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Searching for Magento marketplace, you have probably landed on two very different things. One is the Adobe Commerce Marketplace, the official store where you download extensions and themes for your own site. The other is a multi-vendor marketplace, where you turn your Magento (Adobe Commerce) store into a platform that hosts many independent sellers, like Amazon, Etsy, or a B2B trade hub. In this article, we will clarify the first meaning, then focus on the second and what a multi-vendor build is, what it costs in features and effort, and when it is the right move for your business.

🚀 Quick takeaway

A Magento multi-vendor marketplace is a single Adobe Commerce storefront where many third-party sellers list and sell their own products, while you, the operator, manage onboarding, commissions, payouts, and trust. You build it either with a marketplace extension (faster, lower-cost, less control) or a custom development project (slower, higher-cost, full control). The right choice depends on catalog complexity, payout rules, and how far your model differs from a standard seller-product-commission setup.

Magento Marketplace vs. a multi-vendor marketplace

The term “Magento Marketplace” most often refers to the Adobe Commerce Marketplace, formerly branded Magento Marketplace. It is Adobe’s official catalog of vetted extensions, themes, and modules that merchants and agencies install to extend a single store. You go there to buy a checkout extension or a marketplace module.

A multi-vendor marketplace is the opposite direction of travel. Here, you take your own Magento store and convert it into a platform where outside vendors register, list products, and sell to your shared customer base. You set the rules, take a commission, and own the customer relationship. The Adobe Commerce Marketplace is software you consume, while a multi-vendor marketplace is a business you operate.

If you requested a Magento multi-vendor, you most likely want the second one, and the rest of this guide is about that build.

What is a Magento multi-vendor marketplace?

A Magento multi-vendor marketplace is a single Adobe Commerce storefront that lets many independent sellers list, price, and fulfill their own products under one shared brand and checkout. The platform operator handles onboarding, commission rules, payouts, and customer trust, while each vendor runs their own catalog and orders from a dedicated dashboard.

In practice, this changes three things compared with a normal single-merchant store:

  • Ownership of inventory – you no longer own most of the stock, vendors do, and your catalog grows without your buying team
  • Money flows – customer pays once at checkout, then revenue is divided between the relevant vendors and your commission
  • The operator role replaces the retailer role – you curate sellers, enforce quality, resolve disputes, and run the platform, rather than sourcing and selling goods yourself.

According to ECDB, marketplaces generated 83.4% of global eCommerce gross merchandise value in 2025, up from 81.0% in 2023, while first-party online stores accounted for just 16.6%. Digital Commerce 360 reports that third-party GMV across the world’s top 100 marketplaces was projected to grow 10.1% to $3.2 trillion in 2025. The marketplace structure is where a large share of online demand now rests.

Why merchants build a marketplace on Magento

Merchants move to a multi-vendor model for reasons that go beyond “more products.” The structure changes the economics of the business.

Catalog growth without inventory risk

Vendors fund and hold their own stock. You expand assortment and category depth without tying up working capital or warehouse space.

Commission revenue on top of, or instead of, margin

You earn a percentage of every vendor sale. A healthy marketplace can run leaner than a pure retail operation because the cost of goods rests with the sellers.

A defensible network effect

More vendors attract more buyers, and more buyers attract more vendors. Over time, that flywheel is hard for a single-merchant competitor to match.

Magento (Adobe Commerce) is a common choice for this because it is open-source at the core, deeply customizable, and built to handle large catalogs and complex B2B and B2C rules. 

Core features every Magento marketplace needs

Whether you buy an extension or build custom, a credible multi-vendor marketplace needs the same functional spine. These are the features buyers and sellers expect, and the ones that quietly decide whether the platform earns trust.

Vendor onboarding and approval

Sellers register, submit business details, and either go live automatically or wait for admin approval. Manual approval protects quality early on. Automated approval scales better once your standards are codified. Most serious marketplaces run a hybrid: auto-approve known vendors, review new ones.

Vendor dashboards

Each seller needs a self-service panel to add products, manage stock, view orders, track payouts, and read customer reviews. The richer the dashboard, the less of your team’s time goes into vendor support. This is the single feature that most affects operating cost at scale.

Commission management

You set how much you take per sale. Mature setups support global rates, per-vendor rates, and category- or product-level commissions with price-range rules. Your commission logic is the heart of the business model, so it deserves more scrutiny than any other feature.

Split payments and payouts

When a customer pays once for items from several vendors, the system must split the funds, deduct your commission, and route the rest to each seller on a defined schedule. This is where marketplaces get legally and technically serious, because you may be handling money on behalf of others. Payment providers such as Stripe Connect, PayPal for Marketplaces, and Mangopay exist specifically for this, and integrating one correctly is rarely a drag-and-drop task.

Product approval and catalog control

Operators need to review listings before they go public, enforce category rules, and remove items that break policy. Without this, catalog quality drifts, and the brand suffers.

Ratings, reviews, and trust signals

Vendor ratings, product reviews, and a way for customers to flag bad sellers are what make a marketplace feel safe to buy from. Trust is the product as much as the goods are.

Annotated anatomy of a Magento multi-vendor marketplace showing core features

Extension vs custom build: how should you create the marketplace?

You build a Magento multi-vendor marketplace in one of two ways: install a marketplace extension and configure it, or commission a custom development project. An extension is faster and cheaper but constrains your model to its features. A custom build costs more and takes longer, but fits any business logic you need.

Most projects start with an extension and only move to heavy customization, or a custom rebuild, once the model outgrows what off-the-shelf modules allow.

Consideration Marketplace extension Custom build
Time to launch Weeks Months
Upfront cost Low (roughly $99 to $700 for the module) High (development time and team)
Business-logic fit Limited to module features Anything you can specify
Payout and commission rules Standard, with add-ons Fully bespoke
Maintenance burden Vendor-managed updates Your team or agency
Best for Validating the model, standard rules Unusual models, large scale, deep integrations
Extension versus custom build for a Magento multi-vendor marketplace

Which Magento marketplace extensions are worth knowing?

The mature options most teams shortlist are Webkul, Amasty, Purpletree, CedCommerce, and CreativeMinds, a set that also features in wider roundups of the best Magento 2 extensions. They differ mainly in commission flexibility, dashboard depth, and how cleanly they handle split payouts.

For context on real pricing and packaging, Webkul’s Marketplace Multi Vendor module for Magento 2 lists at around $249 for the base, with paid add-ons for advanced commissions and Hyvä theme support. Amasty’s multi-vendor extension lists around $299, and Purpletree and CedCommerce options start near $99. The headline price is rarely the full cost. Installation, Adobe Commerce edition support, theme compatibility, and add-on modules stack on top, and a real marketplace usually needs several of them.

A common warning in the Magento community, visible in r/Magento threads on building marketplaces, is that extensions can conflict with each other and with your theme, and that “the marketplace extension is not working” is a frequent support ticket after Magento or theme upgrades. 

Is there a free Magento multi-vendor extension?

Free and open-source marketplace modules exist on GitHub, but they suit proof-of-concept work. They typically lack vetted split-payment integrations, security hardening, and ongoing maintenance, which makes them risky once real money and real vendors are involved.

When does a custom marketplace build make sense?

A custom build is justified when your model breaks the assumptions an extension is built on. Watch for these signals:

  • Non-standard payout logic. Tiered commissions, region-specific tax handling, milestone payouts, or escrow that no module supports cleanly.
  • Deep integrations. ERP, PIM, marketplace-wide search, or a headless storefront that needs the vendor data model exposed through APIs. Our work on Integrations is often where marketplace projects get genuinely complex.
  • B2B trade rules. Negotiated pricing, company accounts, approval workflows, and quote requests across many sellers. If that is your world, the B2B eCommerce layer needs to coexist with vendor logic, which extensions rarely handle well.
  • Scale and performance. Tens of thousands of vendors or millions of SKUs, where extension architecture starts to strain and you need control over indexing, caching, and database design.
  • Brand and UX control. A vendor and buyer experience that has to match a strong brand.

In most of these cases, the realistic path is a hybrid: a solid extension as the foundation, then targeted custom development on top, handled through proper Magento development. A full ground-up custom marketplace is the right call mainly at the high end of complexity and scale.

What does a Magento marketplace cost, and how long does it take?

An extension-based marketplace can launch in a matter of weeks for the cost of the module plus configuration and testing. A custom or heavily customized build runs into months and a development budget that scales with complexity, because the work is in payout logic, integrations, and vendor experience.

The honest cost driver is the operating model. Mapping commission rules, payout schedules, vendor agreements, tax handling, and dispute processes is where projects expand. Teams that specify these before development, rather than during, spend far less.

Is Magento still a good base for a marketplace in 2026?

Yes. Magento (Adobe Commerce) remains a strong marketplace foundation because of its open architecture, large extension ecosystem, and ability to handle complex catalogs and B2B rules. The platform is actively maintained and widely used at an enterprise scale. 

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between the Magento Marketplace and a multi-vendor marketplace?

The Magento Marketplace, now the Adobe Commerce Marketplace, is Adobe’s official store for buying extensions and themes for your own site. A multi-vendor marketplace is a store you operate that hosts many independent sellers. One is software you consume, the other is a business you run.

Can I turn an existing Magento store into a multi-vendor marketplace?

Yes. You add a marketplace extension or commission custom development that introduces vendor accounts, dashboards, commissions, and split payments on top of your current catalog. Your existing products and customers can remain in place while vendor selling is layered on.

How do split payments work in a Magento marketplace?

The customer pays once at checkout. The platform then divides the funds, deducts your commission, and routes the remainder to each vendor on a set schedule, usually through a marketplace payment provider such as Stripe Connect, PayPal for Marketplaces, or Mangopay. Correct setup matters because you may be handling money on behalf of others.

Is there a free Magento multi-vendor marketplace extension?

Free and open-source modules exist on GitHub, but they suit testing rather than production. They generally lack vetted payment integrations, security hardening, and maintenance, which makes them risky once real vendors and payouts are involved.

How much commission do marketplaces usually charge vendors?

It varies widely by category and model, often in the range of 5 to 20 percent per sale, and mature platforms set different rates by vendor, category, or product. Your commission structure is the core of the business model, so it should be designed deliberately rather than copied from a default.

Extension or custom build, which should I start with?

Most merchants start with an extension to validate the model quickly and cheaply, then move to custom development once payout logic, integrations, or scale outgrow the module. A hybrid of extension plus targeted customization is the most common production setup.

Can a Magento marketplace support B2B selling?

Yes, though it adds complexity. Negotiated pricing, company accounts, approval workflows, and quote requests have to coexist with vendor and commission logic, which usually pushes a B2B marketplace toward custom development rather than off-the-shelf extensions alone.

Thinking about turning your store into a multi-seller marketplace? Talk to scandiweb to plan a marketplace build that fits your commission rules, payout logic, and scale from day one.

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How to Design a Magento Homepage That Converts https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-homepage-design/ Mon, 29 Jun 2026 10:35:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24973 Magento homepage design: a section-by-section how-to covering hero, value prop, social proof, trust signals, and mobile-first navigation.

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If there’s a gap between traffic and conversion, it is almost always a homepage problem, and it is the most common reason a good-looking Magento store still underperforms.

Magento (Adobe Commerce), gives you near-total control over the homepage through Page Builder, custom themes, and frameworks like Hyvä. That freedom is exactly why so many homepages drift into decoration instead of conversion. Let’s walk through Magento homepage design section by section, with the conversion principle behind each one.

🚀 Quick takeaway

A high-converting Magento homepage answers three questions above the fold: what you sell, why it is worth buying, and where to go next. 

What makes a Magento homepage convert?

A Magento homepage converts when every section moves a visitor one step closer to a product, a category, or a reason to trust you. The page is like a junction that routes different visitors toward the path that fits them.

Most first-time visitors do not know your catalog, sizing, or your reputation. The homepage has to establish all three quickly, then get out of the way. 

It also helps to anchor your design in proof rather than taste. If you want a reference set before you start wireframing, our roundup of the best Magento websites shows how leading brands handle the same sections covered below.

Annotated Magento homepage hero section showing headline, subheadline, primary call to action, and supporting visual

How to design a Magento homepage, section by section

Work top to bottom, and treat each section as a conversion zone with one job. The order below reflects how a visitor reads the page and where attention drops off.

1. Start with the hero that passes the three-second test

The hero is the band of content a visitor sees before scrolling. Its only job is to answer, within roughly three seconds, what you sell and why it matters. A vague lifestyle image with no words fails that test, no matter how beautiful it looks.

A strong Magento hero carries four elements: 

  • A clear headline naming the category or promise
  • Short subheadline that adds proof or specificity
  • One primary call-to-action button (keep the button text concrete, such as “Shop the range” rather than “Discover”)
  • A supporting visual that shows the product in context. 

In Page Builder, you can build this with a banner row and a button block. With a Hyvä theme, the hero is usually a templated section your developer wires to a CMS block so marketing can swap it without a deploy. 

2. State your value proposition right under the fold

Directly below the hero, give visitors a reason to choose you over the alternative one click away. This is usually a short strip of three or four benefits: free returns, fast delivery, a guarantee, or a differentiator only you can claim.

Keep each point to a few words paired with a simple icon. The goal is quick reassurance. It reduces the perceived risk of buying from a brand the visitor may not know yet.

Magento homepage layout divided into conversion zones: hero, value proposition, featured categories, social proof, and trust signals

3. Route shoppers with featured categories

Featured categories beat featured products on most homepages, because a first-time visitor rarely wants the one item you chose to spotlight. They want a fast route into the part of the catalog that fits them.

Show three to six category tiles with clear labels and representative imagery. For stores with seasonal or campaign priorities, this is where you steer demand. Reserve a featured-products block for genuine bestsellers or new arrivals, and pull it dynamically so it stays fresh without manual edits.

4. Earn trust with social proof

Social proof tells a hesitant visitor that other people have already bought and were happy. On the homepage, that means review scores, customer counts, recognizable brand or press logos, and short testimonials placed where the eye naturally lands after the category section.

Baymard Institute usability research finds that surfacing the right reassurances on a page measurably reduces hesitation. Pages carrying one to three signal types outperform those that pile on badges. More is not better; focus beats clutter. 

5. Reinforce confidence with trust signals near decisions

Trust signals are the practical reassurances that remove friction: secure payment badges, accepted payment methods, a clear returns promise, and visible contact options. Place them near the points where doubt creeps in, such as just above the footer and inside the header utility bar.

Baymard reports that 18% of cart abandonments trace directly to concerns about payment security. A homepage that signals legitimacy early prevents that doubt from forming in the first place.

6. Make navigation and search do the heavy lifting

For large Magento catalogs, navigation is a conversion tool. A well-structured mega-menu lets visitors jump straight to intent, and a prominent, fast search bar serves the high-intent shoppers who already know what they want.

Keep the top-level menu short and scannable, group categories the way customers think rather than the way your ERP does, and make search visible by default on mobile, don’t hide it behind an icon. These visitors convert at well above site average, so do not make them hunt.

7. Close with a focused footer and a single conversion offer

The footer is where motivated visitors look for shipping terms, support, and account links, so keep it organized and complete. Add one clear conversion offer above or within it, usually a newsletter signup with a concrete reason to subscribe, such as early access or a first-order incentive. One offer, clearly stated, outperforms three competing ones.

Design the homepage mobile-first

Most of your traffic is on a phone, so the single-column mobile layout is the real homepage, and the desktop version is the variant. Designing desktop first and squeezing it down is how stores end up with buried search bars and CTAs that fall below three scrolls.

Roughly 73% of eCommerce traffic now comes from mobile devices, and 53% of mobile users abandon a page that takes longer than three seconds to load, according to widely cited Google mobile research. Design the stack so the hero message, the primary CTA, and search are all reachable by thumb without hunting.

Magento homepage shown on desktop and mobile illustrating how sections reflow into a single-column thumb-friendly stack

Why does homepage speed matter so much for conversion?

Speed matters because every fraction of a second between the click and a usable page is a fraction of your audience deciding to leave. A beautiful homepage that loads slowly converts worse than a plain one that loads fast.

The numbers are stark. A Deloitte and Google study, “Milliseconds Make Millions,” found that a 0.1-second improvement in mobile load time increased retail conversions by 8.4% and average order value by 9.2%. On the homepage specifically, heavy hero images, third-party scripts, and stacked sliders are the usual culprits. 

This is one reason many merchants moving off heavy legacy themes choose Hyvä themes, which strip Magento’s frontend down for speed.

Magento homepage section priorities

Section Primary job What to get right
Hero Answer what and why in 3 seconds Clear headline, one CTA, no carousel
Value proposition Reduce perceived risk 3-4 benefits, icons, few words each
Featured categories Route shoppers into the catalog 3-6 tiles, intent-based labels
Social proof Show others bought and were happy 1-3 signal types, real reviews
Trust signals Remove payment and returns doubt Secure badges, returns promise
Navigation and search Serve high-intent visitors Mega-menu, visible mobile search
Footer offer Capture motivated visitors One newsletter offer, clear reason
Each homepage section earns its place by doing one job in the conversion path

A pre-launch checklist for your Magento homepage

Before you push a redesigned homepage live, run it against this short list to catch the issues that quietly cost conversions:

  • A first-time visitor can state what you sell within three seconds
  • There is exactly one primary call to action above the fold
  • The mobile single-column layout keeps the CTA and search reachable by thumb
  • The value proposition strip names concrete benefits
  • Featured categories route to real demand, refreshed without manual edits
  • One to three trust signal types appear
  • Largest Contentful Paint stays under 2.5 seconds on a mid-range phone
  • Every section maps to a job, with nothing left as pure decoration.

When to bring in a design partner

You can build and iterate the homepage in-house when you have a designer who understands conversion, a developer comfortable in Page Builder or Hyvä, and analytics to test changes against. Bring in a partner when the redesign touches the theme architecture, when speed problems are structural, or when the homepage is part of a wider replatform.

If you reach that point, our guide to choosing a design agency covers how to evaluate Magento-specialist teams without overpaying for a generic web shop.

Frequently asked questions

How do I edit my homepage in Magento?

In the Magento admin, go to Content, then Pages, open the page set as your home page, and edit it with Page Builder or the CMS editor. You assign which page acts as the homepage under Stores, Configuration, General, Web, Default Pages.

What should a Magento homepage include?

At minimum: a clear hero, a value proposition strip, featured categories, social proof, trust signals, strong navigation and search, and a footer with one focused conversion offer. Each section should map to a single job in the buying path.

Should I use Page Builder or Hyva for homepage design?

Page Builder gives marketers drag-and-drop control without code, which suits frequent campaign changes. Hyva is a lighter frontend framework that favors speed and is usually managed by developers. Many stores combine a Hyva theme with CMS blocks marketers can edit.

How long should a Magento homepage be?

Long enough to cover the core conversion zones and no longer. Most effective homepages run five to seven stacked sections, ending before the content turns into filler that visitors scroll past without reading.

Do homepage carousels or sliders help conversion?

Usually not. Rotating banners dilute the main message and most visitors never engage past the first slide. A single, focused hero almost always outperforms a carousel.

How many trust signals should the homepage show?

Baymard Institute research suggests one to three signal types convert best. Pages crowded with seven or more badges actually performed worse, so prioritize the proof that matters most to your buyers.

Want a homepage built to convert? Talk to our team and rethink your homepage around the buying path your shoppers actually follow.

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Best Magento 2 Extensions Every Store Needs https://scandiweb.com/blog/best-magento-extensions/ Mon, 29 Jun 2026 10:22:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24937 The best Magento 2 extensions by category: search, security, the cost and compatibility discipline to keep your store fast and upgradeable.

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The average Magento store runs around 30 extensions, according to the 2026 Magento statistics compiled by Onyx8 Agency, and the Adobe Commerce Marketplace alone lists roughly 3,900 of them, per Magefan. Every one of those modules is code that someone else wrote, code that has to be patched, retested, and made compatible again every time you upgrade Magento, install a security patch, or move to a new theme.

So this guide on the best Magento 2 extensions does two things at once. We’ll name the extensions worth installing, organized by the job each one does for your store, and tell you which ones you can probably skip, build natively, or consolidate. The goal is the shortest list that covers what your store needs, because on Magento (Adobe Commerce), fewer and better-chosen modules mean a faster site and a far smoother upgrade path.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Pick extensions by category. Most stores need strong search, SEO, performance and caching, security, reviews, marketing automation, and reporting, plus a page builder and a B2B layer where relevant. Choose one trusted vendor per category and confirm version and theme compatibility before you buy.

How to choose Magento 2 extensions

The best Magento 2 extensions are those that solve a real problem you can measure, from a vendor that keeps the module up to date. Everything else is the weight your team has to carry through every future upgrade.

Before naming specific modules, it helps to agree on the selection rules, because they decide which entries below actually belong in your store and which ones do not.

  • One vendor per category where possible, because five extensions from five vendors means five different code styles, five support queues, and five things to break on the next Magento release. A single SEO or marketing suite from one vendor is usually cleaner than three single-purpose modules.
  • Confirm compatibility before you buy and check the exact Magento version, your PHP version, and your theme, including whether the module supports your frontend if you run a modern one.
  • Prefer native first, as Magento ships with capable search, catalog, and promotion tools; replace them only when the native version genuinely limits you.
  • Look at release cadence, how quickly they support new Magento versions, and whether support is responsive.
  • Budget for the year – marketplace prices commonly run from $49 to roughly $449 per extension, and many carry annual renewals for updates and support. Multiply that across 30 modules, and the real number gets your attention fast.

The must-have Magento 2 extensions by category

Below are the categories nearly every serious store needs, with the vendors that consistently do each job well. Treat the named modules as strong defaults and apply the selection rules above before committing.

1. Search and layered navigation

On-site search is where high-intent visitors tell you exactly what they want to buy, so weak search quietly costs revenue. Magento’s native search and layered navigation work, but they slow down and lose relevance as catalogs grow past a few thousand SKUs.

Strong options here are Amasty Improved Layered Navigation, Mirasvit Advanced Search and Sphinx Search, and Mageworx search tooling. For larger catalogs, many stores move to a dedicated engine such as Elasticsearch or OpenSearch (now the Magento default) or a hosted service like Algolia, which has a well-supported Magento module. Better navigation also lifts SEO by creating cleaner, indexable filtered pages, so coordinate this with whoever owns your Search Engine Optimization work.

2. SEO suite

Magento’s out-of-the-box SEO controls are thin. A good SEO extension adds template-driven meta tags, automated and customizable canonical rules, HTML and XML sitemap control, structured data, hreflang for multi-store setups, and bulk URL and redirect management.

The leaders are Mageworx SEO Suite Ultimate, Amasty SEO Toolkit, and Mirasvit SEO Suite. Pick one suite rather than stacking single-purpose SEO modules, because overlapping rules for canonicals and redirects are a common source of indexing bugs that are painful to debug later.

3. Performance and full-page caching

Speed is revenue and a ranking factor, and it is the area where extensions can help or hurt the most. The foundation is server-side: Varnish full-page caching, Redis for sessions and cache, and a CDN.

On top of that, image optimization and lazy-loading modules from Amasty, Mirasvit, or Mageplaza can help, and Google Page Speed style optimizers handle JavaScript and CSS bundling, a core part of Magento performance optimization. The bigger performance lever, though, is a modern frontend. A Hyvä theme strips out the heavy default Luma stack and routinely lifts Core Web Vitals more than any single caching plugin. If your store struggles on speed, start with the theme and infrastructure, then add targeted modules.

Before and after Core Web Vitals dashboard for a Magento store after caching, image optimization, and a Hyva theme

4. Security and compliance

A breach or a failed PCI scan costs far more than any module. Magento’s own security patches are the non-negotiable baseline, but extensions add useful layers: two-factor authentication hardening, admin action logging, login attempt limiting, and bot and spam protection.

Amasty, MageFence, and Mageplaza offer security modules, and reCAPTCHA is built into Magento for form protection. For privacy and cookie consent under GDPR and CCPA, Amasty GDPR and Mageplaza GDPR are common choices. One caution: security extensions touch sensitive areas of your store, so only install ones from vendors with a clear patching track record.

5. Product reviews and user-generated content

Reviews are among the highest-leverage trust signals on a product page, and they feed rich snippets that improve how your listings look in search. Magento’s native reviews are basic, with no photo reviews, review reminders, or import from third parties.

Amasty Advanced Product Reviews and Mirasvit Advanced Reviews add review reminder emails, photo and rating attributes, and structured data output. If you already use a dedicated reviews platform such as Yotpo, Trustpilot, or Bazaarvoice, use their official Magento connector instead of a second module, so you are not maintaining two review systems at once.

6. Marketing automation and promotions

This category covers abandoned cart recovery, email automation, loyalty and rewards, gift cards, and advanced promotion rules. The native cart price rules are surprisingly capable, so confirm what you genuinely need before buying.

Common picks include Amasty and Mageplaza for promotions, automatic related products, and gift cards, and Mirasvit for follow-up email and rewards. Many merchants instead route email and automation through Klaviyo, Dotdigital, or Adobe’s own tools via their official connectors, which keeps the heavy logic outside Magento and lighter on your store.

7. Page builder and content

Adobe Commerce includes Page Builder natively, and Magento Open Source supports it too, so many stores need nothing extra here. Where teams want more layout control or a faster editing experience, third-party builders from Mageplaza, Landofcoder, and others exist, and Hyvä has its own compatible content tooling.

Before adding a builder, check it renders cleanly on your theme. Heavy page builders are a frequent cause of bloated, slow category and landing pages, which undercuts the performance work in category three.

8. B2B functionality

If you sell wholesale, Adobe Commerce includes a full B2B module set: company accounts, shared catalogs, quotes, and requisition lists. On Magento Open Source, you add these with extensions instead.

Amasty, Webkul, and BSS Commerce all offer B2B suites covering company accounts, customer-group pricing, quick order, and request-for-quote. Because B2B logic touches checkout, pricing, and customer accounts, this is one category where a clean implementation matters more than the cheapest module. If wholesale is core to your revenue, treat it as a build, and lean on dedicated B2B eCommerce expertise.

9. Reporting and analytics

Magento’s built-in reports are limited, and exporting to spreadsheets every week does not scale. Advanced reporting extensions give you profit, inventory, and customer reports in the admin, with the metrics merchandisers and finance need.

Mirasvit Advanced Reports, Amasty Advanced Reports, and Mageplaza Reports are the usual choices. Many stores also push order and behavior data into GA4, BigQuery, or a BI tool, in which case a reporting extension matters less. Decide where your single source of truth is before adding one.

Comparison: the core extension categories

Use this summary to map each category to a default approach and to where it tends to break if you are not careful:

Category Trusted vendors Native first? Main watch-out
Search and navigation Amasty, Mirasvit, Algolia Yes, up to ~3k SKUs Performance on very large catalogs
SEO suite Mageworx, Amasty, Mirasvit No, native is thin Overlapping canonical and redirect rules
Performance and caching Hyvä, Amasty, hosting, and DevOps Yes, configure first Plugins cannot fix a heavy theme
Security and compliance Amasty, MageFence, Mageplaza Patches are baseline Only trust vendors with strong patching
Reviews and UGC Amasty, Mirasvit, Yotpo No, native is basic Do not run two review systems
Marketing automation Amasty, Mageplaza, Klaviyo Partly, rules are capable Keep heavy logic outside Magento
Page builder Native, Hyvä, Mageplaza Yes, native covers most Builder bloat slows pages
B2B Adobe Commerce native, Amasty, Webkul Yes on Adobe Commerce Touches checkout and pricing
Reporting Mirasvit, Amasty, GA4 or BI Limited natively Define your source of truth first
Default approach and key risk for each core Magento 2 extension category

Where do you buy Magento 2 extensions?

Most reputable extensions come from three places: the official Adobe Commerce Marketplace, the vendor’s own store (Amasty, Mageplaza, Mirasvit, Mageworx, Webkul, and others), and the open-source community for free modules. The Marketplace vets submissions and is the safest default, with paid extensions commonly listed from $49 to $449.

Buying direct from a top vendor is also fine and often gives you faster support and earlier compatibility releases. Avoid nulled or pirated extensions entirely. They are a known vector for malware, and they void any support or update path, which is exactly the maintenance trap this guide is trying to help you avoid.

How to spot and remove redundant extensions

Most stores accumulate modules over years of quick fixes, agency handovers, and abandoned campaigns, and nobody ever circles back to remove what is no longer used.

A practical audit starts by listing every installed module with bin/magento module:status, then mapping each one to a business owner and a clear reason it exists. Modules with no owner, no recent traffic, or overlapping functions are your first candidates to retire. Common overlaps include two SEO suites both writing canonical tags, a standalone reviews module running alongside a Yotpo or Trustpilot connector, and several small “mini” extensions doing what one suite already covers.

Before you disable anything, confirm it is genuinely unused. Search the codebase and database for references, check whether it powers a live block or cron job, and snapshot your config so you can restore quickly. Disable first with bin/magento module:disable, regression test, and only fully uninstall once you are confident nothing depends on it. Removing dead code shrinks your attack surface, speeds up deploys, and shortens every future upgrade.

Why staging and rollback matter more than the extension itself

The fastest way to take down a Magento store is to install or update an extension straight on production. Even a well-built module can clash with another one’s plugins, override the same class, or expect a different schema version, and you will not see it until checkout breaks at the worst possible moment.

Treat every install and update as a deployment. Run it first on a staging environment that mirrors production data and configuration, then test the critical paths: add to cart, checkout, payment capture, admin order creation, and any flow the new module touches. Keep a tagged release or database backup so a rollback is one command. A real-world conflict example: an SEO suite and a layered-navigation module both rewriting category URLs can produce duplicate canonicals and 404s that only surface on indexed pages days later, which is exactly why you catch it on staging.

How many extensions is too many?

There is no magic number, but if you are well past the ~30-extension average and your upgrades keep slipping, that is the signal. The cost of an extension is the compounding maintenance over every future upgrade.

Each module you add increases the surface area for conflicts, lengthens regression testing, and can delay how fast you adopt the next Magento security release. Stores that stay lean upgrade faster and break less. If you have inherited a store with dozens of overlapping modules, an audit that consolidates or removes the redundant ones usually pays for itself in upgrade time saved.

Are extensions still worth it on Magento in 2026?

Yes. Magento still powers a meaningful share of serious eCommerce, with Magefan reporting it at roughly 8% of the eCommerce market and well over a hundred thousand live stores, and the extension ecosystem is one of its biggest advantages over more closed platforms.

Choosing the right extensions and the right partner

The hard part of extensions is rarely picking a module, it is integrating it cleanly, keeping it compatible across upgrades, and knowing when to build native instead. That is where an experienced team earns its keep, and where the wrong installs quietly accumulate into a slow, fragile store.

If you want help deciding what to keep, what to consolidate, and what to remove, working with a specialist is the fastest path, and scandiweb has been building and maintaining Magento stores for over a decade

Frequently asked questions about Magento 2 extensions

What are Magento 2 extensions?

Magento 2 extensions are modular pieces of code that add or change functionality on your store, similar to apps on a phone. They can add features Magento lacks natively, such as advanced SEO controls or a richer review system, and they come from the Adobe Commerce Marketplace, individual vendors, or the open-source community.

How many extensions does a typical Magento store use?

About 30 on average, according to the 2026 Magento statistics compiled by Onyx8 Agency. That is a useful benchmark rather than a target. Many high-performing stores run fewer, and consolidating overlapping modules is often a quick win for speed and upgrade time.

How much do Magento 2 extensions cost?

Paid extensions on the Adobe Commerce Marketplace commonly run from $49 to about $449, and many carry annual renewals for updates and support. Free modules exist for many use cases, but the real cost of any extension is the ongoing maintenance it adds across every future upgrade.

Are free Magento extensions safe to use?

Reputable free modules from the Marketplace or established vendors are fine. Avoid nulled or pirated copies of paid extensions entirely, because they are a common malware vector and leave you with no updates or support path.

How do I check if an extension is compatible with my store?

Confirm the supported Magento edition (Open Source or Adobe Commerce) and version, your PHP version, and your theme, including Hyvä compatibility if you run a Hyvä frontend. Test on a staging environment before deploying to production, never directly on the live store.

Do extensions slow down a Magento store?

They can, especially heavy page builders, poorly coded modules, or several extensions doing overlapping work. The number of extensions matters less than their quality and how well they are integrated. Server-side caching, a CDN, and a modern frontend such as Hyvä usually move performance more than any single plugin.

Should I build a feature natively or use an extension?

Use an extension when a trusted vendor already solves the problem well and keeps the module current. Build native when the feature is core to your business, needs deep customization, or when stacking modules would create conflicts. For checkout, pricing, and B2B logic in particular, a clean custom build is often more maintainable than several plugins.

Where is the safest place to buy Magento 2 extensions?

The official Adobe Commerce Marketplace is the safest default because submissions are vetted. Buying directly from a top vendor such as Amasty, Mageplaza, Mirasvit, or Mageworx is also reliable and often gives you faster support and earlier compatibility releases.

Carrying more modules than your store needs? Let us help you audit your extension stack so you run fewer, better-chosen extensions and far fewer upgrade headaches.

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Best POS Systems for Magento https://scandiweb.com/blog/best-pos-systems-for-magento/ Fri, 26 Jun 2026 10:25:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24931 Compare the best POS for Magento: offline mode, omnichannel inventory, order sync, hardware, payments, and multi-location.

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How do you keep in-store and online inventory and orders in sync when a single oversell can cost you a customer for good? That one question is what sends most Magento (Adobe Commerce) merchants looking for a point-of-sale system in the first place. You sell the same SKU in-store and on the website, and the moment those two counts drift apart, you are either turning away buyers who think you are out of stock or promising stock you cannot deliver.

The right Magento POS closes that gap by treating your store and your website as one catalog, one customer record, and one stream of orders. Our guide compares seven POS options that work with Magento, scored on the offline mode, omnichannel inventory and order sync, hardware support, payment integration, and multi-location control.

🚀 Quick takeaway

If your store and website share inventory, choose a Magento-native POS such as Magestore or ConnectPOS so stock, orders, and customers are in one database. If you mostly need fast in-store checkout tied to a payment provider you already use, a connector to Square or Lightspeed can be enough.

What makes a POS the best fit for Magento?

The best POS for Magento is the one that uses your Magento catalog and order data as the single source of truth, rather than holding its own separate copy that has to be reconciled. Everything else, from hardware to reporting, is secondary to that.

This matters more than most buyers expect. Harvard Business Review research found that omnichannel customers spend about 10% more online and 4% more in-store than single-channel shoppers, and that 73% of customers use multiple channels during a single shopping journey. When the same buyer moves between your website and your counter, fractured inventory quietly taxes every one of those trips.

Click-and-collect raises the stakes further. US BOPIS sales are projected to reach roughly $154.3 billion in 2025, about 10.5% of all eCommerce sales, per eMarketer figures, and Capital One Shopping research reports that around 87% of merchants now offer buy-online-pickup-in-store. Pickup only works when store-level stock counts are trustworthy, which is exactly what a Magento-integrated POS is supposed to guarantee.

Diagram of Magento as the single source of truth syncing with POS terminals, online orders, and warehouse inventory

Magento POS selection criteria: what to score before you buy

Before comparing brands, fix the scorecard. A demo will always look smooth. These five criteria are where Magento POS software either holds up under retail load or quietly breaks.

Offline mode

Card readers fail, store broadband drops, and you cannot tell a queue of customers to wait for the router. A serious Magento POS keeps ringing sales offline and then reconciles every transaction back into Magento once the connection returns, with no double-counting and no lost orders.

Omnichannel inventory and order sync

This is the core promise. A POS has to stay in sync with your Magento inventory management setup. Look for real-time, two-way sync against Magento Multi-Source Inventory (MSI) so a sale at the register decrements the same stock pool the website reads. One-way or batch sync that runs every few hours is where overselling lives.

Hardware support

Confirm the system drives the gear you use: receipt printers, barcode scanners, cash drawers, and card terminals. Some POS tools are device-agnostic and run in a browser on any tablet. Others lock you to a certified hardware list, which raises switching cost later.

Payment integration

Your in-store payment flow should reconcile cleanly with online payments inside Magento. Check which processors are supported out of the box, whether the reader is EMV and contactless ready, and how refunds for online orders are handled at the counter.

Multi-location control

If you run more than one store, you need per-location stock, store-level reporting, role-based staff permissions, and the ability to route a pickup or transfer to the right branch. Single-store tools often do not scale to this without painful workarounds.

The 7 best POS systems for Magento

The options below split into two groups. Magento-native systems install as an extension and read and write your Magento data directly. Connector-based systems run their own POS and link to Magento through an integration layer. Both can work, and the right answer depends on how tightly your store and website share inventory.

1. Magestore

Best for: mid-market and enterprise retailers who want a fully Magento-native point of sale.

Magestore installs directly inside Magento, so there is no second database to reconcile. The register reads your live Magento catalog, customers, and stock, and writes orders straight back. It is the most consistently recommended Magento-native option across the SERP and review communities for that reason.

Strengths: true real-time, two-way sync against Magento MSI, robust offline mode, deep multi-location and warehouse support, and broad hardware compatibility.

Watch-outs: it is a heavier, higher-priced commitment, and the in-store experience is only as fast as your Magento backend, so performance work pays off here.

2. ConnectPOS

Best for: retailers who want cloud flexibility and fast device-agnostic setup on existing tablets.

ConnectPOS is a cloud POS with a strong Magento connector and a browser-based register that runs on iOS, Android, and PC. It tops several 2025 listicles for ease of rollout across multiple stores.

Strengths: quick to deploy, works on hardware you likely already own, supports multi-store and multi-warehouse, and offers offline selling.

Watch-outs: per-device monthly pricing adds up across a large floor, and because the POS holds its own cloud layer, you depend on the quality of the connector for sync accuracy.

3. Webkul POS

Best for: smaller stores and merchants who want a one-time license rather than a subscription.

Webkul’s Magento 2 POS extension is a budget-friendly, in-Magento option that covers the core counter workflow. It is popular with single-store and early multi-location retailers who want to avoid recurring per-seat fees.

Strengths: affordable one-time license, runs inside Magento, covers barcode scanning, custom receipts, and basic offline handling.

Watch-outs: advanced omnichannel features and polish trail the enterprise systems, and you will lean more on your own team or an agency for setup and edge cases.

4. Acid POS

Best for: specialty and inventory-heavy retailers who want a robust standalone POS that connects to Magento.

Acid POS markets a dedicated Magento integration with strong inventory and retail-operations features. It suits merchants whose in-store operation is complex enough to warrant a purpose-built retail platform that then syncs to the website.

Strengths: mature retail and inventory tooling, multi-location support, and a focused in-store experience.

Watch-outs: as a standalone platform, sync depends on the integration layer rather than living natively in Magento, so validate real-time accuracy during evaluation.

5. Ebizmarts (iOS POS)

Best for: Apple-first retail teams who want a polished iPad register tied to Magento.

Ebizmarts offers an iOS-native Magento POS with a clean in-store experience and tight integration. It is a frequent shortlist pick alongside Magestore for stores standardized on iPads.

Strengths: strong iOS app experience, Magento integration, offline capability, and solid customer-facing checkout.

Watch-outs: the Apple-centric approach is a limitation if your floor mixes Android or Windows devices, so confirm hardware fit first.

6. Square (via Magento integration)

Best for: smaller and growing retailers who already use Square for payments and want a low-friction counter.

Square is not a Magento-native POS, but Magento connectors sync products, inventory, and orders between Square and your store. For merchants who already trust Square hardware and processing, this keeps a familiar in-store flow while linking to the website.

Strengths: simple, well-known POS hardware and payments, fast to start, predictable transaction-based pricing, and good for pop-ups and single locations.

Watch-outs: sync is connector-dependent and typically not as deep as native systems, advanced Magento MSI scenarios can be limited, and reconciliation lag is the main risk to monitor.

7. Lightspeed (via connector)

Best for: established retailers who want a mature, feature-rich cloud retail platform connected to Magento.

Lightspeed is a strong standalone retail POS with deep inventory, purchasing, and reporting features, linked to Magento through an integration. It fits brands that treat the store as the operational hub and the website as one of several channels.

Strengths: rich retail and inventory management, multi-location, strong reporting, and broad hardware and payment options.

Watch-outs: it is a separate system of record, so two-way sync with Magento must be configured and tested carefully, and total cost runs higher than lightweight extensions.

POS system Type Offline mode Inventory sync Best for
Magestore Magento-native Strong Real-time, two-way (MSI) Mid-market and enterprise
ConnectPOS Cloud + connector Yes Real-time via connector Multi-store, device-agnostic
Webkul POS Magento extension Basic In-Magento Budget, single store
Acid POS Standalone + integration Yes Via integration Inventory-heavy specialty retail
Ebizmarts iOS app + integration Yes Via integration Apple-first stores
Square Connector Yes (Square) Connector, batch or near real-time Small stores, pop-ups
Lightspeed Standalone + connector Yes Via connector Retail-led multi-location brands
Magento POS comparison across type, offline mode, and inventory sync

Native Magento POS or a connector: which should you choose?

Choose a Magento-native POS when your store and website share the same inventory and you cannot tolerate overselling. Choose a connector when in-store and online run as semi-separate operations and speed of setup matters more than millisecond accuracy.

Native systems such as Magestore, Webkul, and Ebizmarts read and write Magento data directly, which keeps a single source of truth and makes click-and-collect dependable. Connector-based setups like Square and Lightspeed are faster to launch and let you keep payment hardware you already trust, at the cost of an integration layer you have to monitor.

One rule keeps merchants out of trouble. Do not turn on BOPIS or store pickup until store-level inventory accuracy is consistently high. Omnichannel research repeatedly shows that pickup and reserve-in-store programs collapse customer trust the moment a promised item is not actually on the shelf, and Capital One Shopping research notes that around 85% of BOPIS shoppers buy something extra when they collect, which is upside you forfeit every time a pickup fails.

How to roll out a Magento POS without breaking your store

The platform choice is half the work. A clean rollout is what protects your data and your floor staff.

  1. Map your sources of truth. Decide whether Magento or the POS owns inventory, customers, and pricing. Ambiguity here is the root cause of most sync failures.
  2. Configure Multi-Source Inventory. Set up each store and warehouse as a source in Magento so stock is tracked per location before the POS goes live.
  3. Test offline and reconciliation. Deliberately disconnect a register during a test sale and confirm the order reconciles into Magento exactly once when it reconnects.
  4. Pilot in one store. Run a single location for a few weeks, watch for overselling and reconciliation gaps, then scale.
  5. Train staff on edge cases. Returns of online orders, partial refunds, and split payments are where untrained teams create accounting messes.

This is also where platform health matters. A POS that reads a slow or unstable Magento backend will feel sluggish at the counter, which is why Magento performance optimization and a well-built integration layer are part of any serious POS project.

Do you need an agency to integrate a Magento POS?

Not always, but the harder your retail operation, the more an integration partner pays for itself. A simple single-store extension can be self-installed. Multi-location stock, custom payment flows, ERP links, and reliable offline reconciliation usually justify an experienced team.

If you do bring in help, choosing a partner with real Magento and omnichannel depth matters more than the brand of POS. Our list of top Magento development companies is a good starting point.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best POS for Magento?

For most merchants who share inventory between store and website, Magestore is the strongest Magento-native option because it reads and writes your Magento data directly with real-time, two-way sync. If you already use Square or Lightspeed and want a faster start, a connector to those platforms can be the better fit.

Does Magento have a built-in POS?

No. Magento (Adobe Commerce) does not include a native point-of-sale out of the box. You add one through an extension that runs inside Magento or through a connector that links an external POS to your store.

How does a Magento POS keep in-store and online inventory in sync?

A native Magento POS decrements the same stock pool the website reads by writing every counter sale back to Magento Multi-Source Inventory in real time. Connector-based systems sync through an integration layer, which can run near real-time or in batches, so confirm the timing during evaluation.

Can a Magento POS work offline?

Yes. Quality systems such as Magestore, ConnectPOS, and Ebizmarts keep ringing sales when the internet drops and reconcile each transaction back into Magento when the connection returns. Always test this before you rely on it.

How much does a Magento POS cost?

Pricing ranges widely. Lightweight extensions such as Webkul start around a one-time license in the low hundreds, cloud systems like ConnectPOS run on per-device monthly subscriptions, and enterprise-grade native systems carry higher recurring or license costs plus implementation. Factor in hardware and integration work on top of the software.

Is Square a good POS for Magento?

Square works well for smaller stores, pop-ups, and merchants already invested in Square hardware and processing. It connects to Magento through an integration rather than running natively, so the main thing to watch is sync timing and reconciliation if you depend on tight inventory accuracy.

What is the difference between a native Magento POS and a connector?

A native POS lives inside Magento and uses your store as the single source of truth. A connector runs its own POS and links to Magento through an integration. Native systems win on real-time accuracy and offline reliability, connectors win on speed of setup and reusing existing hardware.

Ready to unify in-store and online into one source of truth? Connect your POS with our omnichannel team and stop overselling for good.

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Introducing OperaLayer: Close the Gap Between Your Business Systems https://scandiweb.com/blog/operalayer-by-scandiweb/ Thu, 25 Jun 2026 13:52:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=25217 An operational layer closes the gap between the systems you already run. Learn what it is, how it differs from iPaaS, and when it is the right move.

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Every business at a larger scale has an ERP, a CRM, an eCommerce system, accounting software, a warehouse system. And each one handles its core domain well. But something always falls between them, ending up in a spreadsheet, a manual process, a wishlist, someone’s email, very old software nobody wants to touch, or in a backlog item that never gets prioritized, you name it. 

OperaLayer is the layer that closes this gap.

Next, I’ll explain what OperaLayer, our operational layer, is, how it differs from iPaaS and a data warehouse, how it gets built without replacing anything you run, and how to tell whether it is the right move for your business.

The gap every business already has

Each of the core platforms already handles its own domain well – the ERP runs the books, the CRM holds the customers, the eCommerce platform runs the storefront, while the warehouse system tracks stock. The gap is the work that falls between them.

It is easy to recognize once you look for it. The same shape of problem shows up in every department:

  • Month-end close takes days because someone reconciles numbers between the ERP and the data warehouse by hand
  • The same customer has three different IDs across the CRM, the eCommerce platform, and support, and nobody owns the fix
  • A process the team runs every Monday has been on the automation backlog for two years
  • Regional pricing is in a spreadsheet that one person maintains, and nothing changes price when they are on holiday
  • Buyers match supplier invoices to purchase orders by hand because every supplier sends a different PDF format
  • The dashboard the board asked for requires data from five systems, so building it has been “next quarter” for three quarters in a row.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The gap for OperaLayer to fix is a hundred small handoffs that no single system owns, and each one quietly costs time and margin.

The gap between your business systems

Why the gap is structural

The gap is not there because a system is broken, but because of how the systems are organized. The data already exists, spread across the platforms you have paid for. Same with processes, your team runs them every week. The systems work, each doing the job it was designed to do. What is missing is anything built to connect them around the specific thing your business needs right now.

That is why the usual fixes do not hold. Even a clean set of system integrations keeps the data flowing without deciding who owns the weekly process that runs on top of it. The structural gap does not shrink on its own, and it does not belong to any one vendor, which is exactly why it keeps ending up on someone’s plate instead of in a system.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Buying another platform does not solve the core issue. The gap belongs to no vendor, which is why it keeps landing on your team.

What OperaLayer is

OperaLayer by scandiweb is an operational layer – a thin software layer that runs across the systems you already use, consolidates their data into one model, and hosts focused apps that close specific gaps between them. It connects to your ERP, CRM, eCommerce platform, and warehouse system, reads from them, and replaces none of them. 

Worth a quick clarification, because the word “layer” gets crowded. This is not an AI or API orchestration layer in the developer sense, which coordinates models or microservices. It is a business operations layer. It is also not a rip-and-replace platform, but adds the missing capability on top of what you run.

An operational layer has three main capabilities:

Visibility

Visibility is the operational view you cannot build today because the data behind it is spread across three systems with three different definitions. It is the single customer view that finally reconciles the same person across the CRM, the eCommerce platform, and support, or the executive dashboard, where every number is defined once instead of five slightly different ways. It is also the department-level drill-down nobody can produce right now, because the data it needs never lands in one place.

Prediction

Prediction is the forward-looking signal your team already produces by hand on a Friday afternoon, surfaced early enough to actually act on. That covers demand and inventory forecasts, churn and revenue risk, and the kind of margin or anomaly alert that stays quiet until something genuinely looks wrong, then routes itself to the person who can deal with it.

Automation

Automation takes the decision that repeats every week and currently needs a person just to run it, and runs it for them. Think reorder and replenishment drafts, cross-system matching and sync, or approval routing. People stay in the loop wherever judgment is needed, and step out of the parts that were only ever manual because no system owned them.

How an operational layer differs from iPaaS, a data warehouse, or another platform

These categories get confused often, and the difference is practical. An operational layer is where the operational app actually is, built on top of connected data, while the other tools each solve a narrower piece.

  • iPaaS and middleware move data between systems and get System A talking to System B, but they do not give a planner a ranked queue to act on.
  • A data warehouse or BI tool stores and reports on the data, tells you what happened, but it does not run the weekly decision or the cross-system workflow.
  • Another platform replaces a system you already have, which means migration, retraining, and a new set of edge cases to manage.

An operational layer uses the middleware and the warehouse where they help, then adds the view, the prediction, or the automated decision on top, without replacing anything underneath.

How it gets built without replacing anything

The delivery model is what makes an operational layer not extend into a multi-year program. It is a single module, built on a short, fixed timeline.

We deliver a working prototype in week one, on real data and the real workflow, so your team can see the right thing being built before it is fully built. Next, iterate with the people who will use it. The production build connects to your existing systems with governance, access, and an audit trail from the start. The module is live in four weeks, with training and post-launch support included. Nothing gets migrated, and your team does not learn a new platform.

The first module sets up the foundation: the systems connected, the data model unified, the first views and the first prediction. Every module after that is faster and cheaper, because the foundation is already paid for. You add capabilities in the order your business actually needs them, not in the order a transformation roadmap dictates.

What OperaLayer looks like in practice

Case 1: Business Central handled the books, but not 50+ supplier brands

A Baltic sports and apparel retailer with more than €100 million in revenue ran its books in Microsoft Business Central. Business Central did not handle 50-plus supplier brands, seasonal commitments, and invoice variance flags, and none of that deserved a full ERP customization. The operational layer gave buyers live supplier purchasing intelligence, with €34 million of one season’s purchasing tracked across every brand and 52 invoice discrepancies caught before goods reached shelves.

Case 2: Magento handled the storefront, but not 50-state pricing

A US specialty retailer selling direct to consumers across 50 states ran its storefront on Magento 2. Magento was never going to handle state-by-state pricing logic with multiple margin types, and a spreadsheet was never going to scale to it. The operational layer took pricing live across all 50 states and recalculated eight margin types per state, eliminating the manual formulas at the source.

Case 3: Navision handled the orders, but not the 100 PDF invoice formats

A B2B electrical and industrial supplier with around 100 vendors ran orders through Microsoft Dynamics NAV. Navision did not handle 100 different PDF invoice formats and line-by-line purchase order matching. The operational layer reached an 87% auto-match rate and surfaced only the exceptions for a human to review, instead of two people matching invoices by hand every morning.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Notice the pattern: in each case the core system stayed exactly as it was. The operational layer closed the one gap it was never built to handle.

When an operational layer is the right move

Consider an operational layer if:

  • Work keeps falling between your systems into spreadsheets, email, and manual routines
  • You do not want to replace systems that otherwise do their job well
  • You need a view, a prediction, or an automation that no single platform you own can produce
  • You have already tried “another report” or “another platform” and the gap is still there
  • You want to prove value on one real problem before committing to anything larger.

Frequently asked questions about the operational layer

What is an operational layer?

An operational layer is a thin software layer that runs across the systems a business already uses, unifies their data, and hosts focused apps that close specific gaps between them. It connects to systems like the ERP, CRM, eCommerce platform, and warehouse system, and replaces none of them. Its job is visibility, prediction, and automation that no single platform produces on its own.

How is an operational layer different from iPaaS or middleware?

iPaaS and middleware are the pipes that move data between systems. An operational layer uses those pipes, then adds the operational app on top: the unified view, the forecast, or the automated decision a team acts on. Middleware gets System A talking to System B. An operational layer turns that connected data into a workflow someone actually uses.

Does an operational layer replace my ERP or CRM?

No. An operational layer is additive. It reads from your existing systems and leaves them in place, so there is no migration and no retraining on a new platform. The ERP keeps running the books and the CRM keeps holding the customers. The layer only adds the capability that currently falls between them.

What is OperaLayer?

OperaLayer is scandiweb’s operational layer. It connects to the systems a business already runs, unifies their data, and hosts focused apps that close specific gaps, built on a roughly four-week rhythm per module without replacing any existing system. The supply-chain and pricing tools scandiweb has shipped are individual modules built on it.

How long does it take to build an operational layer?

A single module follows a short, fixed rhythm: a working prototype in week one and a live, production module in about four weeks, including training and handover. The first module also stands up the shared foundation. Every module after that is faster, because the systems are already connected and the data model already exists.

Is an operational layer only for large enterprises?

No. The gap it closes shows up at any size where a business runs several systems that do not talk to each other about a specific process. Because the work is delivered one focused module at a time rather than as a single large program, a mid-sized business can start with one gap and add more only when each one earns its place.

The gap does not close on its own

The systems you have already do their jobs. The work that falls between them does not belong to any of them, so it keeps costing time and margin until something is built to hold it. OperaLayer is that something: additive, fast to prove, and created around the specific gaps your business has.

We have spent twenty years building the layer between platforms. If the work falling between your systems is starting to add up, that is exactly the kind of gap we close. Let’s chat and, in four weeks, you will have one module running on your real data, closing one specific gap that currently costs your team time every week.

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Top Magento Integrations Your Store Needs https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-integrations/ Thu, 25 Jun 2026 10:11:36 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24927 The Magento integrations every store needs, from ERP and CRM to PIM, payments, and search, with the real tools and a way to plan your stack.

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The average enterprise now runs 897 applications, yet only 29% of them are actually connected to each other. For a mid-market Magento (Adobe Commerce) store, that gap is the difference between an order that reaches the warehouse in seconds and one that a staffer re-keys into the ERP by hand at the end of the day.

That is the part most “best Magento integrations” lists miss. The storefront is the easy part. The real backbone of a healthy store is the set of integrations that keep inventory, orders, customers, prices, and taxes in sync across every system the business already runs. Get that layer right, and the catalog scales, fulfillment stays accurate, and finance trusts the numbers. Get it wrong, and the silos quietly cost you. Gartner estimates that disconnected data costs the average organization 12.9 million dollars a year.

We’ll walk through the integration categories every Magento store needs, name the tools merchants actually use in each one, and give you a way to decide what to connect first. This guide is for heads of eCommerce, CTOs, and operations leads deciding where to spend their integration budget, not a generic explainer of what an API is.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Treat integrations as one connected layer. Prioritize the four systems that move money and inventory first (ERP, payments, tax, and fulfillment), then layer on CRM, PIM, marketing, analytics, POS, and search. The goal is a single source of truth for every order, customer, and SKU.

What are Magento integrations?

Magento integrations are the connections that let Adobe Commerce exchange data with the other systems a business runs, such as its ERP, CRM, payment gateway, tax engine, carriers, and marketing tools. They keep records consistent so that one event, like a completed order, updates every system that needs to know about it.

Magento ships with a flexible REST and GraphQL API plus a large marketplace of extensions, so connectivity is rarely a yes-or-no question. The real decisions are which systems to connect, how tightly, and whether to use a native extension, a prebuilt connector, an integration platform, or a custom build. We cover that trade-off later in this guide.

How to choose the right Magento integrations

Before naming tools, it helps to have a way to judge each one. Most over-built stacks happen because someone connected a system without asking whether it earned a permanent data pipeline. Run every candidate through these five questions.

Question Why it matters
Does it move money or inventory? Order, payment, tax, and stock integrations are non-negotiable. Connect these first and harden them most.
How often does data need to sync? Real-time, near-real-time, or nightly batch each imply different architecture and cost. Match the method to the need.
Is there a maintained native connector? A vendor-supported extension usually beats a custom build for total cost of ownership, until your logic gets unusual.
Who owns the data conflict? Decide the system of record per field (price, stock, customer) before you connect, not after a mismatch.
What breaks if it goes down? Map the failure mode. A queue and retry logic matter far more for orders than for a newsletter sync.
A five-question filter to apply before adding any Magento integration.

Diagram of Magento Adobe Commerce connected to ERP, CRM, PIM, payment, tax, shipping, marketing, analytics, POS, and search systems

Best Magento ERP integrations

An ERP integration is the single highest-leverage connection most stores make. It syncs orders, inventory, pricing, and customer records between Magento and the system finance and operations live in, which removes manual re-keying and keeps stock accurate across channels. High-volume merchants often add a dedicated order management system (OMS) to orchestrate fulfillment from one hub. Many merchants connect these through an integration platform such as Celigo, Jitterbit, or Workato rather than a single point-to-point build, because an iPaaS handles retries, mapping, and monitoring out of the box.

1. NetSuite

NetSuite is a cloud ERP that fast-scaling mid-market brands use to run finance, inventory, and order management in one place. Connected to Magento, it becomes the system of record for stock and pricing while orders flow into NetSuite for fulfillment and accounting. It fits brands that have outgrown spreadsheets but do not want to host on-premise software. The watch-out is that NetSuite customizations and saved searches can make a connector brittle, so agree on field mappings before the first sync. It connects to Adobe Commerce through maintained connectors such as Celigo or a Magento extension, or through the REST API for custom flows.

2. SAP S/4HANA

SAP S/4HANA is the enterprise ERP larger operations and manufacturers run for finance, supply chain, and production. Linked to Magento, it keeps complex pricing, credit, and inventory logic consistent between the storefront and the back office. It fits enterprises with established SAP processes and high order volume. The watch-out is implementation weight, since SAP projects are large and the integration usually runs through middleware rather than a simple extension. It connects to Adobe Commerce through an iPaaS or SAP integration suite that maps orders, customers, and stock both ways.

3. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central

Dynamics 365 Business Central is a mid-market ERP that Microsoft-centric finance teams use for accounting, inventory, and operations. Connected to Magento, it unifies order and customer data with the rest of a Microsoft stack such as Outlook and Power BI. It fits brands already invested in Microsoft tooling. The watch-out is that older on-premise Dynamics editions need different connectors than the cloud version, so confirm which edition you run. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained connector or an integration platform that handles order, stock, and pricing sync. For larger SAP operations, SAP Business One is also a common target in this category.

Best Magento CRM integrations

A CRM integration pushes customer and order history from Magento into the system your sales and service teams use, so they see the full relationship rather than a fragment. It also feeds segmentation back into marketing. For B2B merchants, the CRM link often carries quote, account, and credit data, which makes it tighter and more bidirectional than a typical B2C setup. If account-based selling is part of your model, our B2B eCommerce work covers how that data should flow.

4. Salesforce

Salesforce is the enterprise CRM that sales and service teams use to manage pipelines, accounts, and support cases. Connected to Magento, it gives reps a full view of each customer’s orders and lifetime value alongside their open opportunities. It fits brands with a real sales function or a large service operation. The watch-out is cost and complexity, since Salesforce can become a project of its own, so deduplicate contacts before the first sync or you import the mess instead of fixing it. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a marketplace connector or an integration platform that maps customers and orders both ways.

5. HubSpot

HubSpot is an all-in-one CRM and marketing platform popular with mid-market brands that want sales, service, and email in one tool. Connected to Magento, it syncs contacts, deals, and purchase history to power lifecycle campaigns and sales follow-up. It fits teams that prefer a single platform over stitching several together. The watch-out is that deeper eCommerce reporting can need its higher tiers, so map your must-have properties before committing. It connects to Adobe Commerce through HubSpot’s native or marketplace connector that syncs contacts and order events. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Sales and Zoho CRM are also worth considering in this category.

Best Magento PIM integrations

A PIM integration centralizes product data, attributes, descriptions, and media so the catalog stays consistent across Magento and every other channel. It matters most when you sell thousands of SKUs or publish to marketplaces and retailers alongside your own store. A PIM becomes the source of truth for product content while Magento renders it, which keeps merchandising teams out of admin spreadsheets. scandiweb builds and connects PIM systems, including catalog mapping and enrichment workflows, so the data stays clean before it ever reaches the storefront.

Flow of product data from a PIM into Magento and out to marketplaces and retail channels

6. Akeneo

Akeneo is a product experience management platform that brands use to enrich, validate, and govern catalog data before it reaches any channel. Connected to Magento, it pushes finished product content and media into the storefront while staying the master for attributes. It fits large or fast-changing catalogs and omnichannel sellers. The watch-out is that a PIM is only as good as the attribute model behind it, so invest in the taxonomy before the connector. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained connector that maps Akeneo attributes to Magento product fields.

7. Pimcore

Pimcore is an open-source PIM and digital asset management platform for brands that want product data, media, and content under one flexible system. Connected to Magento, it serves as the source of truth for enriched product records and assets. It fits complex catalogs and teams that need heavy customization or want to avoid per-record licensing. The watch-out is that its flexibility means more setup and developer involvement up front. It connects to Adobe Commerce through API-based sync or a custom connector that mirrors product data into the catalog. Salsify is another option worth considering, especially for retail syndication.

Best Magento payment and BNPL integrations

Payment integrations connect Magento to the processors that authorize and capture money at checkout, and increasingly to buy-now-pay-later providers that lift conversion on higher-value carts. This is one of the four systems that move money, so reliability and conversion both matter here. The right mix depends on your markets, since cross-border stores usually need strong local method coverage. Keep every integration PCI-compliant by tokenizing rather than touching raw card data, and test 3-D Secure and refund flows, not just the happy path.

8. Stripe

Stripe is a developer-friendly payment processor that handles cards, wallets, and many local methods through one API. Connected to Magento, it authorizes and captures payments at checkout and supports saved cards and subscriptions. It fits brands that want broad method coverage and clean APIs, including those selling cross-border. The watch-out is that per-transaction fees add up at scale, so model your effective rate. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained Stripe extension that tokenizes card data and supports 3-D Secure.

9. Adyen

Adyen is an enterprise payment platform built for global and omnichannel merchants that want one provider across online and in-store. Connected to Magento, it processes payments with strong local acquiring and unified reporting. It fits larger brands selling in many countries. The watch-out is that it is aimed at higher volumes, so smaller stores may find onboarding heavy. It connects to Adobe Commerce through Adyen’s official extension that covers tokenization, 3-D Secure, and refunds.

10. PayPal (Braintree)

PayPal, with its Braintree gateway, is one of the most recognized checkout options and a trust signal many shoppers expect. Connected to Magento, it offers express checkout, cards, and wallets through a single account. It fits almost any store that wants to reduce friction for buyers who prefer PayPal. The watch-out is that dispute handling and reserves can affect cash flow, so understand the terms. It connects to Adobe Commerce natively, since PayPal and Braintree are among the built-in payment methods. Authorize.net, plus wallets such as Apple Pay and Google Pay, are common additions in this category.

11. Klarna

Klarna is a buy-now-pay-later provider that lets shoppers split a purchase into installments or pay later, which can lift conversion and average order value on higher-priced carts. Connected to Magento, it appears as a checkout option and settles the full amount to the merchant while carrying the credit risk itself. It fits brands with considered or higher-ticket purchases where payment flexibility drives sales. The watch-out is that BNPL can encourage returns, so watch your return rate alongside conversion. It connects to Adobe Commerce through Klarna’s official payment extension.

Best Magento search and personalization integrations

Search and personalization integrations improve how shoppers find and discover products, which directly moves conversion and average order value. Native Magento search works, but dedicated engines do far more. These tools index your catalog, so upstream PIM and attribute quality determine how good the results feel. We compare similar tools in our roundup of website personalization tools, and the same evaluation logic applies to Adobe Commerce.

12. Algolia

Algolia is a hosted search and discovery engine known for fast, typo-tolerant results and merchandising controls. Connected to Magento, it powers instant search, autocomplete, and category pages that respond as the shopper types. It fits stores with large catalogs or heavy reliance on search. The watch-out is that pricing scales with search volume and records, so estimate usage early. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained Algolia extension that indexes the catalog and syncs updates.

13. Klevu

Klevu is an AI-driven search and discovery platform built specifically for eCommerce, with self-learning relevance tuned to shopper behavior. Connected to Magento, it delivers smart search, category merchandising, and recommendations. It fits brands that want strong out-of-the-box relevance without heavy manual tuning. The watch-out is that AI relevance still needs clean product data to work well. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a Klevu extension that indexes products and tracks on-site behavior. Bloomreach Discovery is another strong option in this category for larger catalogs.

Best Magento email and marketing integrations

Marketing integrations feed Magento purchase and behavior data into the tools that run email, SMS, and automation, so campaigns target real buyers rather than a static list. Map abandoned-cart and order events carefully, since a broken event silently kills your highest-revenue automations. Many of these mirror the choices we cover for Shopify in our guide to the best Shopify integrations, and the selection logic carries over to Adobe Commerce almost one-to-one.

14. Klaviyo

Klaviyo is an email and SMS marketing platform built for eCommerce, with segmentation driven by purchase and browsing data. Connected to Magento, it powers abandoned-cart, post-purchase, and win-back flows tied to real order events. It fits brands that run retention and lifecycle marketing as a revenue channel. The watch-out is that pricing scales with profile count, so prune inactive contacts. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained Klaviyo extension that syncs customers, orders, and events.

15. Dotdigital

Dotdigital is a cross-channel marketing platform strong in email, SMS, and automation, with deep Adobe Commerce roots. Connected to Magento, it syncs customers, orders, and product data to drive segmentation and triggered campaigns. It fits mid-market and enterprise brands that want a platform aligned closely with Adobe Commerce. The watch-out is that getting full value takes setup across channels rather than email alone. It connects to Adobe Commerce through its official Engagement Cloud connector. Mailchimp and Bloomreach are also common picks in this category.

Best Magento reviews and UGC integrations

Reviews and user-generated content integrations collect ratings, photos, and questions from buyers and display them on product pages, which builds trust and lifts conversion. They also syndicate review content to search and shopping channels. The watch-out across this category is moderation and authenticity, so use verified-buyer review requests tied to real Magento orders.

16. Yotpo

Yotpo is a reviews and loyalty platform that collects ratings, photos, and user content and displays them across the storefront. Connected to Magento, it triggers post-purchase review requests from real orders and shows star ratings on product and category pages. It fits brands that want reviews, loyalty, and SMS under one vendor. The watch-out is that the broader suite is modular and priced per product, so scope what you actually need. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained Yotpo extension that ties review requests to order data.

17. Trustpilot

Trustpilot is a widely recognized review platform focused on company and product trust signals. Connected to Magento, it sends automated review invitations after orders and surfaces TrustBox widgets and seller ratings on the site. It fits brands that want a well-known third-party trust mark and Google Seller Ratings eligibility. The watch-out is that public company reviews invite all feedback, so commit to responding. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a Trustpilot extension that automates invitations from completed orders.

Best Magento helpdesk and support integrations

Helpdesk and support integrations bring order and customer data into the tools your service team uses, so agents resolve tickets without switching screens. They turn scattered email, chat, and social messages into one queue tied to real purchase history. The watch-out across this category is keeping order context in sync, so agents always see the current order and fulfillment status.

18. Gorgias

Gorgias is a helpdesk built for eCommerce that centralizes email, chat, and social into one inbox with order context attached. Connected to Magento, it shows each ticket alongside the customer’s orders and lets agents act on them in place. It fits direct-to-consumer brands that want fast, commerce-aware support. The watch-out is that pricing is tied to ticket volume, so automate repetitive questions to keep costs sane. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a Gorgias integration that pulls order and customer data into the agent view.

19. Zendesk

Zendesk is an established support platform that scales across email, chat, phone, and self-service knowledge bases. Connected to Magento, it gives agents customer and order details inside the ticket so they can answer without leaving the helpdesk. It fits larger or multi-brand support operations that need robust workflows and reporting. The watch-out is that the full suite can get expensive and complex, so start with the channels you actually use. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a Zendesk integration or app that surfaces order history in the agent workspace.

Best Magento shipping and fulfillment integrations

These integrations connect Magento to carriers, rate engines, and warehouse or 3PL systems so customers see accurate delivery options and orders flow to fulfillment automatically. The order delivery experience starts the moment the rate appears at checkout, so accuracy here protects both margin and trust. Sync tracking numbers back to Magento and the customer, not just outbound orders, so support is not left guessing.

20. ShipStation

ShipStation is a multi-carrier shipping platform that brands use to compare rates, print labels, and automate fulfillment across carriers. Connected to Magento, it imports orders, applies rules to pick carriers and services, and writes tracking back to the store. It fits stores shipping across multiple carriers or warehouses. The watch-out is that automation rules need maintenance as your carrier mix changes. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a ShipStation integration that pulls orders and pushes tracking updates. Shippo and EasyPost are strong alternatives for multi-carrier rating, alongside direct UPS, FedEx, and DHL accounts.

21. ShipBob

ShipBob is a third-party logistics provider with a fulfillment network and software for brands that outsource warehousing and delivery. Connected to Magento, it receives orders automatically and returns inventory levels and tracking so the store reflects real stock. It fits direct-to-consumer brands that want outsourced fulfillment with distributed warehouses. The watch-out is that you depend on a partner’s stock accuracy, so reconcile inventory regularly. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a ShipBob integration that syncs orders, inventory, and tracking both ways.

Best Magento POS and omnichannel integrations

POS and omnichannel integrations connect Magento to the point-of-sale systems that ring up in-store sales, so online and physical channels share one inventory pool, one customer record, and one view of every order. They matter most when you sell across a website and one or more stores and need stock, pricing, and loyalty to stay consistent everywhere. The watch-out across this category is the shared stock pool, so decide which system owns inventory before you connect, or the two channels will oversell the same units.

22. Lightspeed Retail

Lightspeed Retail is a cloud POS with strong omnichannel inventory features that retailers use to run physical stores alongside an online channel. Connected to Magento, it keeps stock, products, and customer records in sync so a sale in either channel updates the same inventory. It fits multi-store retailers that want one stock pool across the website and the shop floor. The watch-out is that you have to settle which system is the master for inventory and pricing up front, or the channels drift apart. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a maintained connector or an integration platform that maps products, stock, and orders both ways.

23. Square

Square is a popular POS for small and mid-market merchants that unifies in-person and online sales under one account. Connected to Magento, it syncs catalog, inventory, and order data so the storefront and the register reflect the same numbers. It fits brands that already run Square in-store and want their Magento catalog and stock aligned with it. The watch-out is that deeper, real-time inventory sync can need a third-party connector rather than a basic feed, so confirm the level of sync you need. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a marketplace connector or an integration platform that maps products, stock, and orders.

24. Magestore POS

Magestore POS is a Magento-native point-of-sale extension that runs in-store checkout directly on top of Adobe Commerce rather than syncing to an outside system. Because it shares the Magento catalog and order data, the store and the website work from one source of truth without a separate inventory bridge. It fits merchants that want their POS and eCommerce on the same platform and prefer to avoid a third-party POS. The watch-out is that an on-platform POS adds load and customization to your Magento build, so plan hosting and performance accordingly. It connects to Adobe Commerce natively as an extension that reads and writes the same catalog, stock, and orders. Brands that want to compare dedicated POS tools should also weigh options such as Lightspeed and Square against an on-platform approach.

Best Magento tax integrations

A tax integration calculates the correct rate at checkout and keeps you compliant across jurisdictions, which is one of the four money-moving systems you should connect early. For any store selling into multiple states or countries, an automated tax engine quickly pays for itself in avoided errors and audit risk. Validate the setup against your actual nexus footprint, since the engine only calculates what you configure it to.

25. Avalara

Avalara AvaTax is a tax automation engine that calculates US sales tax, VAT, and cross-border duties in real time and supports filing. Connected to Magento, it returns the correct rate at checkout based on address and product taxability, so finance is not reconciling rates by hand. It fits multi-state, multi-country, or marketplace sellers. The watch-out is that accurate results depend on correct tax codes and nexus configuration. It connects to Adobe Commerce through Avalara’s official extension that calls AvaTax at checkout. Vertex and TaxJar are the other standard choices in this category.

Best Magento analytics and CDP integrations

Analytics integrations send Magento behavior and transaction data into the tools that measure performance, so decisions rest on accurate numbers rather than gut feel. A customer data platform goes further by unifying every customer touchpoint into one profile that downstream tools can use. Measurement is fragile, so plan for server-side events early rather than retrofitting them after the data looks wrong.

26. Google Analytics 4

Google Analytics 4 (GA4) is the standard web and app analytics platform, with event-based measurement and free reporting. Connected to Magento, it tracks product views, add-to-carts, and purchases for funnel and attribution analysis. It fits every store that wants reliable reporting at no license cost. The watch-out is that browser and ad-blocker loss degrades client-side data, so pair it with server-side tracking and Google Tag Manager. It connects to Adobe Commerce through GA4 tagging, often via the enhanced eCommerce data layer and GTM. Adobe Analytics and warehouses such as BigQuery or Snowflake extend this for blended reporting.

27. Segment

Segment is a customer data platform that collects events once and routes them to many downstream tools, so analytics, marketing, and warehouses share one clean stream. Connected to Magento, it captures storefront and order events and forwards them to destinations like GA4, Klaviyo, or a data warehouse. It fits brands with a growing stack that want consistent data instead of duplicate tracking in every tool. The watch-out is that a clear tracking plan matters, since a messy event schema spreads everywhere at once. It connects to Adobe Commerce through a Segment source that emits events server-side or client-side.

Native vs third-party Magento integrations: how to decide

Native or marketplace-vendor connectors win on total cost of ownership when they cover your use case, because someone else maintains them through Magento upgrades. A custom build earns its keep only when your logic is genuinely unusual or performance-critical.

Most stores end up with a blend: native extensions for common tools, an integration platform for the heavy ERP and order flows, and a small amount of custom code where the business is differentiated. The mistake is defaulting to custom everywhere, which turns every Magento upgrade into a regression-testing marathon. Extensions that add features on the platform itself are a separate category from these connectors, and our roundup of the best Magento 2 extensions covers those store add-ons.

Approach Best for Trade-off
Native or marketplace extension Common tools with a maintained connector Less flexible if your logic is unusual
Integration platform (iPaaS) ERP, order, and multi-system flows Subscription cost and a learning curve
Custom build Differentiated or performance-critical logic Highest maintenance and upgrade burden
Choosing between native connectors, an integration platform, and custom development.

Common Magento integration pitfalls

The failure rate here is real. Industry research cited by Integrate.io reports that 84 percent of system-integration projects fail or only partially succeed, usually for predictable reasons.

  • No system of record. Two systems both think they own the price or stock, and they drift apart.
  • No retry or queue. One outage drops orders instead of replaying them when the ERP returns.
  • Connector sprawl. Every team adds its own tool until nobody can map the data flow.
  • Ignoring upgrades. Custom integrations break on the next Magento release because no one budgeted for maintenance.
  • Skipping observability. Without monitoring, you learn about a broken sync from an angry customer, not a dashboard.

If you are weighing whether Adobe Commerce is still the right home for this stack, our analysis of whether Magento is dying looks at the platform’s trajectory with current data, and our Magento vs Shopify comparison covers how the two handle complex integration needs differently.

What to do before adding the next Magento integration

Before connecting one more system, confirm the basics so the new pipe strengthens the stack instead of adding fragility.

  • Name the system of record for every field the integration touches.
  • Decide the sync frequency and method (real-time, near-real-time, or batch).
  • Check for a maintained native connector before scoping custom work.
  • Define the failure mode and add retry or queue logic for anything that moves money or orders.
  • Set up monitoring and alerting so a broken sync surfaces immediately.
  • Document the data map so the next person can support it.

Done in this order, integrations compound into an operations advantage. Done ad hoc, they compound into technical debt. If the stack is already sprawling, our integration team can audit what you run and consolidate it into one layer.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Magento integration?

A Magento integration is a connection that lets Adobe Commerce exchange data with another system, such as an ERP, CRM, payment gateway, or carrier, so a single event updates every system that needs it.

Can Magento integrate with ERP systems?

Yes. Magento connects with ERP systems, including SAP Business One, NetSuite, and Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central, usually through a maintained connector or an integration platform such as Jitterbit, Celigo, or Workato.

Is Magento a CMS or a CRM?

Neither. Magento (Adobe Commerce) is an eCommerce platform. It includes content management features for product and page content, but it is not a CRM, which is why most stores integrate a dedicated CRM such as Salesforce or HubSpot.

What are the most important Magento integrations to set up first?

Start with the four systems that move money and inventory: ERP, payment gateway, tax engine, and fulfillment. These keep orders, stock, and finance accurate before you layer on marketing, analytics, and search.

How many integrations does a typical Magento store need?

There is no fixed number. Mid-market companies use around 101 SaaS apps on average per 2025 data, but only a handful need a permanent connection to Magento. Connect what moves money, inventory, or customer data, and resist adding extras that do not earn one.

Should I use a native extension or a custom integration?

Use a maintained native or marketplace connector when one covers your use case, since it survives upgrades for you. Reserve custom development for logic that is genuinely unusual or performance-critical, and use an integration platform for heavy ERP and order flows.

How do I keep inventory accurate across Magento and other systems?

Designate one system of record for stock, sync in near-real-time or real-time for fast-moving SKUs, and add retry logic so an outage replays orders rather than dropping them. POS and omnichannel setups need a single shared stock pool.

Want an integration layer that holds under real volume? Talk to scandiweb to plan your integration stack and connect your Magento store the right way.

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EU Law Requires Online Shops to Add a Compliant Withdrawal Button https://scandiweb.com/blog/eu-withdrawal-button/ Wed, 24 Jun 2026 13:24:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=25196 The EU withdrawal button is mandatory from 19 June 2026. Learn what it must do, who it applies to, and how to add it to your store.

The post EU Law Requires Online Shops to Add a Compliant Withdrawal Button appeared first on scandiweb.

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If you have been getting compliance alerts about the new EU withdrawal button and you are not sure whether it applies to your store, what a compliant one looks like, or how to get one built, you are not the only one.

As of 19 June 2026, online stores selling to consumers in the EU must provide shoppers with a simple way to cancel an eligible order online, and many stores still do not have a working version. Let’s walk through who the EU withdrawal button applies to, what a compliant one must do, the penalties for getting it wrong, and how to add one to your store on any platform.

What is the EU withdrawal button?

The EU withdrawal button is an online function that online stores must give consumers so they can cancel an eligible distance purchase within the 14-day cooling-off period. It was introduced by Directive (EU) 2023/2673, which added Article 11a to the Consumer Rights Directive, and it applies across the EU from 19 June 2026. The button has to be clearly labeled, easy to find, and available throughout the withdrawal period.

In plain terms, the right of withdrawal is not new. EU shoppers have long had 14 days to change their mind about most online purchases. What changed is how they exercise it. Until now, a customer could withdraw by sending any clear statement, often a form or an email. The new rule says that if a store lets people buy through an online interface, it also has to let them withdraw through one, with no extra friction.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The right of withdrawal already existed. The button is about the mechanics of using it online, which is exactly the part stores now have to build.

Who has to add one, and the “financial services only” myth

Here is the point most merchants get wrong. Directive (EU) 2023/2673 is best known for overhauling the rules on distance marketing of financial services, so a common assumption is that the withdrawal button is a banking and insurance problem. It is not. The same directive added Article 11a to the general Consumer Rights Directive, and that article reaches almost every online store.

The requirement covers B2C distance contracts for goods, services, digital content, and financial services concluded through an online interface. A fashion retailer, a furniture brand, a SaaS subscription, and a lender are all in scope.

If shoppers in the EU can buy from you online, and the purchase carries a right of withdrawal, you need a compliant withdrawal button. It applies across all 27 EU member states from 19 June 2026: Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, and Sweden. This corner of EU consumer law has been moving quickly, and the same period brought new transparency duties under the EU AI Act for online stores.

🚀 Quick takeaway

If you read “financial services directive” and assumed you were exempt, re-check. Article 11a applies to ordinary online stores selling ordinary products.

Do non-EU stores selling into the EU need one?

Yes. The requirement follows the consumer, not the trader’s location. A store outside the EU that sells to EU consumers through an online interface has to provide a compliant withdrawal button for contracts that include a right of withdrawal, just like an EU-based store. A US or UK brand shipping into Germany or France cannot opt out by pointing at its headquarters.

What a compliant withdrawal button must do

A compliant withdrawal button has to do five things: be clearly labeled (for example, “withdraw from contract here”), stay visible and reachable throughout the withdrawal period, let the consumer give their name and identify the contract, take a separate confirmation step before submitting, and trigger an acknowledgment of receipt on a durable medium that records the content and the date and time. Withdrawing must be no harder than buying.

Each of those carries a detail that decides whether your setup passes or fails. The sections below break down the three that stores most often get wrong.

Where the button has to appear

The withdrawal function must be prominent, clearly labeled, and continuously available throughout the withdrawal period. It can’t be buried in a confirmation email or shown once after checkout. In practice, that means a persistent entry point a customer can reach at any time during the 14 days. The customer account area is the natural home for it, and many stores also expose it from the footer or a dedicated page so a logged-out customer can find it too.

The label matters as much as the placement. It has to be unambiguous, along the lines of “withdraw from contract here.” Germany, the first market to transpose the directive into national law as Section 356a of its Civil Code (BGB), confirms a useful detail: the law does not strictly require an HTML button. A clearly labeled link can satisfy the requirement, as long as the wording and visibility are right.

The two-step withdrawal flow

The flow is deliberately two-step:

  1. In the first step, the consumer enters or confirms their name, identifies the contract they want to withdraw from, and gives an electronic contact address for the confirmation.
  2. In the second step, a separate action, labeled something like “confirm withdrawal,” actually submits the request. The split protects both sides: it prevents accidental withdrawals, and it gives the store a clear record of intent.

What you cannot do is add friction that the law does not allow. You cannot force the customer to state a reason, log in through an obstacle course, or call a hotline first. The guiding principle behind Article 11a is that withdrawing has to be no more burdensome than buying. If it takes a couple of clicks to place the order, it should take roughly the same number of clicks to undo it.

The confirmation on a durable medium

The moment a customer submits a withdrawal, your system has to send an acknowledgment of receipt without undue delay, on a durable medium, which in practice means email. That acknowledgment is not a courtesy. It has to reproduce the content of the withdrawal declaration and record the date and time it was received.

This is the requirement that trips up bolt-on tools. A widget that shows a “thanks, we got it” screen but never issues a timestamped record on a durable medium is not compliant. The confirmation is your evidence trail and the customer’s proof, so it has to be automatic and accurate every time.

🚀 Quick takeaway

If your withdrawal flow ends on a thank-you page instead of a timestamped email, it is not finished. The durable-medium confirmation is part of the legal requirement.

What the withdrawal button does not change

Adding the button does not change the 14-day withdrawal period, and omitting the button does not by itself extend every return window to 12 months. The up-to-12-month extension is a separate, older rule that applies when a trader fails to give consumers the required information about their right of withdrawal. The button is about how consumers exercise that right online.

The “miss the button, owe everyone 12 months of returns” line is repeated a lot, and it is not accurate. A missing button is its own problem, with its own penalties, which we get to below. But the headline risk people cite actually comes from failing to inform customers about the right of withdrawal in the first place, which is a duty stores have had for years.

Which products and contracts are exempt

Some contracts carry no statutory right of withdrawal, so they do not need the button. Typical exemptions include custom-made or bespoke goods, perishable goods, sealed hygiene or health products once unsealed, and sealed audio, video, or software once opened. Services that have been fully performed with the customer’s prior consent, and certain financial services, also fall outside the standard right.

The catch is that most stores do not sell only exempt items. A catalog that mixes returnable products with a few exempt lines still needs per-product logic, so the right of withdrawal and the button are offered wherever they apply and withheld only where they genuinely do not.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Exemptions are decided per product, not per store. “Some of my range is exempt” does not mean your store is exempt.

Penalties for getting it wrong

Non-compliance carries real exposure. Under the EU cross-border enforcement regime, fines can reach 4% of annual turnover in the affected markets. National maximums also differ: Germany allows up to €50,000, France up to €75,000, and Italy up to €10 million, on top of cease-and-desist letters, injunctions, and claims from competitors who can treat your non-compliance as an unfair advantage.

Germany, which transposed the directive as Section 356a BGB, is the market to watch first. Its cease-and-desist culture means competitors and consumer associations are expected to send warning letters, called Abmahnungen, within days of the deadline, which tends to surface non-compliance fast.

Beyond the fines, there is the operational cost of getting it wrong quietly. Cease-and-desist letters take legal time to answer, an injunction can force an urgent fix on someone else’s timeline, and a public compliance stumble is not the look any brand wants in front of its customers.

How to implement the withdrawal button on your store

Implementing the withdrawal button means more than dropping a link on a page. You need:

  • Labeled entry point available throughout the withdrawal period
  • Two-step form that captures the consumer and the contract
  • Automatic confirmation sent on a durable medium with a timestamp
  • Connection into order management and returns so the request is actioned.

How you build each piece depends on your platform.

On Shopify

On Shopify, a compliant setup usually means either a vetted app or a custom Shopify development build, wired into the customer account area and your transactional emails. Apps get you live quickly, but check that the one you pick actually issues the timestamped durable-medium confirmation and handles your exemptions, rather than just rendering a form. The store remains responsible for compliance.

On Magento (Adobe Commerce)

On Magento (Adobe Commerce), the button is typically a custom module tied into the account area, the returns or RMA flow, and a transactional email that carries the timestamped acknowledgment. Magento’s flexibility is an advantage here, because you can model the withdrawal as a first-class event that updates order state and triggers downstream processes. This is work our Magento support team handles directly.

On headless and custom builds

On a headless or custom stack, the withdrawal function is a frontend component plus an API endpoint and a service that issues the durable-medium confirmation. The main decision is where the withdrawal state is and how it propagates, so the request reliably reaches your commerce backend and your returns process. Done well, this is the cleanest setup of the three, because you control every step.

Connecting it to order management and returns

This is the part button-only tools tend to skip. A withdrawal is not finished when the form is submitted. The request has to flow into order management → pause or reverse fulfillment where possible → open the corresponding return → and start the refund clock, since the law expects refunds without undue delay.

If the button does not connect to the systems that actually process the cancellation, you have automated the customer’s half of the job and left your team to do the rest by hand.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The button is the visible 10%. The compliant, durable confirmation and the link into order management and returns are the 90% that decides whether the flow actually works.

How scandiweb makes your store compliant

scandiweb adds a compliant withdrawal button to your store fast. A standard setup goes live in one day, and most stores are fully compliant within days, on whatever platform you run: Shopify, Magento (Adobe Commerce), WooCommerce, BigCommerce, Salesforce Commerce, or a custom or headless build.

Here is what you get:

  • An on-page withdrawal button in the local language the directive requires, on every page, and reachable without a login
  • A two-step confirmation that shows the order details, then a separate confirm step, with no forced reason field
  • Instant confirmation of receipt, sent on a durable medium and time-stamped the moment a withdrawal is submitted
  • Guest orders covered, for logged-in customers and guests alike, with no new passwords for your shoppers
  • A full audit log that records every withdrawal, so you can show you complied if anyone asks
  • Control of refunds kept with your team, because nothing is auto-refunded and every request is approved and triaged in one queue
  • Updated cancellation-policy documentation to match the new flow.

Frequently asked questions about the EU withdrawal button

What is the EU withdrawal button?

The EU withdrawal button is an online function that lets consumers cancel an eligible distance purchase within the 14-day cooling-off period. It comes from Directive (EU) 2023/2673, which added Article 11a to the Consumer Rights Directive, and it applies across the EU from 19 June 2026. The button must be clearly labeled, easy to find, and available throughout the withdrawal period.

When did the EU withdrawal button become mandatory?

It applies from 19 June 2026. EU member states had to write Directive (EU) 2023/2673 into national law by 19 December 2025, and the withdrawal-button obligation took effect for online stores on 19 June 2026. Stores selling to EU consumers were expected to have a compliant button in place by that date.

Does the EU withdrawal button apply to all online shops or only financial services?

It applies to almost all online shops, well beyond financial services. The rule covers business-to-consumer distance contracts for goods, services, digital content, and financial services concluded online. The financial-services-only belief is a common misreading of the directive. If you sell online to EU consumers and the purchase carries a right of withdrawal, the requirement applies to you.

Where does the withdrawal button need to appear?

It must be prominent, clearly labeled, and continuously available throughout the withdrawal period, not hidden after checkout. In practice that means a persistent, easy-to-find entry point, for example in the customer account area and reachable from relevant pages, so a consumer can start a withdrawal at any point during the 14 days.

Does a missing withdrawal button extend the return period to 12 months?

Not by itself. The standard 14-day withdrawal period still applies. The up-to-12-month extension is a separate, older rule that applies when a trader fails to give consumers the required information about their right of withdrawal. The button governs how consumers exercise that right online, not how long it lasts, though a missing button still carries fines and other penalties.

Which products are exempt from the withdrawal button requirement?

Contracts with no statutory right of withdrawal do not need the button. Typical exemptions include custom-made or bespoke goods, perishable goods, sealed hygiene or health products once unsealed, and sealed audio, video, or software once opened. If a store sells both returnable and exempt lines, it still needs per-product logic so the right of withdrawal is offered where it applies.

Getting your store compliant

The EU withdrawal button is now part of selling to European consumers. A compliant one needs a labeled entry point that stays available for the full 14 days, a clean two-step flow, a timestamped confirmation on a durable medium, exemption logic that is right per product, and a connection into the order and returns systems that actually process the cancellation. scandiweb can put all of that live on your store in days, on whatever platform you run.

Tell us your platform, your markets, and where your store is today, and we will scope the work, give you a timeline, and get you compliant across the EU. Get in touch today, and we will respond within one business day.

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How to Export Orders in Magento 2: CSV, XML, and Automation https://scandiweb.com/blog/how-to-export-orders-magento-2/ Tue, 23 Jun 2026 10:37:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24953 Magento export orders: step-by-step CSV and XML export from the admin grid, scheduled and automated exports, plus the native limits to know.

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“How do I get my order data out of Magento?” is one of the most common questions a store admin types the moment finance asks for a sales report or invoice from last quarter, or the warehouse needs something. The good news is that Magento (Adobe Commerce) gives you several ways to do it. The trick is knowing which method fits the job, because the fastest one is also the most limited.

In this guide, we’ll walk through every practical route to export orders in Magento 2, from the two-click admin grid export to scheduled, automated feeds and a developer-level programmatic approach. You will also see exactly where native export is no longer sufficient so you do not discover a missing column after the report has already been sent.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The native Magento 2 admin export (Sales > Orders > Export to CSV or XML) is instant and free, but it only captures the columns shown in the order grid. For line items, full addresses, payment details, or a recurring feed into your ERP, you need an export extension or a custom programmatic export.

What does exporting orders in Magento 2 mean?

Exporting orders means pulling order records out of your store database into a portable file, usually CSV or XML, so the data can be read, analyzed, or loaded into another system. It is the bridge between Magento and the tools that run the rest of your business.

In practice, merchants export orders for a handful of recurring reasons: feeding accounting and ERP systems, sending fulfillment data to a warehouse or third-party logistics partner, building sales reports, reconciling payments, or migrating to a new setup. Each use case has a different bar for completeness, which is why one export method rarely covers everything.

Why getting order export right matters to the business

Magento and Adobe Commerce still power roughly 8% of the global eCommerce platform market and serve close to 20% of the top 1,000 US retailers, according to 2026 market data compiled by MGT-Commerce. The brands running on it tend to be mid-market and enterprise, where a single botched export can stall fulfillment or throw off a financial close.

The stakes are higher in B2B. Industry data reported across 2026 shows B2B stores on Magento carry an average order value around 2.5 times that of B2C, so each order record often represents thousands of dollars and a complex set of line items, tax rules, and account terms.

Clean, reliable exports protect:

  • Accuracy of your reporting
  • Speed of your fulfillment
  • Trust other teams place in the data.

Magento 2 Sales Orders grid with checkboxes selected and Export dropdown showing CSV and XML

How do I export orders from the Magento 2 admin?

The fastest way to export orders is the native admin grid: go to Sales > Orders, select the orders you want, choose CSV or XML from the Export dropdown, and download; no extension required.

Here is the full sequence:

Prerequisites

  • Admin access with permission to view the Sales > Orders grid.
  • A spreadsheet tool (Excel, Google Sheets, Numbers) or the target system that will read the file.
  • A clear idea of the date range, status, or store view you need, so you do not export the entire order history by accident.

Step 1: Open the Orders grid

From the admin sidebar, go to Sales > Orders. This grid lists every order across your store views, with columns for ID, purchase date, status, customer, grand total, and more.

Step 2: Filter and choose your columns

Use the Filters button to narrow by date range, order status, store view, or customer group. Then open the Columns control to add or hide fields. This matters: the export captures only the columns currently visible in the grid, so add anything you need (billing name, payment method, shipping method) before you export.

Step 3: Select the orders

Tick the checkboxes for the orders you want, or use Select All to grab every order that matches your current filter. The grid is paginated, so confirm you are selecting across all pages rather than just the page on screen.

Step 4: Export to CSV or XML

Open the Export dropdown at the top right of the grid, choose CSV or XML (Excel), and click Export. Magento generates the file and downloads it to your browser. CSV is the right default for spreadsheets and most accounting imports. XML suits structured, hierarchical data and some integration tools.

Step 5: Verify the file

Open the file and confirm the row count matches your filter, and the columns you expected are present. If the download does not appear, clear the cache under System > Cache Management and try again.

What are the limits of the native Magento order export?

The native export only includes the order grid columns. It does not include line item details, full shipping and billing addresses, or payment method specifics, so it is best for quick lists.

A few specifics worth knowing before you rely on it:

  • No line items – you get the order total, not the individual products, SKUs, or quantities inside each order. Warehouses and ERPs usually need the line detail
  • Flattened data only – one row per order. Anything that is a one-to-many relationship (products, status history, multiple addresses) does not fit cleanly
  • Manual and on-demand – every export is a person clicking a button. There is no built-in schedule, no automatic delivery to an SFTP server or your finance system
  • Performance on large grids – exporting tens of thousands of orders at once can time out on stores that have not been tuned for it.

If your export needs stop at “give me a list of recent orders and totals,” the native tool is perfect. The moment you need product-level data, automation, or delivery somewhere other than your own download folder, move up to one of the methods below.

How do I export orders automatically on a schedule?

To export orders automatically, install an order export extension that supports scheduled exports via Magento cron, then configure an export profile that runs on a recurring interval and delivers the file by SFTP, FTP, email, or API.

Extensions such as Amasty Export Orders, XTENTO Order Export, Mageworx, and Firebear run alongside Magento and add three things the native export lacks: full field mapping (including line items and third-party fields), filtering rules, and automated delivery on a schedule.

Diagram of a scheduled Magento order export running on cron to SFTP, email, and ERP

The typical setup with an export extension

  1. Install the extension via Composer and run the standard upgrade and compile commands, or have your developer or support partner handle it
  2. Create an export profile, name it, choose the entity (orders), and pick the output format (CSV, XML, or a custom template)
  3. Map your fields by selecting exactly which order, customer, line item, and address fields go into the file, and renaming headers to match the target system
  4. Set filters – limit by order status, store view, date range, or customer group so each run exports only the relevant orders
  5. Schedule and deliver. Set the cron interval (hourly, daily, on order placement) and the destination: SFTP, FTP, email, or a REST endpoint on the receiving system
  6. Test once manually, confirm the file lands correctly, then let cron take over.

Done well, this turns order export from a daily chore into a feed your finance, fulfillment, and analytics teams can rely on without touching the admin. For stores that connect Magento to an ERP, OMS, or marketplace, this overlaps heavily with broader data integration work, where the export is one half of a two-way sync that keeps Magento inventory management aligned with each order that ships.

Magento order export methods compared

Method Best for Data depth Automation Skill needed
Native admin export (CSV/XML) Quick lists, ad hoc reports Grid columns only Manual Any admin user
Export extension Recurring feeds, ERP, and 3PL delivery Full, incl. line items and custom fields Scheduled via cron Admin plus setup
Programmatic export (REST API or script) Real-time and bespoke integrations Anything in the database Event- or schedule-driven Developer
A quick comparison of the three main ways to export orders in Magento 2

How do developers export Magento orders programmatically?

Developers export orders programmatically by querying order data through Magento’s repositories or the REST API (for example, the GET /rest/V1/orders endpoint) and writing it to a file or pushing it to another system in code.

This is the most flexible route and the one to reach for when no extension fits the exact shape of data a partner system demands. Common patterns include:

  • REST API pulls. The orders endpoint with search criteria filters returns full order objects, including items and addresses, as JSON for a downstream service to consume in near real time.
  • A custom CLI command or cron job. A small module uses OrderRepositoryInterface and a search criteria builder to fetch orders, then writes a CSV or XML file to a defined directory or SFTP target.
  • Event observers. An observer on an order event (for example, when an order is placed or invoiced) appends that order to an export queue, so the feed stays current without a full re-export.

The same techniques extend beyond orders. Teams that ask how to export products programmatically in Magento 2 use the equivalent product repositories and the catalog import/export framework, often to keep a PIM or marketplace listing in sync. The principle is identical: query the right entity, shape the output, and deliver it on a trigger.

Programmatic export gives you total control, but it is also code your team has to maintain through every Magento upgrade. If you do not have in-house Magento engineers, a managed eCommerce support partner can build and own the export job so it does not break the next time you patch.

How to choose the right export method

Pick the method by matching how often you need to export and how complete the data has to be. A short decision guide:

  • One-off list or simple report? Use the native admin export to CSV; it costs nothing and takes two clicks
  • Recurring feed to an ERP, 3PL, or finance tool, with line items? Use an export extension with a scheduled profile and SFTP or email delivery
  • Real-time sync or a data shape no extension supports? Build a programmatic export through the REST API or a custom module
  • Migrating platforms or building a long-term integration? Treat export as part of a wider architecture decision.

Start with the native export to confirm the fields you need, then graduate to automation only when manual exports become a recurring tax on someone’s week.

Frequently asked questions

How do I export all orders from Magento 2?

Go to Sales > Orders, clear any filters so the grid shows the full order history, use Select All across all pages, then choose CSV or XML from the Export dropdown and click Export. For very large stores, an extension or programmatic export handles the volume more reliably.

How do I export Magento 2 orders to CSV?

In the Sales > Orders grid, select the orders, open the Export dropdown, choose CSV, and click Export. Magento generates a comma-separated file with one row per order containing the columns currently shown in the grid.

Why are line items and product details missing from my export?

The native admin export only includes order grid columns, so it omits individual line items, full addresses, and payment specifics. To capture that detail, use an order export extension or a programmatic export through the REST API or a custom module.

Can I export Magento orders automatically on a schedule?

Not with the native tool. To schedule exports you install an export extension that runs on Magento cron, or build a custom cron job, then configure a profile to deliver the file by SFTP, FTP, email, or API on a set interval.

Where do exported order files go?

Native admin exports download straight to your browser’s default download folder. Scheduled and programmatic exports write to wherever you configure them, typically an SFTP or FTP server, an email recipient, or a directory inside your Magento install.

Can I export products programmatically in Magento 2 too?

Yes. Developers use the product repositories and the catalog import/export framework, or the REST catalog endpoints, to export product data on a trigger or schedule. It mirrors the order export approach and is often used to keep a PIM or marketplace feed in sync.

What is the best way to export orders for an ERP integration?

For an ERP, use a scheduled export with full field mapping (orders, line items, addresses, payment, and tax) delivered to an SFTP location or API the ERP can consume. An export extension covers most cases, and a programmatic export handles bespoke or real-time requirements.

Want your order data, on your terms, flowing into the systems that run your business? Our team can automate your exports and keep them reliable through every Magento upgrade.

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Magento vs Oracle Commerce Cloud: Enterprise Platform Comparison https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-vs-oracle-commerce-cloud/ Mon, 22 Jun 2026 10:28:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24965 Magento vs Oracle Commerce compared for enterprises: cost, lock-in, B2B, integrations, and time-to-value to help you pick the right platform.

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Store Leads tracks roughly 211 active Oracle CX Commerce storefronts going into 2026, while Magento and Adobe Commerce still power well over 100,000 live stores. If you are weighing Magento vs Oracle Commerce for an enterprise build, that gap is the first thing worth understanding, because it tells you which platform the wider market keeps betting on, and why.

This comparison is written for heads of eCommerce, CTOs, and CMOs evaluating two very different bets. Magento (Adobe Commerce) is an open, extensible commerce platform. Oracle Commerce, delivered as Oracle CX Commerce in the cloud, is a heavyweight enterprise suite built to be bought as part of the Oracle stack. We’ll break down cost, flexibility, B2B depth, integration with your wider systems, payments, SEO, and time-to-value.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Oracle Commerce gives large Oracle-stack enterprises a bundled, vendor-managed suite. Magento (Adobe Commerce) delivers comparable enterprise capability with far more flexibility, a deeper partner and extension ecosystem, and a more controllable total cost of ownership. Magento is usually the stronger long-term bet.

Magento vs Oracle Commerce: the key differences

Both platforms can run large, complex, global stores. Oracle Commerce is a closed enterprise suite designed to be configured and consumed. Magento is an open platform designed to be extended and owned. That single distinction is the most important one.

The commerce-cloud market is growing fast, raising the stakes for platform choice. Mordor Intelligence values the commerce cloud market at roughly $36.32 billion in 2025, growing at about 16.47% CAGR toward $77.83 billion by 2030. Picking a platform you can evolve at that pace matters more than picking the one with the longest feature checklist on day one.

Category Magento (Adobe Commerce) Oracle Commerce (CX Commerce)
Model Open-source core and extensible, with free Open Source or licensed Adobe Commerce Proprietary enterprise SaaS suite, sold within the Oracle stack
Typical buyer Mid-market to enterprise brands wanting control Large enterprises standardized on Oracle ERP and CX
Cost model Tiered: free Open Source, or Adobe Commerce license scaled to GMV plus build and hosting Usage-based subscription, commonly $180k to $600k+ per year
Customization Full code access, large extension marketplace Configuration within Oracle’s framework, limited deep customization
Lock-in Low to moderate, with portable code and data High, tied to Oracle contracts and ecosystem
B2B Native B2B in Adobe Commerce, with quoting, company accounts, shared catalogs Strong built-in B2B and account automation
Ecosystem Thousands of extensions, large global partner network Smaller, Oracle-centric partner pool
Time-to-value Fast with accelerators and a ready partner, flexible scope Slower, heavier implementations tied to suite rollout
High-level comparison of Magento (Adobe Commerce) and Oracle Commerce for enterprise buyers

Cost and licensing: what you actually pay over time

Oracle Commerce uses usage-based subscription pricing with steep minimum commitments. According to Redress Compliance, mid-sized retailers commonly start near $180,000 per year before usage charges, and full enterprise deployments often land in the $400,000 to $600,000 range annually, with list-price tiers reaching higher. That fee bundles hosting and platform updates, but it is a fixed floor you pay regardless of how much of the suite you use.

Magento offers a wider cost spectrum. Magento Open Source is free to license, so your spend goes into build, hosting, and maintenance. Adobe Commerce adds a license that scales with gross merchandise value, plus the same build and operations costs. Industry analysis from Adobe partners typically puts Adobe Commerce license fees in the range of $22,000 to $125,000 per year depending on revenue band, well below Oracle’s enterprise floor for comparable scale. The practical effect is that you can right-size the investment to your stage, and you control where the money goes rather than handing a vendor a flat enterprise minimum.

Which platform has the lower total cost of ownership?

For most brands, Magento has the lower and more controllable total cost of ownership. Oracle’s high subscription floor makes sense only when you are already deep in the Oracle ecosystem and using the suite heavily. Otherwise you pay enterprise minimums for capability you may not consume.

The nuance competitors skip is that total cost of ownership is not just license. With Magento you choose your hosting, your partner, and your extension stack, which means you can optimize each line. With Oracle, more of the stack is fixed, so your ability to trim cost over time is narrower. If you want a structured way to score this across vendors, our guide on choosing an enterprise eCommerce platform walks through the full TCO model.

Flexibility and lock-in: who owns your roadmap?

Magento’s open-source foundation means you have full access to the code. Your team, or your agency, can modify checkout, build custom catalog logic, integrate any system, and adapt the storefront to your brand without waiting on a vendor’s release cycle. Adobe Commerce layers managed services and B2B features on top, but the underlying openness remains.

Oracle Commerce is the opposite trade. You work within Oracle’s framework, configuring what the suite exposes. That can speed up a standard rollout, but it constrains the unusual requirements that almost every serious merchant eventually hits. When the platform cannot do something, your options are a workaround or a vendor request.

Lock-in compounds this. Oracle contracts, data formats, and tight coupling to the broader Oracle stack make leaving expensive and slow. Magento’s portable codebase and open data model keep your exit ramp clear, which is exactly the leverage you want at renewal time. For a sense of how that openness plays against another cloud-native rival, see our commercetools vs Adobe Commerce breakdown.

Also read: Salesforce Commerce Cloud vs Magento.

What does the exit path look like?

Leaving a platform is rarely about the storefront alone. It is about catalog data, customer records, order history, price lists, and the custom logic wired into checkout and fulfillment. With Magento, those assets live in an open database schema you control, so a partner can export, transform, and re-platform them on a predictable timeline. The code is yours to take.

With Oracle Commerce, the data still belongs to you, but it is shaped by Oracle’s proprietary models and entangled with adjacent Oracle products such as CPQ and ERP. Untangling those dependencies, re-mapping data, and rebuilding integrations on a new stack adds time and cost that rarely shows up in the original business case. Planning the exit before you sign is the cheapest insurance you can buy, and a structured re-platforming approach starts with a clean data and dependency audit rather than a feature wishlist.

B2B capabilities: depth where it counts

Both platforms take B2B seriously, which is why this category is closer than the rest. Oracle Commerce brings strong built-in account management, automation, and integration with Oracle’s CPQ and ERP tooling, a real advantage if your business already runs on Oracle systems.

Adobe Commerce answers with native B2B functionality built into the platform: company accounts and hierarchies, custom catalogs and price lists, requisition lists, negotiable quotes, and self-service account management. Because it is open, you can extend any of these to match unusual contract or approval workflows rather than bending your process to fit the suite.

Is Magento good enough for enterprise B2B?

Yes. Adobe Commerce includes a mature native B2B feature set, and its open architecture lets you tailor quoting, approvals, and catalog rules to complex buying organizations. For most B2B sellers, the deciding factor is how easily the platform bends to their specific process, where Magento has the edge.

The trade-off mirrors the broader theme. Oracle gives you B2B power that is excellent if you live inside Oracle. Magento gives you B2B power you can reshape, with a global partner network ready to build it. If B2B is your core, our breakdown of the Adobe Commerce B2B features shows what an open platform can deliver out of the box.

Integration with your wider stack

No enterprise store runs alone. It connects to ERP, PIM, CRM, OMS, marketing, search, and payment systems. Oracle Commerce integrates most smoothly with other Oracle products, which is the entire point of the suite. Step outside Oracle and integrations become more bespoke and more dependent on Oracle’s connectors and roadmap.

Magento was built to integrate broadly. Its API-first architecture, large extension marketplace, and open codebase mean you can connect to almost any third-party system, including Oracle products if you happen to use them. You are not forced into one vendor’s idea of a stack, which is a meaningful advantage for brands that have grown by picking best-in-class tools.

This is the counter-trend point in practice. The bundled-suite promise is “everything in one place,” but real enterprises rarely have a single-vendor stack. The flexible platform that integrates with what you already run usually beats the suite that wants you to standardize on it.

Payments and checkout: conversion lives here

Checkout is where platform philosophy meets revenue. Oracle Commerce supports major gateways and shines when you route payments through Oracle’s own financial and ERP tooling, but bespoke checkout logic or a niche regional payment method means working within what the suite exposes.

Magento ships with broad payment support and a large gateway extension catalog, and because the checkout is open code, you can tune flows, add one-page or headless checkout, and wire in any acquirer or alternative payment method your markets demand. That control matters: Baymard Institute research puts the average documented cart-abandonment rate around 70%, and a meaningful share of that loss traces to checkout friction the platform makes hard to fix. Owning the checkout means you can test and remove that friction rather than file a feature request.

SEO and performance: the discoverability angle

Both platforms can rank, but the levers differ. Oracle Commerce handles standard SEO needs inside its framework, yet deeper control over URL structure, rendering, structured data, and Core Web Vitals is bounded by what the suite allows.

Magento gives you full control of the SEO surface: clean URL rules, metadata, canonical handling, schema markup, and the freedom to go headless or adopt a fast frontend such as Hyva for stronger Core Web Vitals. Since Google treats page experience as a ranking input and speed correlates directly with conversion, that control compounds over time. A focused SEO program on an open platform can adjust technical fundamentals without waiting on a vendor release, which is exactly the kind of iteration enterprise organic growth depends on.

Time-to-value and the market signal

Oracle implementations tend to be heavy, slower projects, often tied to a wider suite rollout. Magento can move faster, especially with accelerators, a proven partner, and a clear scope, because you are not waiting on a full-suite deployment to launch commerce.

The market reflects this. 6sense puts Oracle Commerce at roughly 2.93% of the eCommerce platform category, far behind the leaders, while Magento powers an estimated 8% of the global market and over 100,000 live stores.

To be fair to Oracle, Store Leads notes its CX Commerce store count grew about 27% year over year heading into 2026, so the suite is not stagnant among its enterprise base. The point is scale and momentum: Magento’s far larger footprint means more talent, more extensions, and more proven implementations to learn from.

Which should you choose, Magento or Oracle Commerce?

Both are credible enterprise platforms. The right answer depends on how committed you are to the Oracle ecosystem and how much flexibility your roadmap demands.

Choose Oracle Commerce if your organization is already standardized on Oracle ERP, CX, and related systems, you value a single-vendor bundled suite over flexibility, your requirements fit the suite’s configuration model, and a six-figure annual platform floor is acceptable in exchange for vendor-managed operations.

Choose Magento (Adobe Commerce) if you want enterprise capability without heavy lock-in, you need to customize deeply and integrate with a mixed best-of-breed stack, you want to control total cost of ownership and right-size your investment, and you value a large global partner and extension ecosystem and faster time-to-value.

For most brands seeking enterprise power they can own and evolve, Magento is the stronger choice. Oracle Commerce earns its place only when the Oracle-stack alignment is already deep and deliberate.

Frequently asked questions

What is the main difference between Magento and Oracle Commerce?

Magento is an open, extensible commerce platform you can fully customize and own, while Oracle Commerce is a closed enterprise suite designed to be configured and consumed within the Oracle ecosystem. Magento favors flexibility and control, while Oracle favors bundled, single-vendor operations.

Is Oracle Commerce more expensive than Magento?

Generally yes. Oracle Commerce carries high subscription minimums, commonly $180,000 to $600,000 or more per year per Redress Compliance, regardless of usage. Magento lets you right-size cost, from free Open Source licensing to an Adobe Commerce license scaled to your revenue, plus build and hosting you control.

Is Magento (Adobe Commerce) good for enterprise and B2B?

Yes. Adobe Commerce includes mature native B2B features such as company accounts, custom catalogs, negotiable quotes, and requisition lists, and its open architecture lets you tailor these to complex buying processes. It powers large global and B2B stores worldwide.

How hard is it to leave Oracle Commerce later?

It is significant. Oracle contracts, data formats, and tight coupling to the wider Oracle stack create meaningful lock-in. Magento’s portable codebase and open data model make migrating in or out far more straightforward, which protects your leverage over time.

Which platform integrates better with my existing systems?

Oracle Commerce integrates most smoothly with other Oracle products. Magento, being API-first and open, integrates broadly with almost any ERP, PIM, CRM, search, or payment system, including Oracle tools, making it the safer choice for mixed best-of-breed stacks.

Is Magento a dying platform?

No. Magento still powers over 100,000 live stores and an estimated 8% of the global eCommerce platform market. Its store count is consolidating around serious merchants rather than collapsing, and Adobe continues to invest in Adobe Commerce.

How long does a Magento build take compared to Oracle Commerce?

Magento projects can move faster, especially with accelerators, a proven partner, and a clear scope, because you are not tied to a full-suite rollout. Oracle implementations tend to be heavier and slower, often bundled into a broader Oracle suite deployment.

Want enterprise capability without the lock-in? Talk to scandiweb to weigh the enterprise options and map the right platform to your roadmap.

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Shopware vs Magento: Complete eCommerce Platform Comparison https://scandiweb.com/blog/shopware-vs-magento/ Fri, 19 Jun 2026 10:29:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24959 Shopware vs Magento compared on architecture, licensing, TCO, B2B, ecosystem, and talent, so you can pick the right platform with confidence.

The post Shopware vs Magento: Complete eCommerce Platform Comparison appeared first on scandiweb.

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You are weighing two open-source platforms that look similar on a feature checklist and feel completely different the moment your team starts building. Shopware and Magento (Adobe Commerce) both let you own the code, host where you like, and customize without asking a SaaS vendor for permission. The tension is that they pull from very different ecosystems, demand different talent, and carry different cost curves over three to five years. 

In this comparison, we’ll cover architecture, licensing and total cost of ownership, customization, B2B depth, ecosystem and talent availability, and performance.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Shopware is the modern, Symfony-based, API-first choice with strong roots in Europe and the DACH region, lighter infrastructure, and B2B features in the core. Magento (Adobe Commerce) is the heavier enterprise option with the largest global talent pool, the deepest extension marketplace, and the most mature native B2B suite. 

Shopware vs Magento: the key differences

Both are open-source PHP platforms, both can be self-hosted, and both target serious merchants.

  • Framework: Shopware runs on Symfony, a mainstream PHP framework with a large developer base. Magento uses its own framework, which is powerful but specialized.
  • Origin and reach: Shopware was built in Germany and is strongest across Europe and DACH. Magento has a larger global footprint and talent pool.
  • Licensing: Both offer a free open-source edition. Shopware’s paid tiers are published and predictable, while Adobe Commerce pricing is quote-based and tied to revenue.
  • B2B: Shopware offers B2B components in its commercial tiers. Magento’s native B2B suite, available with Adobe Commerce, is one of the most complete on the market.
Category Magento (Adobe Commerce) Shopware
Underlying framework Proprietary Magento framework, PHP 8.3+ Symfony 7, PHP 8.2+
Editions Magento Open Source (free), Adobe Commerce (paid) Community (free), Rise, Evolve, Beyond (paid)
Licensing model Quote-based, revenue-tiered Published monthly tiers plus custom enterprise
Strongest region Global, with deep North America and UK presence Europe and the DACH region
Native B2B Mature suite with Adobe Commerce B2B components in commercial tiers
Ecosystem size Largest extension marketplace and partner network Smaller but modern and fast-growing
Admin experience Deep and powerful, steeper learning curve Modern, closer to a SaaS feel
Infrastructure weight Heavier: search, cache, queue services Lighter baseline requirements
High-level comparison of Magento (Adobe Commerce) and Shopware

Architecture and developer experience

Shopware 6 is built on Symfony, one of the most widely used PHP frameworks, with an API-first core that makes headless builds and external integrations natural rather than bolt-on. Its app system runs customizations in a sandboxed layer, which keeps most extensions clear of the core and reduces the risk of an update breaking your store. For teams that already know modern PHP, the ramp is short.

Magento takes a different path. Its framework is proprietary and module-based, layering plugins and observers over a service stack that typically includes a database, OpenSearch or Elasticsearch, Redis, and a message queue such as RabbitMQ. That depth is exactly what lets large merchants model almost any business rule, but it also means more moving parts to host, tune, and maintain.

Which platform is easier for developers to work with?

Shopware is generally easier to onboard because Symfony skills are common, and the codebase is newer with less accumulated technical debt. Magento offers more depth and far more specialists, so complex requirements have more precedent to draw on.

If you are hiring from a broad talent market and want faster onboarding, Shopware’s Symfony foundation helps. If your roadmap includes deep, unusual customization and you want a partner who has solved similar problems many times, Magento’s maturity and the size of its specialist community work in your favor.

Licensing and total cost of ownership

This is where the two platforms diverge most clearly for a budget owner. Both have a free open-source edition, so the headline “free” is true on each side. The real cost lives in licensing, hosting, development, and ongoing maintenance.

Shopware publishes its commercial tiers, which makes forecasting straightforward. Industry pricing breakdowns from MGT-Commerce (April 2026) put Shopware’s Rise tier from roughly €600 per month, with mid-market annual TCO in the €22,000 to €55,000 range. Adobe Commerce, by contrast, is quote-based and scales with revenue, landing those same estimates at roughly €48,000 to €150,000 or more per year once licensing is included. Magento Open Source removes the license fee entirely, so its cost is dominated by hosting and development.

Bar chart comparing annual total cost of ownership for Shopware tiers, Magento Open Source, and Adobe Commerce

Which platform has the lower total cost of ownership?

For most mid-market merchants, Shopware Rise or Magento Open Source carry a lower total cost of ownership than Adobe Commerce, because they avoid revenue-based licensing. Adobe Commerce earns its premium when you genuinely use its enterprise features such as native B2B, advanced merchandising, and Adobe’s wider marketing stack.

The trap is comparing license fees alone. Hosting profile, extension licensing, and the day rate of the talent you can actually hire often move the three-to-five-year number more than the platform license does. We break the editions apart in detail in our Adobe Commerce vs Magento Open Source comparison, which is worth reading before you size a budget.

Customization and extensibility

Both platforms are built to be molded, and neither will box you in the way a closed SaaS tool does. The difference is in how customization is delivered and how safe it stays through upgrades.

Shopware’s app and plugin system keeps a clean line between your custom logic and the core, which makes updates less risky and the codebase easier to reason about over time. Magento’s plugin and module architecture reaches deeper into the platform, giving you near-total control of behavior at the cost of more careful upgrade planning. Both support headless and composable approaches if you want to decouple the storefront from the backend.

Magento’s extension marketplace is the larger of the two by a wide margin, so for many common needs there is already a vetted module rather than a custom build. Shopware’s store is smaller but modern, and because Symfony talent is plentiful, custom work is often quick to commission. If you are weighing a fully decoupled build on either platform, our commercetools vs Adobe Commerce article frames the composable trade-offs well.

B2B capabilities

B2B is one of the clearest dividing lines. If selling to other businesses is core to your model, the depth of native features will shape your build more than almost anything else.

Magento offers one of the most complete native B2B suites in the market through Adobe Commerce, including company accounts, shared catalogs, negotiated pricing, quote workflows, requisition lists, and granular role permissions. These are built in rather than assembled from third-party extensions. We cover the most useful ones in our roundup of Adobe Commerce B2B features.

Shopware addresses B2B through components available in its commercial tiers, with capabilities such as employee management, role-based access, and quick order. These cover a strong share of mid-market B2B needs, and the platform has invested heavily here. For the most complex enterprise B2B scenarios, with deep account hierarchies and intricate pricing logic, Magento still tends to need less custom work out of the box.

Is Shopware or Magento better for B2B commerce?

Magento (Adobe Commerce) is the stronger choice for complex, enterprise-grade B2B thanks to its mature native suite. Shopware is well-suited to mid-market B2B where modern admin usability and lower licensing cost matter more than the deepest possible feature set.

Ecosystem, partners, and talent availability

A platform is only as strong as the people and tools around it, and this is where Magento’s scale shows. According to Q1 2026 estimates compiled by trackers including BuiltWith, StoreLeads, 6sense, and W3Techs, Magento and Adobe Commerce together power roughly 150,000 to 260,000 active stores worldwide, holding an estimated 5 to 7 percent of the global eCommerce platform market. Shopware holds an estimated 1 to 2 percent with roughly 30,000 to 60,000 active stores, and it is growing fastest in the DACH region.

The same data shows movement in both directions. StoreLeads tracking of the Magento install base reported a year-over-year decline of around 15 percent into early 2026, which reflects consolidation toward both SaaS and newer platforms rather than the platform disappearing. We unpack what that trend really means for merchants in our analysis of whether Magento is dying, and the short answer is no, but the market is maturing.

For talent, Magento’s larger footprint translates into a deeper bench of agencies, freelancers, and certified developers globally, which matters for hiring leverage and continuity. Shopware’s talent pool is smaller and concentrated in Europe, though the Symfony foundation means a broad base of general PHP developers can contribute without deep platform-specific training.

Performance and scalability

Both platforms can run fast, and both can run slowly if the infrastructure and code are not handled well. The starting points differ.

Shopware’s baseline infrastructure requirements are lighter, which can make smaller and mid-sized stores cheaper to host and quicker to tune. Magento carries a heavier service stack by default, but that stack is purpose-built for large catalogs and high concurrency, and it scales to very large enterprise traffic when properly architected. For catalogs in the hundreds of thousands of SKUs with complex pricing and faceted search, Magento’s design has more proven precedent at the top end.

The reliable lesson across both is that performance is an outcome of architecture and hosting discipline, not a property of the logo. A well-tuned Magento store outperforms a neglected Shopware one and the reverse is equally true. Either way, plan for proper caching, search, and a hosting setup matched to your real traffic.

Which platform should you choose?

There is no universal winner between Shopware and Magento, only the better fit for your catalog, your team, and your region. Use these profiles as a starting point.

Choose Shopware if you want a modern Symfony-based codebase with a clean developer experience, you operate primarily in Europe or the DACH region, you value transparent published pricing, your B2B needs are mid-market rather than the most complex enterprise scenarios, and you prefer lighter infrastructure with a SaaS-like admin.

Choose Magento (Adobe Commerce) if you run a large or complex catalog, you need the deepest native B2B suite, you want the largest global ecosystem of extensions and certified talent, you operate across multiple regions and brands, or you intend to use Adobe’s wider marketing and analytics stack. Magento Open Source is the right starting point when you want that flexibility without the Adobe Commerce license.

If your shortlist also includes a SaaS option, our Magento vs Shopify comparison is a useful companion read before you commit either way.

Frequently asked questions

What is the main difference between Magento 2 and Shopware 6?

Shopware 6 is built on the Symfony framework with an API-first core and published pricing tiers, while Magento 2 uses its own framework with a larger global ecosystem, a deeper extension marketplace, and a more mature native B2B suite available through Adobe Commerce.

Is Shopware cheaper than Magento?

Often, yes, for mid-market merchants. Shopware’s published tiers and lighter infrastructure typically produce a lower total cost of ownership than revenue-based Adobe Commerce licensing. Magento Open Source can also be very cost-effective because it carries no license fee, leaving hosting and development as the main costs.

Is Shopware similar to Shopify?

Only at the surface. Shopware’s admin has a modern, SaaS-like feel, but it is open-source software you can self-host and fully customize, with optional hosted plans. Shopify is a fully managed SaaS platform with fixed hosting and a more closed core. Shopware is closer to Magento in flexibility and control.

Does anyone still use Magento in 2026?

Yes. Magento and Adobe Commerce still power an estimated 150,000 to 260,000 active stores worldwide according to Q1 2026 tracker estimates. The install base is consolidating rather than collapsing, and the platform remains a leading choice for complex catalogs and enterprise B2B.

Can I migrate from Magento to Shopware or the other way around?

Yes, but treat it as a re-platforming project, not a simple export and import. Data structures, custom logic, extensions, and integrations all differ, so a structured migration plan with thorough testing protects your catalog, SEO, and order history. A specialist partner reduces the risk considerably.

Which platform is better for large catalogs?

Magento (Adobe Commerce) has the stronger track record for very large catalogs in the hundreds of thousands of SKUs, thanks to its search, indexing, and caching stack. Shopware handles substantial catalogs well, but Magento has more proven precedent at the highest end of catalog size and concurrency.

Which platform is better for B2B?

For complex enterprise B2B, Magento leads with its native company accounts, shared catalogs, negotiated pricing, and quote workflows. For mid-market B2B where usability and licensing cost weigh heavily, Shopware’s B2B components are a strong and more economical fit.

Still unsure? Compare with our architects and get a clear recommendation grounded in your catalog, B2B needs, region, and team.

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