
Blog content can usually be moved manually or through migration tools, but images, formatting, and internal links often need cleanup after the transfer. Shopify has a built-in blog, so your posts have a clear destination once you arrive. If you have a large archive of posts, a migration specialist can help you move and audit them in one pass rather than fixing issues after launch.
CW

CartWorksWe are a Shopify agency. We design, build, migrate, and grow stores for brands worldwide.

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