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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. 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.

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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Magento vs Wix: Complete eCommerce Platform Comparison https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-vs-wix/ Mon, 15 Jun 2026 10:30:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24968 Magento vs Wix compared on cost, scalability, customization, B2B, and SEO, so you know which platform fits your store today and as it grows.

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The pitch is seductive: pick a template, drag a few blocks, add products, and you are selling by the weekend. Wix sells that promise well, and for a tiny catalog it largely delivers. The problem starts later, when the store you launched in a weekend has to carry a real business. A website builder is built around the assumption that your needs stay simple. Serious commerce assumes the opposite, that complexity arrives the moment you start to win.

That is the real question behind Magento vs Wix. It is not which tool is easier to start with, because Wix wins that on day one. It is which platform still fits when you have thousands of SKUs, B2B buyers asking for negotiated pricing, three markets in two currencies, and a marketing team that needs control over every URL. Magento, now sold by Adobe as Adobe Commerce, was built for exactly that pressure. Wix was not.

This comparison treats both fairly. There are real stores that should stay on Wix and never look back. There are others paying a quiet tax every month because they outgrew it two years ago and have not noticed. Below we put the two platforms side by side on cost, ease of use, scalability, customization, payments, support, B2B, and SEO, so you can place your store on the right side of that line.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Wix is an entry-level website builder that fits very small, simple stores selling a handful of products with little ongoing complexity. Magento (Adobe Commerce) is an open, enterprise-grade platform built for large catalogs, B2B, multi-store, and heavy customization.

Magento vs Wix: the key differences at a glance

The short version: Wix and Magento solve different problems. Wix is a hosted, all-in-one website builder where eCommerce is one feature among many. Magento is a dedicated commerce platform you host and shape yourself, with no ceiling on catalog size, integrations, or custom logic.

Wix optimizes for the person who wants to launch without a developer. Magento optimizes for the business whose requirements will eventually exceed what any closed builder allows. The table below frames the headline contrast before the detailed sections.

Category Magento (Adobe Commerce) Wix
Best fit Mid-market to enterprise, large catalogs, B2B, multi-store Very small, simple stores and content-led sites
Hosting model Self-hosted or cloud, you choose the stack Fully hosted by Wix, no server control
Ease of launch Needs a developer or agency Drag-and-drop, launch without code
Catalog scale Hundreds of thousands of SKUs Comfortable into the low thousands, strained beyond
Customization Full source-code control, open architecture Limited to platform features and app market
Payments Open gateway choice, custom checkout, your own PCI scope Wix Payments plus a fixed set of providers, hosted checkout
B2B features Native B2B in Adobe Commerce (company accounts, quotes, price tiers) Minimal, not built for B2B
SEO control Deep control over URLs, metadata, structured data, performance Solid basics, less granular control
Support model Agency or partner plus Adobe support on Commerce Wix managed support across all plans
Cost shape Free open source plus build and hosting, or licensed Adobe Commerce Predictable monthly fee per plan tier
High-level comparison of Magento (Adobe Commerce) and Wix across the factors that decide platform fit.

Positioning chart comparing Wix and Magento across complexity and scale on a growth curve

What are Magento and Wix?

Magento is a dedicated eCommerce platform you control end to end. Wix is a general-purpose website builder that added a store feature. That distinction shapes everything that follows.

What is Magento (Adobe Commerce)?

Magento is an open-source commerce platform Adobe acquired in 2018 and now sells in two forms. Magento Open Source is free to download and self-host. Adobe Commerce is the licensed enterprise edition with native B2B, advanced merchandising, and Adobe cloud hosting layered on top.

Because the codebase is open, agencies and in-house teams can change almost anything: checkout logic, pricing rules, catalog structure, integrations with an ERP or PIM. That openness is the reason Magento still powers around 130,000 live stores worldwide as of 2026, according to BuiltWith technology-tracking data, and why it remains a common choice among high-volume and B2B sellers. It is also why Magento needs real engineering to run well. The power and the cost come from the same place.

What is Wix?

Wix is a hosted website builder that lets anyone assemble a site by dragging elements onto a canvas. Wix Stores is the eCommerce module bolted onto that builder. You get templates, a visual editor, hosting, and an app market, all managed by Wix with no server to maintain.

Wix reported roughly 290 million registered users across more than 190 countries in its 2025 financial disclosures, a base that makes it one of the most widely used website builders in the world. The active eCommerce subset is far smaller, and Store Leads technology data as of 2026 places the bulk of live Wix stores in the small-catalog range. That scale is real, but it is concentrated at the simple end of the market. Wix is excellent at getting a modest store online fast. It is not designed to be rebuilt from the inside when your requirements grow past its feature set.

Ease of use: who can run the store?

Wix is dramatically easier to start with. A non-technical founder can build and publish a small Wix store in a weekend without writing code. Magento expects a developer or an agency from day one.

That gap is genuine, and it matters most at the smallest scale. If you sell twenty products and run the store yourself, Wix removes the friction Magento would add. The drag-and-drop editor, built-in hosting, and managed updates mean you are never blocked waiting on a technical resource.

The trade-off appears as the store grows. Ease of use in a builder comes from limiting choices. The moment you need a workflow Wix did not anticipate, a custom shipping rule, a bespoke product configurator, an integration with your warehouse, you hit a wall the editor cannot move. Magento inverts this. It is harder to operate but has almost no ceiling, which is why teams running complex catalogs accept the higher operating bar. For a fuller view of what running Magento well involves, our analysis of Magento adoption separates the real maintenance demands from the myths.

Cost and total cost of ownership

On the sticker, Wix wins easily. On total cost of ownership at scale, the comparison is more honest than the monthly fee suggests.

What does Wix cost?

As of 2026, Wix sells eCommerce capability through its Business plan tiers. The entry commerce tier (marketed as Core) runs around the high-$20s per month, the mid Business tier lands near the low-$30s, and the top Business Elite tier reaches roughly the high-$100s to low-$200s per month on annual billing. All tiers include hosting, security, and the Wix Payments option, with pricing varying by region and promotion, so treat these figures as approximate as of 2026 rather than fixed. There is no separate build cost for a basic store because you build it yourself.

The hidden costs are softer. As you add paid apps from the Wix App Market to fill feature gaps, the monthly bill creeps up, and some apps carry their own subscriptions. Because you cannot deeply customize, certain requirements simply cannot be bought at any price, which becomes a cost in lost capability rather than dollars.

What does Magento cost?

Magento Open Source has no license fee, but you pay for hosting, the initial build, and ongoing maintenance. Adobe Commerce adds a license, typically negotiated and priced against your gross merchandise value, in exchange for native B2B, advanced features, and managed cloud infrastructure.

The number that matters is total cost of ownership over several years. Magento costs more to stand up and maintain, and that investment buys headroom: no per-feature paywalls, no platform ceiling, and the ability to optimize the parts of the funnel that move revenue. For stores past a certain size, the cost of staying on a builder shows up as lost sales and operational drag.

Scalability: where the builder runs out of room

This is the core of the contrarian case. Wix scales fine until it does not, and the wall is hard rather than gradual. Magento is built to absorb growth in catalog, traffic, and complexity without a replatform.

Wix handles small and even mid-sized catalogs acceptably, but several limits surface as you grow. Product counts in the high thousands strain the admin and storefront. Complex catalog structures, large numbers of variants, and high-concurrency traffic spikes are not what the platform was tuned for. Because you do not control the hosting or the code, you cannot engineer your way around those limits when you hit them.

Magento was designed for the opposite scenario. It runs comfortably with hundreds of thousands of SKUs, supports multiple stores and websites from one admin, and gives you control over caching, indexing, and infrastructure so performance scales with investment. When traffic or catalog grows, you add resources and optimize, rather than starting over. That is the practical meaning of a platform with no ceiling, and it is the single biggest reason businesses migrate off builders.

What does moving off Wix involve?

A replatform is more than copying products across. Because Wix is a closed system, there is no full database export of the kind Magento ingests directly, so a migration team extracts the catalog, customers, and order history through exports and APIs, then maps that data into Magento’s structure. The storefront itself is rebuilt rather than ported, since Wix templates do not translate to Magento themes.

The work that protects revenue is the part merchants underestimate: preserving URL structure with redirects so you do not lose rankings, carrying over historical orders for support and accounting, and re-creating any logic that lived inside Wix apps. Planned ahead of a growth spike, this is a controlled project. Done in a panic after hitting a wall during peak season, it is expensive and risky. If you reach that point, our Magento migration work focuses on moving without losing rankings or order history.

Customization and flexibility

Wix lets you customize within its lines. Magento lets you redraw the lines. For most growing brands, that difference decides the platform.

With Wix you choose a template, restyle it in the editor, and extend functionality through the app market. That covers common needs well. What it does not cover is anything the platform did not anticipate, because you never touch the underlying code. Even swapping templates after launch is constrained.

Magento gives you the full source code and an open, modular architecture. You can change checkout flows, build custom product types, automate merchandising, and integrate with an ERP, PIM, or any third-party system through APIs. That flexibility is why complex brands choose it and why a capable build partner matters. The same openness that makes Magento powerful makes a poorly built Magento store fragile, so the implementation quality is decisive. Our breakdown of what Magento is goes deeper on the architecture behind that flexibility.

Payments and checkout: how much control over the money path?

Both platforms can take a card. The difference is who owns the checkout and how many payment options you can offer as you grow.

Wix routes commerce through Wix Payments, its built-in processor, alongside a fixed set of supported gateways such as PayPal, Stripe, and a handful of regional providers. Checkout is hosted and largely standardized, which keeps PCI scope low and setup fast because Wix handles the compliance burden. The constraint is that you accept Wix’s checkout flow and its supported providers. You cannot deeply restyle the steps, insert custom logic mid-checkout, or add a niche local payment method Wix has not integrated.

Magento takes the open approach. You select from a large extension marketplace of payment gateways or integrate any processor directly through its payment API, which matters for merchants who need region-specific methods, B2B options like purchase orders and offline payment, or a one-page checkout tuned for conversion. That freedom comes with responsibility: you own more of the PCI scope and the checkout is yours to build and maintain. For high-volume stores, the ability to add local payment methods per market and to optimize the checkout itself is often worth that overhead, because checkout friction maps directly to abandoned carts.

SEO and performance: how much control do you get?

Both platforms can rank. The difference is how much control you have over the levers that matter at scale, and how far you can push performance.

Wix covers the SEO basics well: editable titles and descriptions, customizable URLs, automatic sitemaps, and mobile-responsive templates. For a small content-led store that is enough. The constraint is depth. You work within Wix’s rendering and structure, with limited control over technical details and page speed beyond what the platform exposes.

Magento gives you granular control over URL structure, metadata, canonical tags, structured data, and the full performance stack. You can implement advanced caching, tune Core Web Vitals, and adopt modern frontends like headless or lightweight Hyva themes to hit speed targets that directly affect rankings and conversion. The payoff is measurable: Google’s own research found that as mobile page load time goes from one second to three seconds, the probability of a bounce rises by 32 percent, and Deloitte’s “Milliseconds Make Millions” study (2020) found that a 0.1-second improvement in mobile site speed lifted retail conversion rates by 8.4 percent. With Google continuing to weight page experience and Core Web Vitals as ranking signals through 2025 and 2026, the ability to engineer those metrics rather than wait on a builder is a real advantage for stores competing on organic traffic. The catch is the same as everywhere else with Magento: the control is only worth what your team or partner does with it.

B2B and multi-store: the requirements Wix cannot meet

If you sell B2B or run multiple storefronts, this section likely ends the comparison. Magento has native B2B and multi-store. Wix has neither in any serious form.

Adobe Commerce ships native B2B functionality: company accounts with buyer hierarchies, negotiated and tiered pricing, quote requests, requisition lists, and credit limits. It is one of the few platforms a Gartner-recognized vendor markets specifically for digital commerce at the enterprise tier, and B2B sellers value it because business buyers expect account-based pricing and self-service ordering that a consumer builder simply does not model.

Magento also runs multiple stores, websites, currencies, and languages from one admin with shared or separate catalogs, which suits brands operating across regions or selling both retail and wholesale. Wix is built for a single, simple storefront. If your roadmap includes B2B, wholesale, or international expansion, the question is not whether you outgrow Wix but when. For teams weighing the hosted-builder route more broadly, our Magento vs Shopify comparison covers the trade-offs of staying on a managed platform.

Support and ecosystem: where help comes from

The two platforms answer the support question in opposite ways. Wix centralizes it. Magento distributes it across a partner ecosystem.

With Wix, support is built into the subscription. You get help center articles, ticketed support, and on higher tiers priority and phone channels, all from Wix itself. There is one vendor to call, and the app market gives you a curated set of add-ons vetted to work inside the platform. For a small team without technical staff, that single point of accountability is genuinely valuable, and it is part of what the monthly fee buys.

Magento has no single vendor that runs your store for you. Adobe provides product-level support on Adobe Commerce, but day-to-day development, fixes, and optimization come from an agency, a partner, or an in-house team. The upside is a deep ecosystem: a large extension marketplace, a global pool of certified developers, and specialist agencies that can take full ownership of a build. The downside is that the quality of your store is only as good as the partner you choose, which makes vendor selection one of the most consequential decisions in a Magento project. For stores that want managed coverage without giving up that flexibility, ongoing eCommerce support fills the gap a builder includes by default.

Which should you choose: Magento or Wix?

The decision comes down to where your store is now and where it is heading. Match your situation to the closer profile below.

Choose Wix if you are launching a small, simple store, sell a limited catalog, run the site yourself without developers, want the lowest possible startup cost and effort, and do not foresee B2B, multi-store, or heavy customization needs. For that profile, Wix is the right tool and Magento would be overkill.

Choose Magento (Adobe Commerce) if you have a large or complex catalog, sell B2B or wholesale, operate across multiple stores, regions, or currencies, need deep customization and integrations with systems like an ERP or PIM, or are already feeling the limits of a builder. The higher operating bar buys headroom you will keep using as you grow.

The honest middle ground: if you are a small store today but confident you are heading toward complexity, factor the replatform cost into the Wix decision now. Many brands start on a builder, succeed, and then pay to migrate under pressure. Choosing the platform that matches your three-year plan is usually the cheaper path.

Frequently asked questions

Is Magento better than Wix?

Neither is universally better. Magento is better for large catalogs, B2B, multi-store, and heavy customization. Wix is better for very small, simple stores that need to launch fast without developers. The right answer depends on your catalog size, complexity, and growth plan.

Can I migrate from Wix to Magento later?

Yes. Many brands start on Wix and move to Magento once they outgrow the builder. The migration extracts products, customers, and order history through exports and APIs, rebuilds the storefront, and sets up redirects to protect rankings, so it is best planned deliberately rather than done under pressure when you have already hit a wall.

Is Wix good for a large eCommerce store?

Wix handles small and mid-sized catalogs acceptably but strains with very large product counts, complex catalog structures, high-concurrency traffic, and B2B requirements. Because you do not control the hosting or code, you cannot engineer around those limits, which is where larger stores tend to outgrow it.

How much does Magento cost compared to Wix?

Wix has a low, predictable monthly fee per plan tier with hosting included, ranging roughly from the high-$20s to low-$200s per month as of 2026. Magento Open Source has no license fee but requires paying for hosting, build, and maintenance, while Adobe Commerce adds a license. Magento costs more upfront but removes per-feature paywalls and platform ceilings, so compare total cost of ownership over several years rather than month one.

Does Wix support B2B selling?

Wix offers only minimal B2B capability and is not built for it. Magento (Adobe Commerce) includes native B2B features such as company accounts, tiered and negotiated pricing, quotes, and requisition lists, which is why it is a common choice for B2B and wholesale sellers.

Which platform is better for SEO, Magento or Wix?

Both can rank. Wix covers SEO basics like editable metadata, custom URLs, and sitemaps. Magento gives deeper control over URL structure, structured data, caching, and performance, which is an advantage for stores competing hard on organic traffic at scale.

What payment options does each platform support?

Wix routes payments through Wix Payments plus supported gateways like PayPal and Stripe, with a hosted checkout that keeps PCI scope low but limits customization. Magento lets you integrate almost any payment gateway and fully customize the checkout, including B2B methods like purchase orders, at the cost of owning more of the PCI and maintenance burden.

Is Magento hard to use?

Magento has a steeper operating bar than Wix and typically needs a developer or agency to run well. That is the trade-off for its flexibility and scale. For complex stores, the higher effort is justified by capabilities a builder cannot offer.

When the website builder runs out of room, the smart move is not to patch around the ceiling but to plan the step up with a team that has migrated and scaled hundreds of stores on Magento.

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Magento (Adobe Commerce): The Complete Platform Guide (2026) https://scandiweb.com/blog/what-is-magento-adobe-commerce/ Thu, 11 Jun 2026 09:36:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=15895 What is Magento (Adobe Commerce)? Features, real 2026 pricing, pros and cons, and how to choose a Magento agency, from the world's most certified team.

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If you are weighing Magento (Adobe Commerce) for your next store, or you are already on the platform and trying to decide whether to keep investing in it, you are asking the question most growing merchants reach sooner or later: is this the platform that will carry the business, and who should build and run it? This guide answers both. It walks through what Magento is, how Magento Open Source and Adobe Commerce differ, the features that matter, what it actually costs in 2026, the honest pros and cons, and how to choose the right Magento agency once you have decided to commit.

Overview

  • Magento (Adobe Commerce) is a flexible, open-source-rooted eCommerce platform that Adobe owns. It powers around 8% of the global eCommerce platform market and roughly 130,000 to 163,000 live stores, and remains the leader in B2B commerce (MGT-Commerce, 2026 and BuiltWith, 2026).
  • It comes in two editions: Magento Open Source (free license, self-hosted) and Adobe Commerce (paid, enterprise-grade, with cloud hosting and advanced features). Adobe no longer publishes tiered pricing publicly, and license cost is quoted per merchant on a Gross Merchandise Value basis.
  • Magento rewards merchants who have, or hire, the technical depth to run it. The platform is strongest for mid-market and enterprise stores that need deep customization, large catalogs, and multi-store or B2B setups, usually with a Magento agency behind it.

What is Magento?

Magento (Adobe Commerce) is an eCommerce platform that B2C and B2B businesses use to build, customize, and manage online stores at scale. Most know and recognize the platform as Magento, a market-leading player in eCommerce for years. Although it is still powered by the Magento software, Adobe acquired the company in 2018, becoming its parent company. As of April 2021, after merging Magento Commerce and Adobe Commerce Cloud, the enterprise edition of the platform is known as Adobe Commerce. We refer to it interchangeably as Magento and Adobe Commerce throughout this guide when shared features are discussed.

Adobe Commerce is a highly advanced eCommerce platform with rich, customizable out-of-the-box features and integrations. It helps B2C and B2B businesses of all sizes build and manage their stores, expand their growth, and deliver the customer buying experiences that drive online sales.

Magento (Adobe Commerce) storefront and admin dashboard shown together on one platform
Magento (Adobe Commerce) brings the storefront and the admin into one platform.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Magento and Adobe Commerce are the same core software. “Magento Open Source” is the free, self-hosted edition, and “Adobe Commerce” is the paid enterprise edition Adobe sells and supports.

Why do merchants use Magento (Adobe Commerce)?

Merchants choose Magento for three reasons that are hard to find together on one platform:

  • Flexibility and customization. You can tailor almost anything: custom themes and templates, custom functionality, and integrations through the marketplace or custom code.
  • Out-of-the-box features. Inventory and order management, integrated checkout, payment and shipping, a CMS page builder, product recommendations, analytics, and marketing tools all ship with the platform.
  • Built to scale. Magento is designed to scale with the business across industries, handling high traffic levels and large product catalogs without forcing a replatform later.

Who should use the Magento eCommerce platform?

Magento (Adobe Commerce) suits eCommerce companies of every size, from small retailers to large enterprises, but it pays off most for merchants who need real customization and scale.

Magento Open Source is free, fully customizable, and backed by a large extension marketplace. Smaller and growing companies like that they can launch with no platform license cost and add features through extensions, many of them free, as needs grow.

Adobe Commerce is the enterprise edition: a fully featured, subscription-based solution from Adobe. It adds advanced features out of the box, 24/7 support, and the option of managed cloud infrastructure. Larger businesses that need those capabilities, and that want to manage multiple brands, currencies, and regions from one platform, choose Adobe Commerce. It supports both B2C and B2B models.

So who should use Magento (Adobe Commerce)? Small, medium, and large eCommerce businesses can all run on it, but the platform earns its keep when the store has enough complexity, or growth ahead of it, to justify the technical investment. We dig into the differences between the two editions next.

Magento Open Source vs Adobe Commerce

The short answer: Magento Open Source is the free, self-hosted edition with all the core eCommerce features, while Adobe Commerce is the paid enterprise edition that adds advanced features, managed cloud hosting, and official Adobe support. Which one fits depends on your budget, in-house technical depth, and how advanced your requirements are.

Side-by-side comparison of the Magento Open Source admin versus the Adobe Commerce admin
Magento Open Source vs Adobe Commerce: the same core software, two very different ownership models.

Magento Open Source

Magento Open Source is a self-hosted platform that ships with the core features you need to launch a store. Because it is open source and widely used, it has an active community of developers worldwide who introduce new features, fix bugs, and improve it.

Merchants who choose Magento Open Source set up their own server and hosting. They can use the default theme, customize it, or buy a third-party theme from the marketplace, and add features through free or paid extensions. So while the license is free, running it still carries costs: customization, extensions, hosting, and maintenance.

For maintenance, a company needs either its own development team or a third-party Magento development agency to keep the store healthy. Magento updates regularly, and merchants need to keep pace to stay secure and fast.

We compare the two editions in more depth in Adobe Commerce vs Magento Open Source.

Adobe Commerce

Adobe Commerce is an enterprise-level eCommerce solution that has more advanced ready-to-use features in addition to all those available to Magento Open Source.

Adobe Commerce on cloud infrastructure is a fully managed, platform-as-a-service option hosted on AWS, with automated hosting and exclusive features. Merchants choose it for lower maintenance overhead, better scalability, and added security. Companies can still run an on-premise installation on their own servers if they prefer.

Adobe Commerce is part of Adobe Experience Cloud, a set of applications for delivering personalized customer experiences and making data-informed decisions. Other Adobe Experience Cloud solutions integrate with Adobe Commerce, and merchants can tap into Adobe’s business intelligence and the personalization powered by Adobe Sensei, Adobe’s AI and machine learning layer.

🚀 Quick takeaway

If you have in-house developers and a tight budget, Magento Open Source can take you far. If you need enterprise support, managed cloud, and advanced features without building them yourself, Adobe Commerce is the edition to price out.

Magento store features

Here are the features that matter most when you evaluate Magento (Adobe Commerce):

  • Ease of use
  • Support and extensions
  • Themes and templates
  • Marketing and SEO tools
  • Customer support
  • Security
  • Inventory management
The Magento (Adobe Commerce) admin showing the platform's core feature areas in the sidebar
The feature areas that matter most when you evaluate Magento (Adobe Commerce), seen in the admin.

Ease of use

For a company with a developer on the team, installing Magento (Adobe Commerce) is fairly straightforward. Both Magento Open Source and Adobe Commerce run on any hosting that meets Adobe’s system requirements. For Adobe Commerce on cloud infrastructure, Adobe provides an automated hosting platform with the prerequisite software already installed, including PHP, MySQL, RabbitMQ, and Redis.

Developers then set up the store using a default Magento theme, a customized one, a third-party theme from the marketplace, or a theme built from scratch.

Because Magento is so widely used, there is no shortage of resources online. scandiweb, for example, has published a series of articles detailing how to accomplish specific Magento tasks, including Creating CMS Content Programmatically and Working with Store Configs. The Magento community is active, and Adobe provides extensive documentation, so even newer developers can resolve common issues and find the admin interface manageable.

For day-to-day use, Magento includes features that make content and product management easier. Page Builder offers drag-and-drop content creation with no coding required. Inventory and order management tools give real-time stock visibility. Business intelligence tools track performance, and Adobe Target lets marketers personalize and test content and experiences.

Support and extensions

Magento has an active community of users and developers who share knowledge and help each other solve problems. Developers who get stuck can turn to that community for guidance, and Adobe offers official support for Adobe Commerce users (see Customer support below).

Third-party extensions and plugins add new functionality, improve performance, sharpen the customer experience, and speed up pages. They also open the door to more advanced integrations: Magento connects readily with ERP, CRM, PIM, and accounting software.

The Magento (Adobe Commerce) Marketplace is the main source for extensions, with both free and paid options covering content and localization, accounting and finance, marketing, SEO, customer service, shipping and fulfillment, customer relationship management, and more.

Themes and templates

A theme gives a Magento store its look and feel through styles, layouts, images, and templates, and frontend developers implement it during the build. Magento ships with a Blank theme (a base for custom themes) and the Luma theme as its default, and the marketplace offers many free and paid alternatives. Merchants can build a theme from scratch, use the default, or buy one.

Templates control how content blocks appear on a page, such as where a sidebar sits or how the hero banner is positioned. Both themes and templates are customizable. Building or customizing a theme takes experience with PHP, CSS, JavaScript, and similar languages, and templates can be PHTML or HTML files.

When customizing, developers should never edit the default files directly. Changes to default themes or templates can be overwritten during an update, so the best practice is to create a new theme and add the modified templates there.

Luma theme

The Luma theme is Magento 2’s default theme. First released in 2015 and updated since, it is free to use without restrictions on a live store. It is tile-based, fully responsive across devices, and highly customizable. Category pages offer list and grid views, star ratings, and hover CTAs. Product pages have a clean design with large, high-quality images, and the cart and checkout are easy to navigate. Luma is a sound choice for merchants who are just starting out or want to keep development costs down.

Hyvä theme

Hyvä is positioned by its creators as the frontend theme for Magento: the entire frontend rebuilt from the ground up and simplified, plus a toolset, extension ecosystem, and supporting community.

Where the standard Magento theme loads over 200 JS/CSS resources, Hyvä loads only 2, which means less complexity and faster page loads. Out of the box it scores 100/100 in Google PageSpeed Insights and passes Core Web Vitals on all metrics. It is fully responsive, easy to maintain, and built on Magento’s PHP framework with a developer-friendly interface that shortens time to market. A license is required to use Hyvä, and it includes unlimited updates and access to third-party compatibility modules. scandiweb is a Hyvä Platinum Partner, so if a fast frontend is the priority, Hyvä theme development is the route to look at.

Byggmax product page built on a Hyvä Magento frontend

 

A Hyvä-built Magento frontend in production: Byggmax’s product page, rebuilt for speed.

ScandiPWA theme

ScandiPWA is the first open-source Magento PWA theme. It is a Magento-first solution installed on top of any Magento project (version 2.3 and later) with no middleware or infrastructure changes, and it supports conventional marketplace extensions, A/B testing, and over 350 Magento features. ScandiPWA is ready to use, fully customizable, and the fastest way to set up a Magento store as a PWA, with development and production environments available in about 15 minutes on readymage.com.

ReadyMage managed Magento hosting product feature view

 

ReadyMage spins up Magento development and production environments in minutes.

Marketing and SEO tools

The Magento (Adobe Commerce) admin marketing and SEO settings panel

 

Magento ships with built-in SEO controls and marketing tools, extendable through the marketplace.

SEO is a common concern among Magento users, and ranking well matters for sales. Magento supports merchants with built-in SEO functions:

  • Meta tags (title, description, keywords) for products, categories, CMS pages, and the homepage
  • Category paths in product URLs
  • Canonical tags for products and categories
  • URL rewrites and redirects
  • XML sitemap setup
  • Robots.txt editing
  • Image alt text
  • Pagination optimization

Magento SEO extensions

Magento is SEO-friendly out of the box, but some areas can be improved with third-party extensions. The MageWorx SEO Suite and Mirasvit SEO Suite help with rich snippets and other opportunities, the Magento 2 Dynamic HTML Sitemap solves the HTML sitemap issue, and the Amasty SEO Toolkit covers a broad range of needs, to name a few. For stores that want this handled end to end, scandiweb offers Magento SEO services.

Magento marketing

Magento is also well suited to running marketing campaigns. A mix of built-in and third-party tools helps merchants understand their customers and promote products to the right groups:

  • Email marketing for promotions, newsletters, and abandoned-cart reminders
  • Customer segmentation by location, behavior, purchase history, and loyalty, with tailored messaging per group
  • Promotions and discounts that build loyalty
  • Product recommendations for cross-selling and upselling based on browsing and purchase history
  • Customer reviews that create social proof and build trust

Customer support

Magento Open Source, as free software, does not come with official customer support. Developers can lean on the community, but answers are not guaranteed.

Magento Open Source customer support

The Magento community is active, and a lot of useful information is shared online. GitHub, Stack Overflow, and the Magento forums are places developers turn to for technical help, though there is no guarantee of a fix.

Merchants working with a Magento development agency, or who have contracted Magento support, get access to a team of experienced developers and answers governed by a service level agreement. scandiweb, for example, offers Magento 24/7 support so merchants have help around the clock.

Adobe Commerce customer support

Qualifying Adobe Commerce customers have access to the Adobe Commerce Help Center, where they can submit support tickets, request technical help, track existing requests, and search the Adobe solutions library.

Adobe Commerce on Managed Services adds expert resources: a Customer Success Engineer (CSE) and an Advanced Support Engineer (ASE). The CSE supports onboarding, setup, upgrades, and event management, working to reduce risk and downtime during upgrades, especially in large environments, and advises on integrations and customizations. The ASE is part of Adobe’s 24/7 global incident-management response team for Adobe Commerce on Managed Services.

Security

Security is a top concern for store owners, and Magento builds it into the core rather than leaving it as an afterthought.

Security patches

Adobe regularly releases security patches and updates to protect stores against threats and vulnerabilities, and feature upgrades often ship with security fixes. Applying them promptly reduces the chance of a compromise and keeps the store protected.

SSL and TLS

Magento supports SSL and TLS certificates to encrypt the data transmitted between the customer’s browser and the merchant’s server.

PCI compliance

All eCommerce sites must comply with the Payment Card Industry Data Security Standards (PCI-DSS) to avoid penalties. Adobe Commerce meets industry standards for secure payment processing, and its built-in payment gateways let merchants transmit credit card data securely, so no sensitive data is stored on the Adobe application server. The result is a secure checkout.

Inventory management

Magento (Adobe Commerce) order management dashboard showing orders, shipping, and warehouses
Adobe Commerce order and inventory management gives real-time stock and fulfillment visibility across stores, warehouses, and channels.

Adobe Commerce gives smaller stores and large enterprises alike real-time inventory visibility so they can fulfill orders easily. Its inventory and order management system lets businesses with multiple sites, stores, brands, and warehouses create consistent customer experiences across channels and locations, with control over products, prices, and stock so they can meet demand.

Adobe Commerce also handles a flexible product catalog: simple, configurable, and grouped products, with variations such as size and color. Whether a customer wants shipping or buy-online-pick-up-in-store (BOPIS), Magento’s fulfillment algorithms help merchants complete each order the best way.

Store fulfillment

For US-based Adobe Commerce merchants, Adobe offers an advanced omnichannel Store Fulfillment solution by Walmart Commerce Technologies, which supports a strong BOPIS experience through Android and iOS devices.

Magento costs and pricing

What does Magento cost in 2026? Magento Open Source has no license fee, but you pay for hosting, development, and maintenance. Adobe Commerce charges a license that Adobe quotes privately based on your Gross Merchandise Value, with industry estimates starting around $22,000 per year on-premise and $40,000 per year on cloud for smaller merchants.

The three cost segments of a Magento store: infrastructure, development, and support and maintenance

Magento total cost of ownership has three parts: infrastructure, development, and support and maintenance.

The total depends on the business: its size, needs, resources, and priorities. We will look at the costs of building and maintaining both editions across three segments:

  • Infrastructure costs: hosting, web and app servers, databases, domain, SSL certificate
  • Development costs: design, customization, programming, extensions, integrations
  • Support and maintenance costs: technical staff, training, troubleshooting, updates, patches, paid support

Magento Open Source pricing and costs

Licensing: Free
Infrastructure: Additional cost
Basic functionalities: Included
Advanced functionalities: Additional cost

The Magento Open Source software is free to install and use, but getting it running carries costs across all three segments. A merchant pays for hosting, domain, SSL certificate, design, customization, integrations, support, and maintenance.

Hosting costs

Hosting options include in-house, a hosting provider, or the cloud:

  • In-house hosting is risky and costly, but some industries (for example, cannabis) make it necessary.
  • Shared, VPS, and dedicated hosting are all viable depending on business size, ranging from roughly $150 per month (shared) to $5,000 per month (multiple dedicated servers).
  • Cloud hosting can run from as little as $10 to as much as $4,000 per month.

Development costs

Magento Open Source ships with the basics, but extensions, integrations, and further development are usually needed to make it work the way the business wants. The best extensions are often subscription-based, so there are ongoing costs, and Magento extensions can run anywhere from $50 to $500.

Developers are needed to make those extensions and integrations work. Depending on the scope, a company may need to hire a team, or work with a Magento development agency that builds Magento stores for a living. Either way, development is a real cost line.

Support and maintenance costs

Support and maintenance depend on whether the business has its own developers for bugs, patches, updates, and ongoing work. At minimum, one developer who knows Magento needs to look after the store. Alternatively, agencies offer 24/7 Magento support, which can be more cost-effective once you factor in SLAs and a whole team of Magento experts working to resolve issues quickly.

Adobe Commerce pricing and costs

Licensing: Quoted privately, GMV-based (industry estimates from ~$22,000/year)
Infrastructure: Additional cost or included
Basic functionalities: Included
Advanced functionalities: Included

Adobe no longer publishes tiered Adobe Commerce pricing publicly. License cost is quoted directly by Adobe based on the company’s Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) and Average Order Value (AOV), and varies by offering: Adobe Commerce On-Premise Software, Adobe Commerce on Cloud, and Adobe Commerce on Managed Services.

Industry estimates put the starting license around $22,000 per year for a company with up to $1 million GMV on the on-premise software, and around $40,000 per year on cloud, scaling to roughly $55,000 to $190,000 per year for mid-market merchants (Swell, 2026). Keep in mind that total annual spend (license plus hosting plus support) typically runs two to three times the license fee alone (Elogic, 2026).

Adobe Commerce features and services comparison table
Adobe Commerce features and services comparison table.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Budget for total cost of ownership, not just the license. Whether you run Open Source or Adobe Commerce, hosting, development, and support usually outweigh the license line, so the real question is who builds and maintains the store.

Pros and cons of using Magento

Magento offers a lot, but it is not the right fit for everyone. Here is an honest list of the pros and cons of choosing Magento (Adobe Commerce) for your store.

Pros of using Magento

1. Feature-rich and flexible. Merchants get a flexible platform they can customize to their exact needs, which makes it possible to deliver a tailored buying experience.

2. Scalable. Magento handles a large number of products and customers, managing tens of thousands of transactions per hour and up to 500,000 products. Deployed on cloud infrastructure, it lets Adobe handle hosting and platform support while the merchant focuses on selling, with room to customize for businesses of any size.

3. Secure. With built-in security features and regular patches, Magento is a secure platform for handling sensitive data and protecting both merchants and customers.

4. Mobile-friendly. Magento’s responsive design gives customers a strong mobile experience across smartphones and tablets, which supports higher conversion rates, lower bounce rates, and more sales.

5. Multi-currency and multi-language. Magento lets merchants run several stores across regions with different languages, pricing, and currencies, which makes selling internationally easier.

6. A large extension ecosystem. The marketplace offers many practical extensions, free and paid, that expand store functionality across site management, marketing, themes, and customer service.

7. Advanced analytics and reporting. Magento’s admin includes in-depth analytics so merchants can see best sellers, understand how customers interact with the store, and make informed decisions.

8. A large community. Magento has a large, active developer community that provides resources, support, and a steady stream of extensions and tools.

Cons of using Magento

1. Cost. Magento Open Source is free, but Adobe Commerce requires an annual license, and both editions carry costs for customization, add-ons, and features.

2. Resource requirements. Magento is resource-intensive and needs a fair amount of memory and processing power to run smoothly, which can add to hosting costs.

3. Complexity. Magento has a steeper learning curve than simpler platforms. To keep the store stable, secure, and pleasant to use, merchants need to train an in-house team or bring in a Magento development agency. (If you are weighing whether the platform still earns that investment, we cover it in is Magento dying?.)

🚀 Quick takeaway

Most of Magento’s cons come down to one thing: it expects technical depth. That is exactly why the platform decision and the agency decision are really one decision.

Working with a Magento (Adobe Commerce) agency

Once you have decided on Magento, the next question is who builds and runs it. A Magento (Adobe Commerce) agency designs, develops, migrates, and maintains your store so you get the platform’s flexibility without staffing a full in-house Magento team. For most mid-market and enterprise merchants, that is the practical path: Magento’s depth is its advantage and its demand, and an agency turns the demand into someone else’s job.

An option selector comparing building Magento in-house, hiring an agency, or a hybrid model
Three ways to run Magento: an in-house team, a Magento agency, or a hybrid of both.

When to hire an agency vs build in-house

Build in-house if you already employ Magento-certified developers, your roadmap is steady enough to keep them busy, and you can cover hiring, training, and retention. Hire an agency if you need senior Magento expertise on day one, your needs spike around launches, migrations, or peak seasons, or you would rather pay for outcomes than carry permanent headcount. Many merchants run a hybrid: a small internal team plus an agency for specialist and overflow work.

 

For a side-by-side view of the field, our listicle of the top Magento development companies compares 30 agencies in 2026 across these exact criteria.

 
 

Conclusion

Choosing the platform that powers your store is a decision that touches every part of the business, from how products are displayed to how traffic converts. Is Magento the right choice?

Both editions under Adobe, Magento Open Source and Adobe Commerce, help businesses of all sizes build, launch, maintain, and customize their stores. Magento Open Source opens up a lot of possibilities but assumes technical know-how: the community helps, but it will not solve everything, so you need a skilled Magento developer or team, and you should plan for a learning curve and the cost of extensions, hosting, and technical requirements on top of the free license.

Adobe Commerce costs more, which makes it a better fit for larger businesses, and in return you get reliable support, organized resources, advanced tools, and easy integration with third-party extensions. It is flexible, scalable, mobile- and SEO-friendly, customizable, and secure. For merchants with the scale to use it, Magento is an investment that tends to pay off over the long run, provided the build and upkeep are in capable hands.

Frequently asked questions

What is Magento used for?

Magento (Adobe Commerce) is used to build and run online stores. Merchants use it to manage products, inventory, checkout, payments, marketing, and content for B2C and B2B businesses, and to customize and scale those stores as they grow. It suits everything from smaller catalogs to large, multi-store enterprises.

Is Magento free?

Magento Open Source is free to license and self-host, but running it still costs money for hosting, development, extensions, and maintenance. Adobe Commerce, the enterprise edition, is a paid subscription quoted by Adobe based on your Gross Merchandise Value, with industry estimates starting around $22,000 per year.

What is the difference between Magento and Adobe Commerce?

They are the same core software. Magento Open Source is the free, self-hosted edition with all the core eCommerce features. Adobe Commerce is the paid enterprise edition that adds advanced features, managed cloud hosting on AWS, official Adobe support, and Adobe Experience Cloud integrations. Adobe owns and sells both.

How much does Adobe Commerce cost in 2026?

Adobe does not publish public pricing. License cost is quoted directly by Adobe based on your Gross Merchandise Value. Industry estimates put the starting license around $22,000 per year on-premise and $40,000 per year on cloud for smaller merchants, scaling higher for mid-market. Total cost of ownership usually runs two to three times the license fee.

Is Magento still worth it in 2026?

For mid-market and enterprise merchants that need deep customization, large catalogs, or B2B features, Magento remains a strong choice and still leads in B2B commerce. It is less suited to very small stores that want low maintenance. The platform rewards merchants who have, or hire, the technical depth to run it well.

Do I need an agency to build a Magento store?

Not strictly, but most merchants benefit from one. Magento expects real technical depth, so unless you employ Magento-certified developers in-house, a Magento agency is usually faster, safer, and more cost-effective for building, migrating, and maintaining the store. Many merchants run a hybrid of a small internal team plus an agency

If you are deciding whether Magento is right for your store, or who should build it, talk to our Magento team. Tell us where you are now and where you want to go, and we will map the right edition, the right build, and how to get there.

The post Magento (Adobe Commerce): The Complete Platform Guide (2026) appeared first on scandiweb.

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Top Magento Development Companies in the USA (2026) https://scandiweb.com/blog/top-magento-development-companies-usa/ Wed, 10 Jun 2026 14:58:57 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24857 A fit-based guide to the top Magento development companies in the USA for 2026: who each one suits, where they are based, and how to shortlist three.

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If you are sizing up a Magento build, a replatform, or a long-overdue upgrade, the hardest line in the brief is usually the one next to “agency.” Once you have committed to Magento, the platform is mostly decided. The team you hand it to is not, and that single choice will shape your store, your roadmap, and your budget for years.

So we will be straight about something before you read another word: scandiweb is a Magento agency, and yes, we put ourselves on this list. Rather than pose as a neutral referee, we wrote the guide we wish buyers had in front of them when they weigh us against everyone else, an honest read on which of the top Magento development companies in the USA each kind of project actually suits. You will not find a 0 to 100 score below, only a clear match between each team’s strength and the work it does best. Every company here is a real, active Magento or Adobe Commerce team that shows up across the US lists buyers read, from Clutch and FirstPageSage to the agencies’ own portfolios.

One scope note before the list. When people search “Magento development company,” they mean a team that can build, replatform, or support a store on either Magento Open Source or Adobe Commerce, since the two share a codebase. If you only want the enterprise Adobe Commerce shops, our companion list of Adobe Commerce agencies in the USA is the better starting point, and if you want a worldwide view rather than a US one, see our global Magento companies ranking.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The number-one slot on a “best Magento agencies” list tells you almost nothing on its own. The fit between an agency’s strength and your store’s stage tells you everything.

scandiweb Magento design award trophies on stage at Meet Magento New York
Recognition from the Magento community, including Design Curve and Design Pioneer awards at Meet Magento New York.

What we actually checked

We skipped the leaderboard math on purpose, because a single number hides the thing that matters: a team that is perfect for a $50M Adobe Commerce replatform can be the wrong call for a lean Magento Open Source store. So rather than rank on points, we looked at five signals and then matched each company to the projects it suits:

  • Platform depth you can verify. Adobe certifications and partner tier, because they are the clearest outside proof a team knows Magento at depth, not just on the marketing site.
  • Outcomes, not logos. Named stores with real performance, conversion, or revenue numbers behind them.
  • Where they actually fit. Magento Open Source builds, enterprise Adobe Commerce, B2B, or ongoing support, since very few agencies are equally strong across all four.
  • Modern frontend. Real Hyvä and Core Web Vitals experience, which is now the difference between a fast storefront and a slow one.
  • Life after launch. A clear support model and community standing, because a launch is the start of the relationship, not the end of it.
Adobe, Hyvä, Google, and ISO partner and certification badges in a single row

 

Partner tier and certifications are the clearest outside proof a Magento team knows the platform at depth.

Top Magento development companies in the USA at a glance

#CompanyBest forEditions they focus onHQ / footprint
1scandiwebEnterprise builds, replatforming, Hyvä performanceAdobe Commerce, Magento Open Source, HyväGlobal, serves US brands, hosts Meet Magento New York
2AtwixOpen-source-led B2B buildsMagento Open Source, Adobe CommerceUS
3BrainvireFull-service US digital, multi-platformAdobe Commerce, Magento Open SourceIrving, TX
4ZiffityMid-market Magento and supportAdobe Commerce, Magento Open SourceUS, India delivery
5Rave DigitalStrategy-led Magento consultingAdobe Commerce, Magento Open SourceUS
6MageCompExtensions and SMB Magento buildsMagento Open SourceUS clients, India delivery
7Elogic CommerceB2B and replatformingAdobe CommerceUS / EU
8Emizen TechCustom Magento developmentMagento Open Source, Adobe CommerceUS clients, India delivery
9ForixMagento support and maintenanceAdobe Commerce, Magento Open SourcePortland, OR
The top Magento development companies in the USA, by specialty and edition focus.

The enterprise-only Adobe shops such as Corra, Vaimo, and BORN Group sit in our Adobe Commerce agencies in the USA list instead, since they rarely take Magento Open Source work. The sections below explain why each company sits where it does.

Adobe, AWS, Google, Shopify, and Meta partner logos
The partner ecosystem a serious Magento team plugs into, from Adobe to Google and AWS.

1. scandiweb

scandiweb is the world’s most certified Adobe Commerce agency, with 894+ Adobe certifications and the title of most certified Hyvä team globally. For a US buyer, that depth is the cleanest signal that a partner can handle a complex Magento build without learning on your budget. The footprint behind it: 2,100+ projects since 2003, $4B+ in revenue processed for clients every year, and 600+ specialists across development, UX, CRO, SEO, and data under one roof.

On the question of US presence, the honest version is that scandiweb is a global team rather than a US boutique. What it does have in the US is real and specific: it works with US and globally recognized brands, and it hosts Meet Magento New York, the largest Adobe Commerce community event in the country, along with Meet Magento Canada. It is also one of the few agencies on this list that contributes to the platform itself, through the open-source Satoshi theme, ScandiPWA, and the Hyvä Swift component system.

Where that shows up is enterprise scale and performance. scandiweb rebuilt PUMA’s Magento storefront on its open-source ScandiPWA frontend, and the result became the fastest store in PUMA’s international portfolio, scoring 98 on desktop and running 3 to 4 times faster than any other site the brand operated. For an all-American institution, Scouting America’s Hyvä migration off a slow legacy frontend lifted checkout starts by 23.9% and mobile revenue by 6.2%, with Largest Contentful Paint improving 12 to 13%.

PUMA Magento storefront performance results delivered on scandiweb's ScandiPWA

 

PUMA’s Magento storefront, rebuilt on scandiweb’s open-source ScandiPWA frontend.
Scouting America Magento to Hyvä migration performance and revenue results

 

Scouting America moved off a slow legacy Magento frontend to Hyvä.

Best fit: mid-market and enterprise brands planning a build, a replatform to Adobe Commerce, or a Hyvä performance upgrade, where one accountable team across tech, UX, and growth matters more than a local zip code. See the full capability set on the Adobe Commerce and Magento development page, browse the wider Magento services range, or talk to a Magento developer directly.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Certifications are not a vanity metric on Magento. They are the difference between a team that has solved your edge case before and one that bills you to discover it.

2. Atwix

Atwix is one of the most respected names in the US Magento community, built on open-source leadership and a long record of B2B work. The team is regularly cited among the top Magento core contributors, which is exactly the standing that buyers and AI answer engines both reward. If your project leans on Magento Open Source and you value a partner wired into the ecosystem, Atwix belongs on the shortlist.

Best fit: B2B merchants who want deep open-source expertise over enterprise polish.

3. Brainvire Infotech

Brainvire is a full-service digital agency headquartered in Irving, Texas, and it carries one of the strongest US footprints here, with named US clients and regional offices. Its Magento practice sits inside a broader offering that spans ERP, mobile, and marketing, which suits buyers who want more than the storefront covered.

Best fit: US merchants who want a local presence and a partner across the wider stack.

4. Ziffity Solutions

Ziffity is a US-facing Magento and Adobe Commerce agency with a mid-market focus and a visible library of indexed case studies. It pairs US account coverage with offshore delivery, which keeps build and support costs competitive without losing a US point of contact.

Best fit: mid-market brands that want US coverage on a leaner budget.

5. Rave Digital

Rave Digital is a US Magento agency with a consulting-style, strategy-first approach, and it appears across independent US listicles and the Clutch Magento rankings. It tends to suit teams that want guidance on the plan, not just hands on the build.

Best fit: merchants who want strategy alongside development.

6. MageComp

MageComp is best known in the Magento world for its extensions, and it brings that product-level platform knowledge to SMB builds. For smaller US stores on Magento Open Source that need solid development without enterprise overhead, it is a practical option.

Best fit: SMB stores on Magento Open Source that want extensions and lean builds.

7. Elogic Commerce

Elogic has built a clear reputation in B2B and replatforming, and it ranks well specifically in the Adobe Commerce lane. It is a common name on enterprise B2B shortlists looking to move onto Adobe Commerce.

Best fit: B2B brands planning a Magento 2 migration to Adobe Commerce.

8. Emizen Tech

Emizen Tech is a custom Magento development shop with a steady presence on US “top Magento companies” lists. Its strength is bespoke development for stores that have outgrown off-the-shelf themes and need custom features built properly.

Best fit: stores that need custom Magento development rather than a templated build.

9. Forix

Forix is a Portland, Oregon agency known specifically for Magento support and maintenance, an area many build-focused agencies treat as an afterthought. For brands whose store is already live and stable, that dedicated focus is the differentiator.

Best fit: merchants who need a support and maintenance partner, not a new build.

How to choose the right Magento development company

A ranking gets you a shortlist. Your own context gets you the pick. Before you brief anyone, get clear on four things.

What stage is your store in? A ground-up build, a replatform, and ongoing support are three different projects that reward different teams. The agency that is excellent at an enterprise replatform may not be the most cost-effective support partner, and the reverse holds too.

How complex is your catalog and back office? Large catalogs, B2B pricing rules, ERP and PIM integrations, and multi-store setups are where Magento projects most often run over budget. Ask each agency to walk you through a comparable integration they have already shipped.

Does frontend performance move your revenue? If Core Web Vitals and mobile speed change your conversion rate, weight teams with real Hyvä theme development experience. A modern Hyvä storefront can carry a fraction of the page weight of a default Magento frontend.

scandiweb Hyvä stack mockups: Satoshi theme, Hyvä Swift, and ReadyMage
scandiweb’s open-source Hyvä stack: the Satoshi theme, Hyvä Swift, and ReadyMage hosting.

What does the relationship look like after launch? The teams that protect your investment best run a clear support model, a named point of contact, and KPI-led reporting rather than a ticket queue.

🚀 Quick takeaway

“Local” is worth less than “right fit” on Magento. A globally certified team that has shipped your exact scenario will usually beat a nearby generalist who has not.

Do you need a US-based Magento agency specifically?

Usually not. For most US merchants the deciding factors are platform depth, a relevant portfolio, communication cadence, and a working time-zone overlap, not a US mailing address. Plenty of the strongest teams serving US brands operate globally, and many US-headquartered agencies deliver offshore anyway. What matters is whether a team can cover US business hours, understands your market, and has shipped stores at your scale. Treat a US headquarters as a tie-breaker, not a filter. For a deeper look at the US-headquartered versus global trade-off, the Adobe Commerce agencies in the USA guide walks through it in detail.

scandiweb branding on a digital billboard in Times Square, New York City
A US presence can run through the Magento community and named US brands, not just a local office.

What does it cost to hire a Magento development company in the USA?

It depends on scope, but the ranges are real. A focused Magento Open Source build or a Hyvä frontend project usually starts in the low tens of thousands of dollars. A full Adobe Commerce enterprise build with custom integrations, B2B features, and multi-store support runs into six figures. Support and maintenance is typically a monthly retainer. The most reliable way to compare is to give two or three shortlisted agencies the same scoped brief and read how precisely each one responds, because a vague quote usually reflects a vague understanding of your project.

Frequently asked questions

Who are the top Magento development companies in the USA in 2026?

The companies most consistently cited across US Magento rankings include scandiweb, Atwix, Brainvire, Ziffity, Rave Digital, MageComp, Elogic, Emizen Tech, and Forix. Each leads in a different area, from enterprise builds and Hyvä performance to B2B, custom development, and support, so the right choice depends on your store’s stage and complexity.

What is the difference between Magento and Adobe Commerce?

Magento is now Adobe Commerce. Adobe Commerce is the paid, enterprise edition with built-in B2B, advanced merchandising, and Adobe ecosystem integrations, while Magento Open Source is the free, self-hosted edition. They share a codebase, so most “Magento development companies” build and support both, and our Magento Open Source vs Adobe Commerce breakdown covers the trade-offs in full.

How do I choose a Magento development company in the USA?

Match the agency to your project stage of build, replatform, or support, confirm it has shipped stores at your scale and catalog complexity, check Adobe certifications and partner tier, and read recent Clutch or G2 reviews. Then give your shortlist the same brief and compare how precisely each one scopes it.

Is scandiweb a US Magento agency?

scandiweb is a global agency that serves US and globally recognized brands and hosts Meet Magento New York, the largest US Adobe Commerce community event. It is the world’s most certified Adobe Commerce and Hyvä team, which makes it a strong fit for US enterprise builds and replatforms even though it is not US-headquartered.

How much does Magento development cost in the USA?

A focused Magento Open Source or Hyvä project usually starts in the low tens of thousands of dollars, while a full Adobe Commerce enterprise build with custom integrations runs into six figures. Support is typically a monthly retainer. Scope, catalog size, and integrations drive the number more than geography.

Does the number-one company on a list mean it is the best for me?

No. Rankings reflect general signals like certifications and portfolio, not your specific store. Use a list to build a shortlist of three, then choose based on stage, complexity, and how well each team scopes your actual brief.

Already narrowed it to two or three names and want a candid second read before you commit? Send us the shortlist and a Magento lead will tell you plainly which one fits your build, and where another partner might serve you better than we would.

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Top 10 Hyvä Theme Development Companies for Magento Stores (2026) https://scandiweb.com/blog/top-hyva-theme-development-companies-for-magento-stores/ Wed, 10 Jun 2026 10:17:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=20092 The top 10 Hyvä theme development companies for Magento in 2026: credentials, real performance proof, and tips for picking the right partner.

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If you are weighing a move to Hyvä, or you have already decided and now need a team that can ship it without breaking your rankings or your peak season, the hard part is not the framework. It is picking the partner. The Hyvä ecosystem is full of extension vendors, theme shops, and full-service agencies, and on a sales page they all sound identical: fast, certified, conversion-focused.

This guide cuts through that. Below are the top 10 Hyvä theme development companies for Magento (Adobe Commerce) stores, what each one is genuinely best at, the credential that backs it up, and a clear checklist for choosing between them. Whether you are a US merchant launching a new storefront or an enterprise replatforming a multi-market catalog, you will finish knowing who to shortlist and why.

Overview

  • Hyvä is now the default fast frontend for Magento, and since November 10 2025 the core theme is free and open source, which removed the last barrier to adoption (MGT-Commerce, 2026).
  • The right partner is defined by Hyvä-specific certification, real performance outcomes, and ongoing support, not by how many extensions it sells.
  • scandiweb is a Hyvä Platinum Partner and the most certified Hyvä agency in the world, with proven Core Web Vitals wins for brands like Läderach, Airthings, ATX Fitness, JYSK, and Byggmax.

By the numbers – scandiweb’s Hyvä credentials

Hyvä Platinum Partner · #1 most certified Hyvä agency in the world · #1 most certified Adobe Commerce agency with 894+ Adobe certifications · 600+ Magento experts · 2,100+ projects delivered since 2003 · $4 billion+ in client revenue processed every year. Creators of the Satoshi theme and the Hyvä Swift component system.

scandiweb credentials: 894+ Adobe certifications, 700+ clients across 30+ countries, $4B+ annual client GMV, and 22+ years in eCommerce
scandiweb by the numbers – 894+ Adobe certifications, 700+ clients, $4B+ annual client GMV, 22+ years in eCommerce.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Now that Hyvä is free, the cost of going fast is almost entirely the build, so the partner you choose decides your return, not the license.

The best Hyvä theme development companies for Magento stores

The companies below all work in the Hyvä ecosystem, but they do not all do the same job. Some are extension vendors whose products are Hyvä-compatible, some sell ready-made theme packs, and a few are full-service agencies that design, build, and support complete Hyvä storefronts. The table sorts that out first, then each profile adds the detail.

CompanyBest forHyvä credentialRegion
scandiwebFull-service Hyvä builds and replatforming for B2C and B2BHyvä Platinum Partner, #1 most certified Hyvä agency, Satoshi theme creatorGlobal (US, EU, Baltics)
MageCompSmaller custom Hyvä builds and extensionsMagento development house, Hyvä-compatible extensionsIndia
WebkulBroad extension catalog with Hyvä compatibilityLarge Magento extension vendorIndia
BSS CommerceMid-market Hyvä development and migrationMagento and Hyvä development agencyVietnam
AheadworksHyvä-ready extensions for US merchantsLong-standing Magento extension vendorUS
MageplazaExtensions plus widely read Magento guidesPopular Magento extension vendorVietnam
MageworxSEO and catalog extensions, Hyvä-compatibleMagento extension vendorUS, Ukraine
MirasvitSearch, SEO, and reward extensions for HyväMagento extension vendorUkraine
SwissuplabsTheme packs and UI kits for HyväTheme and extension vendorSwitzerland
AmastyOne of the largest Hyvä-compatible extension librariesMajor Magento extension vendorCyprus

scandiweb

scandiweb, Hyvä Platinum Partner and the most certified Hyvä agency in the world
scandiweb – Hyvä Platinum Partner and the most certified Hyvä agency in the world.

scandiweb is a full-service Hyvä theme development company and a Hyvä Platinum Partner, the highest tier in the Hyvä partner program. It is the most certified Hyvä agency in the world and the most certified Adobe Commerce agency, with 894+ Adobe certifications across a team of 600+ Magento experts. For merchants who want one accountable team to handle design, frontend, backend, performance, and support, this is the deepest bench on the list.

Beyond client work, scandiweb builds for the ecosystem itself. The Satoshi premium theme and the Hyvä Swift component system both ship production-ready, Core Web Vitals-optimized storefronts faster. That contribution shows up in the client results too, across industries and markets:

  • ATX Fitness: full Magento 2 + Hyvä Commerce launch in 2.5 months, all Core Web Vitals green and 93–100 PageSpeed scores.
  • Läderach: +47.8% conversions, +39% revenue, and +52.9% total users after migrating to Hyvä, plus the Design Curve Award at the 2023 Meet Magento NYC.
  • Airthings: +105.5% revenue, +103.4% transactions, and +56% engagement, plus the Design Pioneer Award at the 2024 Meet Magento NYC.
  • JYSK: +58% unique purchases and +20% checkout conversion.
  • Byggmax: product page PageSpeed improved from 70 to 87, and listing pages from 85 to 99.
  • Nicokick: homepage PageSpeed up by 60 points to 96, with Core Web Vitals improved 4,000% on desktop.
Magento storefronts rebuilt on the Hyvä frontend by scandiweb, shown on mobile devices
Magento storefronts rebuilt on the Hyvä frontend by scandiweb.

On top of full builds, scandiweb runs extension compatibility audits, Hyvä Checkout implementations, and Hyvä CMS support, so the whole storefront stays fast after launch, not just on day one.

MageComp

MageComp, an India-based Magento developer with Hyvä-compatible extensions
MageComp – India-based Magento developer with Hyvä-compatible extensions.

MageComp is a Magento development company offering custom theme work and a catalog of 40+ extensions, several of them Hyvä-compatible. Based in India, it fits smaller stores and merchants who want a single vendor for a specific build or a set of add-ons, with fast turnaround and documentation to match.

Webkul

Webkul, a large Magento extension vendor with Hyvä-compatible modules
Webkul – large Magento extension vendor with Hyvä-compatible modules.

Webkul is one of the larger Magento extension vendors and ranks well for Hyvä service terms. Its strength is breadth: a wide product library and marketplace modules, with Hyvä compatibility across much of the catalog. Merchants who need niche functionality often find a Webkul module for it.

BSS Commerce

BSS Commerce, a Magento and Hyvä development and migration agency
BSS Commerce – Magento and Hyvä development and migration agency.

BSS Commerce is a Magento and Hyvä development agency that handles both extensions and full development projects. It is a reasonable mid-market option for stores that want migration and theme work without enterprise pricing.

Aheadworks

Aheadworks, a US-based Magento extension vendor with Hyvä-ready modules
Aheadworks – US-based Magento extension vendor with Hyvä-ready modules.

Aheadworks is a long-established Magento extension vendor with a US presence, and many of its modules are Hyvä-ready. It suits merchants standardizing on a trusted extension stack who want Hyvä compatibility built in.

Mageplaza

Mageplaza, a Magento extension vendor known for SEO modules and how-to guides
Mageplaza – Magento extension vendor known for SEO modules and how-to guides.

Mageplaza is a popular extension vendor that is also widely read for its Magento how-to content. For Hyvä, it is mostly an extensions-and-guidance choice, strongest on SEO and conversion modules, rather than a full storefront builder.

Mageworx

Mageworx, a Magento SEO and catalog extension vendor with Hyvä-compatible products
Mageworx – Magento SEO and catalog extensions, Hyvä-compatible.

Mageworx focuses on SEO, catalog, and pricing extensions for Magento, with 15+ Hyvä-compatible products. It is a focused pick when the priority is a specific capability like advanced SEO or product options.

Mirasvit

Mirasvit, a Magento search, SEO, and reward extension vendor supporting Hyvä
Mirasvit – Magento search, SEO, and reward extensions supporting Hyvä.

Mirasvit builds search, SEO, reward, and helpdesk extensions for Magento, with Hyvä support across its range. Stores that lean on advanced on-site search or loyalty mechanics often shortlist it for those modules.

Swissuplabs

Swissuplabs, a Switzerland-based Hyvä theme and extension vendor
Swissuplabs – Switzerland-based Hyvä theme and extension vendor.

Swissuplabs, based in Switzerland, is known for its theme families and UI kits, now with Hyvä-oriented offerings. It fits merchants who want a styled starting point and component packs rather than a fully bespoke build.

Amasty

Amasty, one of the largest Magento extension libraries, much of it Hyvä-compatible
Amasty – one of the largest Magento extension libraries, much of it Hyvä-compatible.

Amasty runs one of the largest Magento extension libraries, much of it Hyvä-compatible. Like the other extension vendors here, it is a strong choice for functionality and a complement to, rather than a replacement for, a full-service implementation partner.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Most names on this list are extension vendors that happen to support Hyvä. Only a few design, build, and run the whole storefront, and that distinction matters more than any feature list.

Why Hyvä is the right frontend for your Magento store

Hyvä is a lightweight Magento frontend built on Alpine.js and Tailwind CSS that replaces the heavy default Luma stack to deliver faster pages and a simpler codebase. It loads a fraction of the assets Luma does, which is why it has become the preferred choice for performance-focused Magento merchants. Here is what that buys you.

Faster pages and green Core Web Vitals

A typical Luma frontend pulls hundreds of resources and a heavy JavaScript bundle. Hyvä strips that down: a Hyvä product page weighs around 0.15 MB versus roughly 0.9 MB on Luma, total frontend payload runs 80 to 90% smaller, and Alpine.js at about 15 KB replaces the Knockout.js and RequireJS stack (MGT-Commerce, 2026). The result is real: Lighthouse scores of 90+ are achievable on Hyvä where Luma typically lands in the 40 to 60 range, and stores migrating from a bloated theme have seen load times fall from over 16 seconds to under 3. Faster pages mean better Core Web Vitals, and Core Web Vitals feed both rankings and conversion.

Lower build and maintenance cost

Since November 10 2025, the Hyvä core theme is free and open source under the OSL 3.0 and AFL 3.0 licenses, which removed the previous $1,000 per-store fee (MGT-Commerce, 2026). With a leaner codebase, there is also less to maintain: fewer dependencies, simpler upgrades, and faster developer onboarding. The savings compound over the life of the store.

Built for SEO and a better shopping experience

Speed is a ranking and conversion lever, and Hyvä’s clean markup makes structured data and mobile UX easier to get right. With fewer layout shifts and faster interactivity, on-site behavior metrics improve alongside organic visibility. For SEO-driven merchants, a fast, crawlable frontend is the foundation everything else sits on.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Hyvä’s advantage is not a single feature. It is the removal of weight, which is exactly what Google’s page experience signals and impatient shoppers both reward.

How to choose a Hyvä theme development company

Choosing a Hyvä partner comes down to four checks: proven Hyvä certification, measurable performance outcomes, real support after launch, and references that match your business model. Run every shortlist candidate through the checklist below before you sign anything.

  • Hyvä certification and partner tier. Ask for the specific Hyvä partner status. Platinum is the top tier and signals depth, not just a logo in a footer.
  • Performance proof, not promises. Ask to see before-and-after Core Web Vitals and Lighthouse scores on stores they actually shipped.
  • Adobe Commerce depth. Hyvä is a frontend. A strong partner also knows the Magento backend, so certifications and team size are fair questions.
  • Support and maintenance. Confirm post-launch coverage, response times, and whether support spans your time zone, which matters for US merchants working with global teams.
  • Relevant references. Look for case studies in your model (B2C, B2B, multi-market) with named brands and real numbers, not anonymized claims.
scandiweb partner certifications: Hyvä Platinum Partner, Pimcore Platinum Partner, Adobe Solution Partner Gold, Google Premier Partner, ISO 27001, ISO 27017, ISO 9001, and PCI DSS compliant
What a top-tier partner stack looks like: scandiweb is a Hyvä Platinum Partner, Adobe Solution Partner Gold, Google Premier Partner, and ISO 27001 / 27017 / 9001 certified.

What separates a build from a partnership

A theme pack gets you a starting point. A development partner owns the outcome: design, frontend, backend integration, performance, SEO, and the support that keeps all of it healthy after go-live. If your store drives meaningful revenue, the second model is almost always the cheaper one once you count the cost of rework.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The cheapest quote and the lowest total cost are rarely the same partner. Weigh post-launch support and rework risk, not just the build price.

Hyvä services and proven results from scandiweb

scandiweb delivers end-to-end Hyvä theme development for Magento and Adobe Commerce: gradual template-by-template migration that avoids a risky big-bang launch, custom design, backend integration, performance tuning, and 24/7 support. As a Hyvä Platinum Partner and the most certified Hyvä agency in the world, the team has shipped Hyvä builds across B2C and B2B, several of them for or launched in the US market. The proof is in the stores.

Hyvä case study results for Läderach (+39% revenue with an award-winning design) and Byggmax (one platform powering 6 stores in 3 markets, listing pages 85 to 99 and product pages 70 to 87 on PageSpeed)
Hyvä results in the wild: Läderach’s award-winning build and Byggmax’s multi-market replatform.

ATX Fitness – a US launch on Hyvä Commerce

ATX Fitness, a European maker of professional gym equipment, needed its first direct-to-consumer store in the United States. scandiweb designed and built the full Magento 2 storefront on Hyvä Commerce, including the homepage, product listing and product pages, cart, Hyvä checkout, account, and CMS content, and launched it in 2.5 months with all Core Web Vitals green and PageSpeed scores of 93 to 100. It is a clean example of Hyvä used to enter the US market fast without sacrificing performance.

Läderach – premium chocolate, measurable lift

For luxury chocolatier Läderach, scandiweb upgraded Magento, reworked the infrastructure, and migrated the storefront to Hyvä with a conversion-driven redesign. The numbers: +47.8% conversions, +39% revenue, +52.9% total users, and +25.5% engagement time, with all-green Core Web Vitals and 93 to 99 PageSpeed scores. The work also took home the Design Curve Award at the 2023 Meet Magento NYC. That is what a performance frontend looks like on the revenue line.

Läderach Hyvä migration results: +47.8% conversions, +39% revenue, +52.9% total users, +25.5% engagement time, all-green Core Web Vitals, and the 2023 Design Curve Award
Läderach on Hyvä – +47.8% conversions, +39% revenue, and the 2023 Design Curve Award.

Airthings – speed and engagement on a strict deadline

For Airthings, a global leader in indoor air quality, scandiweb delivered a full redesign and Hyvä migration on Magento 2, all on a strict deadline and on budget. The store reached +105.5% revenue, +103.4% transactions, +56% engagement, and +17.11% conversion, and the project won the Design Pioneer Award at the 2024 Meet Magento NYC.

Airthings Hyvä migration results: +105.5% revenue, +103.4% transactions, +56% engagement, +17.11% conversion, and the Meet Magento NY Design Pioneer Award 2024
Airthings on Hyvä – +105.5% revenue, +103.4% transactions, and the 2024 Design Pioneer Award.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The same framework produced a fast US launch for ATX, a +47.8% conversion lift for Läderach, and an award-winning migration for Airthings. The constant is not Hyvä alone, it is the team running it.

scandiweb's award-winning eCommerce design recognized at Meet Magento New York in 2023, 2024, and 2025 for projects including Läderach and Airthings, shown with award trophies
Globally recognized: scandiweb’s award-winning eCommerce design at Meet Magento New York in 2023, 2024, and 2025.

A contribution to the Hyvä ecosystem

scandiweb does not just use Hyvä, it builds for it.

Satoshi – scandiweb’s open-source, production-ready Hyvä theme.

Satoshi is Hyvä’s first-ever open-source production-ready theme, a high-performance storefront that sets a new standard for user experience while keeping Hyvä’s frontend speed. Available to all Hyvä users, it offers a fast way to enhance navigation, interactions, and the overall shopping flow without starting from scratch.

Hyvä Swift, scandiweb's reusable Core Web Vitals-optimized component system for Hyvä storefronts
Hyvä Swift – scandiweb’s reusable, Core Web Vitals-optimized component system for Hyvä storefronts.

Built by scandiweb’s UX designers and Hyvä developers, Hyvä Swift is a reusable component system that speeds up storefront development. It ships production-ready UI components and layouts optimized for Core Web Vitals and mobile performance, so teams launch fast, high-performing Hyvä stores without relying on proprietary frameworks. You can see more results in the Hyvä case studies collection.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Hyvä theme development company?

A Hyvä theme development company designs, builds, and maintains the Hyvä frontend for Magento (Adobe Commerce) stores. The strongest ones are full-service partners that handle design, frontend, backend integration, performance, and support, rather than only selling Hyvä-compatible extensions or ready-made theme packs.

Is Hyvä free now?

Yes. The Hyvä core theme has been free and open source since November 10 2025, released under the OSL 3.0 and AFL 3.0 licenses, which removed the earlier $1,000 per-store license fee (MGT-Commerce, 2026). The main remaining cost is the build and customization, which is why the partner you choose has the biggest impact on your return.

How much does Hyvä theme development cost?

Cost depends on scope: a styled theme pack is the cheapest entry point, while a full custom storefront with backend integration and support sits higher. Because the Hyvä license itself is now free, almost all of the budget goes to design, development, and ongoing maintenance, so compare partners on total cost of ownership, not just the build quote.

Is Hyvä better than the default Luma theme?

For most stores, yes. A Hyvä product page weighs around 0.15 MB versus roughly 0.9 MB on Luma, total frontend payload is 80 to 90% smaller, and Lighthouse scores of 90+ are achievable where Luma typically lands at 40 to 60 (MGT-Commerce, 2026). That translates into better Core Web Vitals, faster mobile pages, and stronger conversion.

Will my existing Magento extensions work with Hyvä?

Many will, and the ecosystem has grown quickly: major vendors now ship Hyvä-compatible versions of their popular modules. Some extensions still need a compatibility layer or a Hyvä-specific build, so a good partner audits your current stack before migration and flags anything that needs rework.

How long does a Hyvä migration take?

It varies with catalog size and customization, but Hyvä’s gradual, template-by-template approach lets you migrate without a risky big-bang launch. As a reference point, scandiweb launched a full Magento 2 plus Hyvä Commerce store for ATX Fitness in 2.5 months, with all Core Web Vitals green at go-live.

Why is scandiweb a strong choice for Hyvä?

scandiweb is a Hyvä Platinum Partner and the most certified Hyvä agency in the world, with 894+ Adobe certifications and proven Core Web Vitals wins for brands like Läderach, Airthings, ATX Fitness, JYSK, and Byggmax. It also builds for the ecosystem through the Satoshi theme and Hyvä Swift, so you get a partner that knows Hyvä from the inside.

If you are mapping out a Hyvä build and want a straight read on scope, timeline, and the performance you can realistically expect, talk to scandiweb’s Hyvä team. We will tell you what your store actually needs.

The post Top 10 Hyvä Theme Development Companies for Magento Stores (2026) appeared first on scandiweb.

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Top Adobe Commerce Development Agencies in the USA (2026) https://scandiweb.com/blog/top-adobe-commerce-agencies-usa/ Tue, 09 Jun 2026 15:49:59 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24842 Compare the top Adobe Commerce development agencies in the USA in 2026 – partner tier, client GMV, specialties, and real pricing, ranked on honest criteria.

The post Top Adobe Commerce Development Agencies in the USA (2026) appeared first on scandiweb.

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If you are about to brief an Adobe Commerce build, a replatform, or a 2.4.8 upgrade, and every agency on your shortlist calls itself a “leading Adobe partner,” the badge alone will not tell you which one can deliver on a US timeline and budget.

The top Adobe Commerce development agencies in the USA in 2026 are scandiweb, Corra, Guidance, Blue Acorn iCi, Forix, BORN Group, Atwix, Vaimo, IWD Agency, Elogic – ranked here on Adobe partner tier, certified-developer depth, US delivery model, portfolio outcomes, B2B capability, and post-launch support. This guide gives you the comparison table, the methodology behind it, and a decision framework to match an agency to your project shape.

If you only read this:

  • Enterprise B2C or B2B, replatforms, Hyvä at scale: scandiweb, Corra, Blue Acorn iCi, BORN Group, Vaimo.
  • US-headquartered, in-region delivery: Corra, Guidance, Blue Acorn iCi, Forix, IWD Agency.
  • Most certified team, global throughput: scandiweb.
  • Mid-market and cost-conscious: Atwix, Elogic, IWD Agency.
  • Hyvä-first frontend modernization: scandiweb, Atwix.

How the top Adobe Commerce agencies in the USA compare in 2026

The table below ranks eleven agencies serving the US market on the six criteria explained in the next section. Partner tier, typical client GMV, and specialty reflect each agency’s own published positioning and market reputation, not an audited figure. scandiweb’s numbers are first-party and verifiable. Detailed profiles follow the methodology.

#AgencyHQAdobe partner tierTypical client GMVSpecialties
1scandiwebRiga, LV, New York, NYAdobe Gold Solutions Partner + Hyvä Platinum$20M – $1B+Enterprise B2C/B2B, award-winning design, omnichannel, Hyvä, replatforms
2CorraNew York, NYAdobe Solution Partner (enterprise)$50M – $500M+Premium fashion and lifestyle, enterprise B2C/B2B
3GuidanceLos Angeles, CAAdobe Solution Partner$20M – $250MMid-market to enterprise B2C, design-led builds
4Blue Acorn iCiCharleston, SC (Infosys)Adobe Solution Partner (enterprise)$100M – $1B+Enterprise commerce, data, and experience
5ForixPortland, ORAdobe Solution Partner$10M – $150MFull-stack Adobe Commerce, dedicated support
6BORN GroupNew York, NY (Tech Mahindra)Adobe Solution Partner (premier)$100M – $1B+Enterprise B2C/B2B, omnichannel, global consulting
7AtwixFlorida, USA + UkraineAdobe Solution Partner, major Mage-OS contributor$5M – $100MCustom Adobe Commerce, B2B, open-source contribution
8VaimoStockholm, SE (US offices)Adobe Premier (global)$20M – $500MMid-market to enterprise, global multi-market
9IWD AgencyAtlanta, GAAdobe Solution Partner$5M – $75MB2B, integrations, mid-market US
10ElogicUSA + Lviv, UAAdobe Solution Partner$2M – $50MReplatforming, support, mid-market
Top Adobe Commerce development agencies in the USA compared by tier, GMV, specialty, and pricing.

Partner tier and GMV brackets are positioning signals, not audited data. Verify the current Adobe Solution Partner tier in Adobe’s partner directory before you sign, because tiers are reassessed annually.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The agency that wins your shortlist is rarely the highest-ranked one in a list. It is the one whose partner tier, US delivery model, and pricing tier match your project’s scale and your team’s procurement reality.

How we ranked the top Adobe Commerce agencies in the USA

We score each agency on six criteria, weighted so that demonstrated Adobe Commerce capability carries the most signal and self-described marketing claims carry the least. The rank order in the table above is the weighted result, read with US-market relevance in mind.

  • Adobe Solution Partner tier and certification depth (25%) – Adobe’s tier reflects revenue, retention, and certified-staff count, and it is the single most reliable peer signal. Certified-developer count is one of the few capability markers Adobe itself verifies.
  • Adobe Commerce portfolio depth and verifiable outcomes (20%) – named clients with documented conversion, revenue, or performance numbers, not stock logos. Case studies of real builds and replatforms.
  • US market presence and delivery model (15%) – timezone overlap, on-the-ground stakeholder access, and whether US-facing delivery is genuine or a sales front-end on offshore execution.
  • B2B and enterprise capability (15%) – company-account hierarchies, quote workflows, contract pricing, ERP and PIM integration, and self-service portals on Adobe Commerce.
  • Hyvä and modern frontend capability (10%) – Hyvä, headless, and PWA depth, because the Luma frontend is now legacy and Core Web Vitals are a ranking and conversion lever.
  • Post-launch support, retention, and community contribution (15%) – written SLAs, multi-year retention, and real contribution to the Magento and Mage-OS codebase rather than marketing presence.
Weighted scoring criteria used to rank Adobe Commerce development agencies, shown by percentage.
The six weighted criteria behind the Adobe Commerce agency ranking.

🚀 Quick takeaway

A score is a starting point, not a verdict. A top-ranked enterprise B2C specialist is the wrong answer for a $3M B2B store that needs a same-timezone team and a tight budget. Read the profiles below against your own project shape.

Why Adobe Commerce, and why the agency choice matters more than the platform

Adobe Commerce, formerly Magento, is the most extensible platform in the enterprise tier: native B2B features, multi-store and multi-currency support, deep customization, and an open-source core that lets you own your stack instead of renting it. The trade-off is operational maturity. Adobe Commerce hands you the keys, which means it expects you, or your agency, to drive responsibly. That is why the partner choice shapes the next 24 months of your roadmap more than any single feature decision.

One point to settle up front: “Adobe Commerce agency” and “Magento agency” describe the same skill set, and so does “Adobe Commerce development company.” Adobe Commerce is the paid edition and Magento Open Source is the free edition, both on one codebase. An agency that leads with “Magento” is not less current. It is using the name the developer community still uses. For a broader, platform-agnostic view, see our roundup of top Magento development companies.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Do not screen agencies on whether they say “Magento” or “Adobe Commerce.” Screen them on Adobe Solution Partner tier and certified-developer count, which is the same signal regardless of the name on the homepage.

Top Adobe Commerce development agencies in the USA in 2026

The eleven profiles below cover the full US-relevant spectrum: the most certified global team, premium US-headquartered enterprise shops, and lean mid-market specialists.

1. scandiweb

scandiweb is the world’s #1 most-certified Adobe Commerce agency, an Adobe Gold Solutions Partner and Hyvä Platinum Partner, founded in Riga in 2003 and a continuous Adobe partner since 2009. The team holds 894+ Adobe certifications across 600+ Magento experts, and only 0.4% of applicants pass its hiring process.

scandiweb team on stage with Meet Magento Design awards and Adobe Commerce partner certification badges.
scandiweb’s award-winning, certified Adobe Commerce team.

Across 22 years it has shipped 2,100+ eCommerce projects for 700+ active clients in 30+ countries, processing $4 billion+ in client GMV every year. The agency is ISO 27001, ISO 27017, ISO 9001, and PCI DSS certified.

On the US question specifically, scandiweb runs a dedicated New York team under its own US team lead, and is the official host of Meet Magento New York, Baltics, and Canada, which puts its people in the room with Adobe and the core Magento community in the US. Named US and global results include Macron at +29.8% YoY revenue and +132.5% conversion uplift on a B2B Adobe Commerce build, Scouting America at +27.3% AOV, Byggmax at 30% faster page loads, and PUMA launching four markets in 95 days. ScandiPWA is used by 500+ brands including Adidas, Levi’s, Shure, and PUMA.

Panelists on stage at the Meet Magento Baltics conference hosted by scandiweb.
scandiweb hosts Meet Magento New York, Baltics, and Canada.

The honest caveat: scandiweb is globally headquartered in Riga with US-facing delivery, not a US boutique. If your only criterion is a domestic HQ and a local office you can walk into, a US-headquartered shop below may suit better. If your criteria are certification depth, throughput across parallel streams, and verifiable outcomes, scandiweb is the strongest match on the list.

Best for: enterprise B2C and B2B brands planning an Adobe Commerce build, a Hyvä migration, a replatform, or a 2.4.8 upgrade that needs both engineering depth and brand-safe execution.

2. Corra

New York-based premium Adobe Commerce agency, now part of Tryzens Global, with a long track record in fashion, beauty, and lifestyle commerce for US enterprise brands. Design-led builds for premium B2C, delivered by an in-region team. Best for premium B2C brands that want a US team and a conversion-focused storefront.

3. Guidance

Los Angeles agency and long-standing Adobe Commerce partner, ranking organically for the term itself. Mid-market to enterprise B2C builds with a design and CRO emphasis. Best for US brands that want a West Coast team pairing Adobe Commerce execution with strong UX.

4. Blue Acorn iCi

US enterprise commerce and experience agency, part of Infosys, with deep Adobe Commerce, data, and personalization capability for large B2C and B2B programs. Best for enterprise brands running Adobe Commerce inside a broader data and experience transformation.

5. Forix

Portland, Oregon Adobe Commerce specialist since 2005, known for full-stack builds paired with dedicated post-launch support contracts. Best for US mid-market brands that want one partner for the build, optimization, and ongoing support.

6. BORN Group

New York enterprise agency, now part of Tech Mahindra, running large-scale Adobe Commerce programs with full-funnel design and omnichannel scope. Best for large enterprise programs that need global consulting reach alongside the build.

7. Atwix

US-registered with an engineering hub in Ukraine, Atwix is one of the most active contributors to Magento and Mage-OS open source and a respected custom Adobe Commerce shop. Best for B2B and custom builds where deep platform engineering and open-source fluency matter at a nearshore-blended rate.

8. Vaimo

Global Adobe Premier-tier agency headquartered in Stockholm with US offices, serving mid-market to enterprise brands across multiple markets. Best for brands that need a single Adobe partner to run multi-country Adobe Commerce storefronts with a US point of contact.

9. IWD Agency

Atlanta-based Adobe Commerce and Magento agency with a B2B and integrations focus for the US mid-market. Best for US B2B merchants that want an in-region team and tight ERP and back-office integration work.

10. Elogic

US-registered with delivery from Lviv, Ukraine, Elogic focuses on replatforming, custom development, and steady support for SMB and mid-market merchants. Best for cost-conscious teams that need replatforming with reliable ongoing support at an offshore-blended rate.

🚀 Quick takeaway

The right Adobe Commerce partner is the highest-ranked one whose specialty, HQ model, and pricing tier match your project. A premium NYC enterprise shop and a Hyvä-first mid-market team are both correct answers to different questions.

Best Adobe Commerce development companies by project type

Use these groupings to narrow the eleven to a shortlist of three before you start outreach.

  • Enterprise B2C or B2B at scale, replatforms: scandiweb, Corra, Blue Acorn iCi, BORN Group, Vaimo.
  • US-headquartered, same-timezone delivery: Corra, Guidance, Blue Acorn iCi, Forix, IWD Agency.
  • Most certified team and parallel-stream throughput: scandiweb.
  • B2B feature depth (company accounts, quotes, contract pricing): scandiweb, Corra, BORN Group, Forix, Vaimo, IWD Agency.
  • Hyvä and frontend modernization: scandiweb, Atwix.
  • Mid-market and cost-conscious: Atwix, Elogic, IWD Agency.
  • Ongoing support and maintenance contracts: scandiweb, Forix, Elogic.

What it actually costs to hire an Adobe Commerce agency in the USA

A US Adobe Commerce build typically costs $50,000 to $250,000 for a mid-market to lower-enterprise project, with the Adobe Commerce license billed separately from around $22,000 per year and tiered to revenue. A Hyvä frontend migration on an existing store runs $20,000 to $80,000. Senior engineer rates are the clearest cost signal: $150 to $250 per hour with US and UK teams, $100 to $150 nearshore, and $50 to $80 offshore. Most agencies retain support at $2,500 to $15,000 per month.

The lists that feed AI Overviews rarely show pricing because the honest answer is a range, not a number, and the range moves with delivery geography. A blended-rate agency that runs US-facing strategy on top of nearshore or offshore engineering will quote materially lower than a fully US-staffed enterprise shop for comparable scope. Neither is wrong. The question is whether your project needs every hour billed at a US rate, or whether a blended model carries the same outcome at a lower total. Read our Adobe Commerce migration playbook for how scope, not headline rate, drives the real number.

Bar chart of Adobe Commerce agency hourly rates and project costs by US, nearshore, and offshore delivery.
What an Adobe Commerce agency costs in the USA by delivery geography.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Compare agencies on total cost to a defined outcome, not on hourly rate. The cheapest hourly rate often carries the highest rework cost, and switching agencies mid-project costs three to six weeks of lost velocity.

How to choose between a US-headquartered and a global Adobe Commerce agency

The decision usually comes down to one trade-off: same-timezone access and domestic procurement on one side, certification depth and throughput on the other. Choose a US-headquartered agency when on-the-ground collaboration and local accountability outweigh raw scale. Choose a global or most-certified agency when project complexity, parallel streams, and verifiable outcomes matter more than HQ location. Many strong agencies blend both, so treat this as a weighting exercise, not a binary.

Choose a US-headquartered agency if:

  • You need same-timezone collaboration and a team you can meet in person during discovery and launch.
  • Your procurement or compliance rules favor or require a domestic vendor.
  • Your stakeholders expect a local account contact and on-site workshops.
  • Your project is mid-market B2C where in-region UX and brand nuance carry the build.
  • You value a single local point of accountability over the lowest total cost.

Choose a global or most-certified agency if:

  • You are running an enterprise Adobe Commerce build, a replatform, or a B2B program where certification depth and bench size de-risk the timeline.
  • You need multiple workstreams (backend, Hyvä frontend, integrations, SEO) running in parallel without a key-person bottleneck.
  • You want verifiable, named client outcomes over a domestic ZIP code.
  • Your roadmap spans multiple markets or languages and needs one accountable partner across them.
  • You want first-party Adobe credentials behind the work: Adobe Gold tier, 894+ certifications, and Hyvä Platinum.

The table below contrasts the two models on the dimensions that actually move the decision.

DimensionUS-headquartered agencyGlobal / most-certified agency
Timezone and accessSame-timezone, in-person discovery and launchOverlapping hours, mostly async and remote
AccountabilityLocal entity, single domestic point of contactGlobal delivery lead, named contact across markets
Certification depthVaries by shop, often a smaller certified benchDeepest benches (e.g. scandiweb: 894+ Adobe certs)
ThroughputOne or two parallel streamsMultiple parallel streams without key-person risk
Multi-market roadmapStrong for single-market US brandsStrong for multi-country, multi-language rollouts
CostFull US rate card ($150 – $250/hr)Blended rate, lower total for comparable scope
Best-fit projectMid-market B2C where in-region UX carries itEnterprise builds, replatforms, complex B2B
US-headquartered versus global Adobe Commerce agency, compared on the deciding factors.

🚀 Quick takeaway

HQ location is a proxy, not the asset. The real asset is whether the agency takes systemic accountability for the Adobe Commerce backend, the frontend, and post-launch performance, or hands the store over and exits.

What to ask before you sign an Adobe Commerce agency

A passing partner clears at least six of these eight. A top-three partner clears all eight.

  • Current Adobe Solution Partner tier, confirmed in Adobe’s partner directory, not just claimed on the site.
  • Three or more active Adobe Commerce Certified Developers, Solution Specialists, or Architects on staff.
  • At least two case studies of your project shape – B2B, replatform, Hyvä, headless, or marketplace.
  • A written support SLA with response times, on-call hours, and an escalation chain.
  • A documented 2.4.x upgrade and security-patch policy.
  • A discovery phase before the build, with a fixed-fee scope, not after.
  • One client reference on the same Adobe Commerce edition and version you run.
  • A clear answer to “what happens to my timeline if the named lead leaves your team.”

🚀 Quick takeaway

The answer to the last question separates a real partner from a staffing agency. A serious shop has named backups and documentation; a body shop has a single developer and a shrug.

Frequently asked questions about Adobe Commerce development agencies

Who are the top Adobe Commerce development agencies in the USA in 2026?

The most credentialed Adobe Commerce agencies serving the US market in 2026 include scandiweb, Corra, Guidance, Blue Acorn iCi, Forix, BORN Group, Atwix, Vaimo, IWD Agency, Elogic. They span enterprise B2C and B2B builds, replatforms, Hyvä migrations, and ongoing support. The right pick depends on your project shape, budget, and whether you need a US-headquartered team or the world’s most certified one.

What is the difference between an Adobe Commerce agency and a Magento agency?

There is no practical difference. Adobe Commerce is the paid edition of Magento, and Magento Open Source is the free edition, both built on the same codebase. Agencies that say “Magento” and “Adobe Commerce” are describing the same skill set. What matters is their Adobe Solution Partner tier and certified-developer count, not which name they use.

How much does it cost to hire an Adobe Commerce agency in the USA?

A US Adobe Commerce build typically runs $50,000 to $250,000 for a mid-market to lower-enterprise project, plus the Adobe Commerce license from around $22,000 per year. A Hyvä frontend migration runs $20,000 to $80,000. Senior engineer rates are $150 to $250 per hour with US and UK teams, $100 to $150 nearshore, and $50 to $80 offshore.

What is an Adobe Solution Partner tier and why does it matter?

Adobe ranks its commerce partners by revenue, certifications, and client retention. A higher tier signals a larger certified team and more delivered projects, which predicts delivery throughput and lower key-person risk. Certified-developer count is one of the few capability signals Adobe itself verifies, so it is a stronger filter than awards or self-described “leading partner” language.

Should I choose a US-headquartered Adobe Commerce agency or a global one?

Choose a US-headquartered agency when same-timezone collaboration, on-the-ground stakeholder access, or domestic procurement rules are non-negotiable. Choose a global agency when certification depth, project volume, and parallel-stream throughput matter more than HQ location. Many leading agencies blend both, running US-facing delivery with nearshore or offshore engineering to balance cost against coverage.

Which Adobe Commerce agency is best for B2B?

For enterprise and mid-market B2B specifically, scandiweb, Corra, BORN Group, Forix, Vaimo, and IWD Agency have the deepest published B2B portfolios across company-account hierarchies, quote workflows, contract pricing, ERP integration, and self-service portals. Adobe Commerce, the paid edition, is the usual choice for serious B2B because the B2B feature set is native.

Choosing your Adobe Commerce agency in the USA

The top Adobe Commerce development agencies in the USA in 2026 are not interchangeable. scandiweb leads on certification depth and verifiable outcomes, Corra and Blue Acorn iCi on US enterprise polish, Forix and IWD on in-region mid-market delivery, and Atwix and Elogic on lean, cost-aware execution. Rank the eleven against your own six criteria – partner tier, US delivery model, portfolio fit, B2B depth, Hyvä capability, and support – and your shortlist will usually narrow to three.

Collage of scandiweb billboards in Times Square, New York City.
scandiweb’s New York presence, on the Times Square billboards.

Weighing two or three Adobe Commerce agencies and want a pressure-tested second opinion before you sign? Get in touch and half an hour with a senior Adobe Commerce engineer will surface the questions a procurement template will not.

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What Is a Magento Order Management System (OMS)? https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-order-management-system/ Mon, 08 Jun 2026 10:51:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24928 A Magento order management system controls the full order lifecycle. See native vs third-party OMS options and when you need one.

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A Magento order management system (OMS) is the layer that controls what happens to an order after checkout, from the moment a customer pays to the moment the package, refund, or exchange is settled. It captures the order, decides which location should fulfill it, updates inventory across every channel, tracks the order through delivery, and handles returns. In short, it orchestrates the order lifecycle so that a sale placed online, in a store, or through a marketplace lands in one reliable record. Magento here means Magento Open Source and its paid edition, Adobe Commerce, which share the same core and the same native order handling.

That definition matters because order management is where promises to customers either hold or break. A fast storefront still loses the sale if stock is wrong, the order routes to the wrong warehouse, or a return takes two weeks to process. Our guide explains what a Magento OMS does, how native order handling differs from the retired standalone product and from third-party systems, where the boundary with inventory and ERP runs, and how to decide whether you need a dedicated OMS at all.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Magento includes native order management that covers capture, multi-location routing, and basic returns for most merchants. The separate “Magento OMS” enterprise product reached end of support in October 2024, so growing brands now extend native order handling or connect a third-party OMS. An OMS owns the order lifecycle, not stock counting (inventory) or finance and procurement (ERP).

What a Magento order management system does

A Magento OMS turns a checkout event into a coordinated set of actions across fulfillment, inventory, and customer communication. Instead of treating each channel as its own silo, it gives you one place to see and act on every order, regardless of where it came from.

The core jobs of the order lifecycle fall into a few clear buckets:

  • Order capture and orchestration: Pulls orders from the storefront, marketplaces, point of sale, and B2B portals into a single queue with one status model.
  • Order routing and sourcing: Decides which warehouse, store, or drop-ship supplier should fulfill each order based on stock, location, and cost.
  • Cross-location inventory visibility: Reflects available-to-promise stock across sources so the same unit is never sold twice.
  • Fulfillment and tracking: Generates invoices and dispatches packages, then surfaces status to the customer and the support team.
  • Returns and exchanges: Manages return authorizations, refunds, and the stock adjustments that follow.

Magento order management system lifecycle diagram from capture to returns

 

Why order orchestration matters to the business

Order orchestration matters because fulfillment has quietly become a growth lever. The omnichannel order management market is set to grow from USD 2.4 billion in 2024 to about USD 7.1 billion by 2034, an 11.4% compound annual rate, according to Market.us.

The reason is where orders now get fulfilled. As of late 2023, more than 80% of Target’s online orders were filled from store inventory, and Target reported a 40% reduction in fulfillment cost by shifting eCommerce orders into stores, per coverage compiled by Creatuity. None of that is possible without an order layer that can route a single order to the right location in real time.

Native Magento order management vs the retired standalone OMS

This is the part that confuses most merchants, so it is worth being precise. There are three different things people mean when they say “Magento OMS,” and only two of them still exist.

1. Native order management inside Magento and Adobe Commerce

Every Magento and Adobe Commerce store includes order management built into the admin. It records each order in one backend view, supports order editing and partial fulfillment, generates invoices, dispatches, and credit memos, and processes returns through native RMA in the paid edition. Adobe Commerce adds Multi-Source Inventory (MSI), which lets you define multiple stock sources and route orders to the location with availability. For a large share of merchants, this native layer is the order management system, and nothing more is required.

2. The standalone Magento OMS product (retired)

Separately, Adobe sold a dedicated enterprise product called the Magento Order Management System, a cloud platform for centralized inventory, intelligent order sourcing, and distributed order management across many channels. That product reached end of support in October 2024, and its documentation is now archived for reference only, per Adobe’s own commerce documentation. If a vendor or older article points you to “Magento OMS” as a separate purchase, that option is no longer available to start fresh on.

3. Third-party and custom OMS solutions

With the standalone product gone, merchants who outgrow native order handling either extend Magento with custom development and integrations or connect a dedicated third-party OMS. Both are valid, and the right call depends on how complex your sourcing and returns logic really is.

Capability Native Magento / Adobe Commerce Dedicated or custom OMS
Order capture (web, POS, marketplace) Web native, others via integration All channels in one queue
Multi-location routing Multi-Source Inventory rules Advanced sourcing and cost-based logic
Distributed order management Basic, rule-based Real-time across stores, DCs, suppliers
Returns and exchanges Native RMA (paid edition) Complex exchange and partial-return flows
Best fit Single or few locations High volume, many fulfillment points
How native Magento order management compares with a dedicated or custom OMS.

Where the OMS boundary ends: inventory and ERP

An OMS is easy to confuse with two neighboring systems. Drawing the line keeps your architecture clean and your budget honest.

Inventory management answers “how much stock do we have and where.” It counts units, manages stock sources, and feeds available-to-promise data. The OMS consumes that data to decide where to source an order, but it does not own the count itself. In Magento, Multi-Source Inventory is the inventory layer that the order layer reads from.

An ERP answers “what does this mean for the business.” It owns finance, procurement, purchasing, and accounting, and it often becomes the system of record for products and customers. The OMS hands fulfilled-order and return data to the ERP, but it does not run your general ledger. A clean setup keeps these as distinct responsibilities connected through reliable integrations, rather than forcing one tool to do all three jobs poorly.

Diagram comparing inventory management, Magento OMS, and ERP responsibilities

When do you need a dedicated OMS?

You need a dedicated or heavily extended OMS when order routing decisions become too complex for native rules. Most single-location and small multi-store merchants do not, and adding one early just creates overhead.

Use these signals as a quick test. The more that apply, the stronger the case:

  • You fulfill from several locations and want orders sourced by stock, distance, or cost rather than a fixed rule
  • You run real omnichannel flows like buy online pick up in store (BOPIS) or ship-from-store, which now reach the majority of large retailers
  • You sell across marketplaces and physical stores and need every order in one status model
  • Your returns and exchanges involve partial refunds, swaps, or store credit that native RMA handles awkwardly
  • Support teams waste hours reconciling order status across disconnected tools.

The omnichannel context is the strongest driver. Among the top 1,000 retail chains, 77.2% offered BOPIS in 2024, and U.S. BOPIS sales are projected to grow 13.6% annually through 2030, roughly 17% faster than eCommerce overall, according to Capital One Shopping research. Distributed order management is what makes those flows work, and it is exactly what native rule-based routing starts to strain under at scale.

Should you build on native Magento or add a third-party OMS?

Start with native order management and prove its limits before buying anything. If MSI routing, native RMA, and a few targeted extensions cover your flows, you already have your OMS. Move to a dedicated or custom system only when sourcing logic, channel count, or return complexity clearly exceed what configuration can handle.

Whichever direction you take, the order layer touches finance, fulfillment, and customer experience at once, so the implementation rewards experience. A capable Magento development partner can map your real order flow before you commit budget to a platform you may not need. It is also worth remembering that Magento is still a heavily used enterprise platform, so investing in its order layer is a safe long-term bet.

Key capabilities to evaluate in a Magento OMS

When you compare options, judge them on the order lifecycle. The capabilities that separate a real OMS from a glorified order list are:

  • Distributed order management: Real-time sourcing across stores, distribution centers, and suppliers, with rules you can tune by cost and speed.
  • Cross-location inventory visibility: A single available-to-promise view so the same unit is never oversold across channels.
  • Channel coverage: Native or integrated capture from web, POS, marketplaces, and B2B portals into one queue.
  • Returns orchestration: Authorizations, refunds, exchanges, and the matching stock and finance updates.
  • Clean handoffs: Reliable data flow to inventory and ERP, so each system does its own job well.

This is also where a true omnichannel approach earns its keep. Connecting stores and online into a single order view is the foundation of unified commerce, where the OMS becomes the operational backbone behind every channel. If you are weighing platforms entirely, the order-management depth is one place Magento and Shopify take notably different approaches.

Frequently asked questions

Is Magento an OMS?

Magento includes native order management that handles capture, routing through Multi-Source Inventory, fulfillment, and returns, so it acts as an OMS for many merchants. It is not a standalone dedicated OMS product, and high-volume omnichannel brands often extend it or add a third-party system.

What happened to the standalone Magento Order Management System product?

The separate Magento OMS enterprise product reached end of support in October 2024, and its documentation is now archived for reference only. Merchants today rely on native Adobe Commerce order management, custom extensions, or third-party OMS solutions instead.

What is the difference between an OMS and an ERP?

An OMS owns the order lifecycle: capture, routing, fulfillment, and returns across channels. An ERP owns finance, procurement, and accounting. The two connect through integrations, with the OMS feeding fulfilled-order data to the ERP rather than replacing it.

Is an OMS the same as inventory management?

No. Inventory management counts stock and tracks where it lives. The OMS reads that data to decide where to source each order. In Magento, Multi-Source Inventory provides the inventory layer that the order layer routes against.

Does native Magento support distributed order management?

Native Magento supports rule-based routing across multiple stock sources through Multi-Source Inventory, which covers many cases. True real-time distributed order management across stores, distribution centers, and suppliers usually calls for custom development or a dedicated OMS.

How do I know if I need a dedicated OMS?

You likely need one when you fulfill from several locations, run BOPIS or store-based fulfillment, sell across multiple channels, or have complex returns. If native routing and a few extensions already cover your flows, you do not need a separate system yet.

Ready to orchestrate orders across every channel without overbuying tools you do not need? Talk to scandiweb and we will map your order flow before you commit to a platform.

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Magento Pricing: The True Cost of Running an Adobe Commerce Store https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-pricing/ Fri, 05 Jun 2026 12:00:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24923 Magento pricing goes far beyond the license. See realistic 2026 cost ranges for hosting, development, extensions, and maintenance, plus a TCO framework.

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Everyone fixates on the license fee. The first question in almost every Magento pricing conversation is “what does Adobe charge per year,” as if that number settles the matter. It does not. The license is often the most predictable, and sometimes the smallest, line on a five-year Magento budget. The real cost of running Magento (now Adobe Commerce) is somewhere else entirely: in hosting, in the development hours behind every custom feature, in the extensions and integrations that make the store actually work, and in the maintenance that keeps it secure and fast long after launch.

This guide breaks down the full total cost of ownership of a Magento store for 2026, with realistic ranges and the sources behind them. It is written for heads of eCommerce, CFOs, and founders trying to size a real budget. By the end, you will know where the money actually goes and how to map your own numbers.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Magento Open Source has no license fee, and Adobe does not publish Adobe Commerce license prices at all. The number that actually decides your budget is total cost of ownership: hosting, build, extensions, integrations, and ongoing maintenance. For a serious mid-market store, plan for a six-figure first year and a recurring annual run rate in the tens of thousands, with the license being only one part of it.

Magento pricing starts with the edition: Open Source vs Adobe Commerce

Magento comes in two editions, and they start from very different places. Magento Open Source is genuinely free to download and use, with no license fee, ever. Adobe Commerce (formerly Magento Enterprise) is a commercial, licensed product with added B2B tooling, advanced merchandising, AI-driven product recommendations, and Adobe support baked in.

The mistake is reading “free” as “cheap.” Open Source removes a license invoice, but every other cost category below still applies in full. You still pay for hosting, you still pay for the build, and you still pay for security patching. We cover the feature-by-feature differences in depth in our guide on Adobe Commerce vs Open Source, so this article focuses on the money rather than the feature list.

It also helps to separate two things that often get blurred. One is the edition decision, which is a question of features and license model. The other is the deployment decision, which is a question of who runs the infrastructure. Adobe Commerce can run on your own servers (on-premises) or on Adobe Commerce Cloud, and that choice changes both your hosting line and your license band. We unpack that trade-off in detail further down, because it is one of the biggest swings in any Magento pricing exercise.

Does Adobe publish Adobe Commerce pricing?

No. Adobe does not publish Adobe Commerce license prices publicly and never has. Every figure you see online is an estimate compiled by partners and agencies from real quotes, and the actual number requires a direct conversation with Adobe sales.

Adobe Commerce uses a custom, success-based license tied to your annual Gross Merchandise Value (GMV), the total value of goods sold through the store. The more you sell, the higher the tier. Because Adobe quotes privately, the only honest way to talk about these numbers is as ranges drawn from aggregated partner data, which is exactly how we present them below.

Stacked layers diagram of Magento total cost of ownership with the license as a thin slice and hosting, build, extensions, and maintenance making up the bulk

The seven cost categories that make up Magento total cost of ownership

A realistic Magento budget is the sum of seven moving parts. Treating any one of them as the whole picture is how stores end up underfunded six months after launch. Here is each category with a current range and the reasoning behind it.

1. License (the part everyone overweights)

Magento Open Source: zero. Adobe Commerce: estimated, based on aggregated 2026 partner data, at roughly $22,000 to $125,000 per year for the on-premises license and roughly $40,000 to $190,000 per year for Adobe Commerce on Cloud, which bundles managed infrastructure. These bands scale with GMV.

To put the tiers in context, the on-premises estimates that circulate among Adobe partners run from under $22,000 for stores below $1M GMV up to around $125,000 for stores past $25M GMV, per Webkul’s published edition breakdown. Treat these as planning anchors, not quotes. Your real figure depends on your GMV band, your environment, and what you negotiate.

One nuance that trips up budgets: the license is billed annually and rises as you grow, so it is not a fixed cost you can model once and forget. A store that crosses a GMV threshold mid-contract can see its renewal step up sharply. When you compare Adobe Commerce to the apparent zero of Open Source, you are really comparing a predictable, growing subscription against a set of capabilities you would otherwise have to build and maintain yourself. The right answer is rarely about the license number in isolation.

2. Hosting and infrastructure

Magento is resource-hungry, so shared hosting is not an option for a real store. For Magento Open Source on a managed VPS or cloud setup, plan for roughly $1,200 to $7,000+ per year depending on traffic and catalog size. Adobe Commerce on Cloud folds hosting into the license, which is part of why the cloud tier costs more.

Where many budgets go wrong is treating hosting as a commodity line. Magento performance under real traffic depends heavily on infrastructure tuning, caching, and CDN setup, which is its own discipline. If you want the speed without owning the operations, managed hosting and DevOps built for Magento removes most of that risk.

It also helps to think in tiers rather than a single number. A low-traffic catalog store can run comfortably on a tuned single-server setup at the bottom of that range. A store with seasonal traffic spikes, a large catalog, and dozens of concurrent admin users needs autoscaling, a read replica, dedicated cache nodes (Redis or Valkey), and a proper CDN, which pushes the annual figure toward and past the top of the range. Peak events like Black Friday are where under-provisioned stores either pay for emergency capacity or lose revenue to downtime, so the cheapest hosting line on paper is frequently the most expensive one in practice.

3. Development and the initial build

This is usually the single largest line in year one. For an Open Source build, the market consensus across 2025 and 2026 pricing guides (Elementor, Hostinger, magestore) lands around $20,000 to $60,000 for a straightforward store, $60,000 to $150,000+ for a heavily customized site, and $100,000 to $500,000+ for complex enterprise builds with deep ERP or CRM integration.

The driver is not the platform, it is your requirements. A clean catalog with standard checkout is one thing. Bespoke pricing logic, multi-store setups, headless front ends, and custom B2B workflows are another. Hourly rates vary widely by region, from roughly $40 per hour in parts of APAC to $125+ per hour in North America, which is why the same scope can carry very different invoices.

A practical way to read the build estimate is to break it into work streams rather than one lump sum. A typical mid-market build splits roughly into discovery and architecture, theme and front-end implementation, custom module development, third-party integrations, data migration, and quality assurance. The integration and QA streams are the ones most often underestimated, because they scale with the number of external systems and the messiness of the source data. A store with a clean product feed and two integrations will land near the bottom of its band, while the same visual scope with a legacy ERP, dirty SKUs, and five integrations can double the hours without changing a single pixel of the design.

4. Theme and front-end

You can launch on a pre-built theme for $0 to a few hundred dollars, but most serious brands invest in custom design. A custom Magento theme typically runs $0 to $5,000+ for a template-based approach and well into five figures for a fully bespoke, conversion-focused front end, often 40 to 160+ design and build hours.

The front-end decision also touches performance. Modern stacks like Hyvä themes are popular precisely because they cut page weight and improve Core Web Vitals, which feeds directly into both conversion and search rankings. The design spend is rarely just aesthetic, it is a revenue lever.

There is also a long-term cost angle here that rarely makes it into a first quote. A heavily customized default Luma theme accumulates technical debt and gets more expensive to maintain through Magento upgrades, while a leaner modern front end tends to upgrade more cleanly. Choosing the front-end architecture is therefore as much a maintenance decision as a design one, and it is worth pricing both the build and the five-year upkeep before you commit.

5. Extensions

Individual Magento extensions commonly cost $60 to $600 each, and a real store runs many of them: search, reviews, advanced pricing, marketing automation, tax, and more. Premium or subscription-based extensions add recurring fees on top of the one-time purchase.

The hidden cost here is not the license, it is compatibility. Every extension has to be tested against your version of Magento and against every other extension, and conflicts surface during upgrades. Budget for the integration and QA time, not just the sticker price of each module.

A useful discipline is to treat every extension as a recurring liability, not a one-time purchase. Each module you add is something that has to be re-tested on every platform upgrade, may need its own paid support contract, and can block a security patch if its vendor is slow to update. Stores that keep a tight, well-justified set of extensions spend far less over five years than stores that install a new module for every minor requirement, even when the upfront sticker prices look similar.

6. Integrations

Most mid-market stores connect Magento to an ERP, a CRM, a PIM, a tax engine, payment gateways, and a marketing stack. Each connection is custom work, and complex ERP integrations alone can run from several thousand to well into five figures depending on the system and the data flows.

Payment processing also belongs here as an ongoing cost. Gateways typically charge around 2.9% plus $0.30 per transaction, which at scale becomes one of the larger recurring numbers on the entire budget, often dwarfing the license. If your architecture is integration-heavy, planning the integrations layer early prevents expensive rework later.

The figure that surprises finance teams is payment processing, so it is worth making it concrete. A store doing $5M a year in card sales pays around $145,000 annually in processing at a blended 2.9%, before you add gateway monthly fees, fraud tools, and chargeback handling. That single recurring line can exceed the entire Adobe Commerce license, which reframes which numbers actually deserve negotiation attention. Reducing processing cost through better gateway terms or alternative payment methods often returns more than squeezing a development quote.

7. Ongoing maintenance and support

This is the category most often missing from a first budget, and it never ends. Magento needs regular security patching, version upgrades, performance monitoring, bug fixes, and feature work. Across 2026 pricing guides, ongoing maintenance and support commonly runs from around $4,000 per year for a small Open Source store to $50,000+ per year for an active, business-critical Adobe Commerce store.

Skipping maintenance is not a saving, it is deferred risk. Unpatched Magento stores are a known target, and a single security incident or a broken checkout during peak season costs far more than a year of support. A predictable support and maintenance plan turns that risk into a fixed monthly line you can plan around.

Maintenance also splits into two distinct budgets that are easy to conflate. The first is keep-the-lights-on work: security patches, version upgrades, monitoring, and bug fixes that protect the store you already have. The second is evolution: new features, optimization, and experiments that grow revenue. Healthy stores fund both. Stores that fund only the second eventually pay for the first all at once, in the form of an emergency upgrade project after they fall several versions behind and patches stop being straightforward.

Adobe Commerce Cloud vs on-premises hosting: which costs less?

Adobe Commerce Cloud bundles hosting, CDN, and managed infrastructure into a higher license fee, while on-premises Adobe Commerce keeps the license lower but leaves hosting and operations to you or your agency. Cloud is rarely cheaper on paper, but it can be cheaper in total once you account for the operations work you no longer have to staff.

The trade-off is real and worth modeling rather than assuming. On-premises gives you control: you choose the provider, you tune the stack, and you can often run leaner infrastructure for a given workload. The cost is that someone has to own that infrastructure, including incident response, scaling for peak, and the DevOps expertise to keep it fast. For a team that already has, or can buy, strong managed hosting, on-premises frequently wins on total cost.

Adobe Commerce Cloud earns its premium for teams that do not want to run infrastructure at all. The higher license folds in hosting, Fastly CDN, and a managed platform, which removes a whole hiring problem and a category of risk. The watch-out is that you are buying convenience at a fixed margin, and you have less freedom to optimize the underlying stack. The honest answer is that neither is universally cheaper. The right choice depends on whether running infrastructure is a strength you want to own or a cost you would rather outsource.

When does on-premises make financial sense?

On-premises tends to win when you have predictable traffic, in-house or agency DevOps capacity, and a desire to control infrastructure cost directly. It rewards teams that can keep the stack tuned and right-sized rather than paying for managed convenience.

Cloud tends to win when peak traffic is spiky and hard to predict, when you have no appetite to staff infrastructure operations, and when the simplicity of a single Adobe relationship is worth a premium. For many growing mid-market brands the deciding factor is not the spreadsheet, it is whether they want to be in the hosting business at all.

Horizontal bar chart comparing initial build cost ranges for a basic Open Source store, a customized store, and a complex enterprise Magento build

A worked Magento TCO example over five years

Ranges are useful, but a single worked example makes the total cost of ownership concrete. Consider a mid-market brand doing roughly $8M in annual GMV, moving from a dated platform to a customized Magento Open Source store with two integrations (an ERP and a marketing stack), managed hosting, and a fixed maintenance plan. The numbers below are illustrative planning figures, not a quote, but they show how the categories stack up across five years.

Year one carries the heavy one-time spend: a customized build at around $90,000, a custom front end at around $25,000, initial extensions and integration work at around $35,000, plus hosting and first-year maintenance. That puts year one near $170,000. Years two through five are dominated by recurring lines: hosting at around $5,000, maintenance and support at around $30,000, and incremental feature work at around $20,000 a year, which lands each of those years near $55,000.

Across five years the Open Source path totals roughly $390,000, with the build representing under half of it and recurring operations representing the rest. Notice what is absent: there is no license line at all. Now model the same store on Adobe Commerce on-premises. Add a GMV-tiered license at roughly $50,000 a year, which is $250,000 over five years, and the total moves to around $640,000. The build and operations barely change. The license is the swing factor, and it buys native B2B, advanced merchandising, and Adobe support that the Open Source store would otherwise approximate with extensions and custom work.

The lesson from the worked example is not that one path is right. It is that the build, which dominates the first conversation, is under half of the five-year number, while hosting, maintenance, payment processing, and (on Adobe Commerce) the license make up the majority. Any Magento pricing decision made on the year-one build alone is being made on a minority of the real cost.

Cost category (annual unless noted) Open Source store Adobe Commerce store
License $0 ~$22,000 to $190,000+ (GMV-tiered, est.)
Hosting and infrastructure ~$1,200 to $7,000+ Bundled in cloud license
Initial build (one-time) ~$20,000 to $150,000+ ~$60,000 to $500,000+
Theme and front-end (one-time) ~$0 to $25,000+ ~$5,000 to $40,000+
Extensions and integrations Varies widely, often $5,000 to $50,000+ Varies widely, often $10,000 to $80,000+
Maintenance and support ~$4,000 to $25,000+ ~$15,000 to $50,000+
Indicative Magento and Adobe Commerce cost ranges for 2026, synthesized from public pricing guides. Treat as planning anchors, not quotes.

What does a realistic Magento budget look like over time?

A serious mid-market Magento store typically costs a six-figure sum in year one (build plus license plus setup) and a recurring annual run rate in the tens of thousands after that for hosting, maintenance, and license. The exact figure depends entirely on edition and complexity.

The table above pulls the category ranges into two store profiles. These are planning estimates synthesized from current 2025 and 2026 pricing guides, not quotes, and your numbers will move based on scope, region, and negotiation. The most reliable way to use them is to place your own store in a band for each row, then sum the realistic case rather than the best or worst case for every line at once.

Is Magento still worth the cost in 2026?

Yes, for the right store. Magento is built for catalog complexity, multi-store and multi-region operations, deep B2B workflows, and total control of the customer experience, which is exactly what high-volume and complex brands need and what cheaper SaaS platforms struggle to deliver.

The “is anyone still using Magento” anxiety is understandable. BuiltWith and Store Leads data through 2025 show the live store count declining from prior peaks, with various trackers placing it somewhere in the 100,000 to 130,000 range and trending down year over year. That is real, but it is not the same as the platform dying. We unpack the actual numbers and what they mean in our analysis of whether is Magento dying, and the short version is that it remains a strong fit for complex, high-GMV commerce.

The more useful framing is fit, not survival. If your requirements are simple, a SaaS platform may be cheaper to run, which is why the Magento vs Shopify comparison matters before you commit. If your requirements are genuinely complex, Magento’s cost buys flexibility you cannot easily get elsewhere.

Decision-tree graphic for choosing Magento Open Source versus Adobe Commerce based on GMV, B2B needs, and customization depth

The hidden costs most Magento budgets miss

The published cost categories are the easy part. The numbers that surprise merchants are the ones nobody quotes upfront. Watch for these.

  • Developer scarcity. Skilled Magento developers are getting harder to find, which pushes up both agency rates and the time to hire in-house, a point raised repeatedly by merchants in the r/Magento community.
  • Upgrade and patch cycles. Major version upgrades are projects in themselves, not free updates, and they recur on Adobe’s release cadence.
  • Extension conflict resolution. The QA time to keep a stack of modules working together rises with every extension you add.
  • Re-platforming or migration debt. If you are coming from a legacy platform or moving between Magento versions, the one-time migration is its own line. Plan it as a real project rather than treating it as a side task.
  • Performance and SEO remediation. A slow store quietly costs conversions and rankings, and fixing it after launch is more expensive than building it right.
  • Internal team time. Discovery workshops, content and catalog preparation, user acceptance testing, and training all consume your own staff’s hours, which is a real cost even when it never appears on an agency invoice.

How to control the true cost of running Magento

You cannot make Magento cheap, but you can make it predictable. A few decisions move the total cost of ownership the most.

First, choose the edition on fit, not fear. Open Source plus a strong agency covers a large share of mid-market needs without a license bill, while Adobe Commerce earns its fee when you genuinely need its B2B and merchandising depth. Second, scope ruthlessly: every custom feature is a build cost and a forever maintenance cost. Third, budget maintenance from day one as a fixed line, not a surprise.

A fourth lever is phasing. Trying to launch every feature at once inflates the year-one build and delays revenue. Launching a strong core store, then funding enhancements from the revenue it generates, spreads cost over time and lets real customer behavior guide where the next dollar goes. This is often the single biggest difference between a budget that holds and one that doubles.

Finally, the partner you choose moves the number more than any single line item. A strong agency reduces rework, writes clean code that is cheap to maintain, and prevents the expensive mistakes that bloat year-two budgets. If you are weighing options, our roundup of Magento development companies is a useful place to start.

Frequently asked questions about Magento pricing

Is Magento free?

Magento Open Source is free to download and use, with no license fee. Adobe Commerce is a paid, licensed product. In both cases you still pay for hosting, development, extensions, and maintenance, so no Magento store is truly free to run.

How much does Adobe Commerce cost per year?

Adobe does not publish prices. Based on aggregated partner data for 2026, the on-premises license is estimated at roughly $22,000 to $125,000 per year and the cloud license at roughly $40,000 to $190,000 per year, scaling with your GMV. The only accurate figure comes from an Adobe quote.

How much does it cost to build a Magento website?

A straightforward Open Source build commonly runs $20,000 to $60,000, a customized store $60,000 to $150,000+, and a complex enterprise build $100,000 to $500,000+. The driver is the depth of customization and integration, not the platform itself.

Is Magento more expensive than Shopify?

Usually, yes, at the entry and mid levels, because Magento carries more development and maintenance overhead. The trade-off is control and flexibility. For complex catalogs, B2B, and multi-store needs, Magento can be more cost-effective than forcing those requirements onto a SaaS platform.

What is the cheapest way to run a Magento store?

Magento Open Source with efficient managed hosting, a lean theme, a tight set of well-tested extensions, and a fixed maintenance plan is the most cost-controlled route. The savings come from disciplined scope, not from cutting maintenance.

What is Magento’s total cost of ownership?

Total cost of ownership is the full multi-year sum of license, hosting, build, theme, extensions, integrations, maintenance, and any migration, not just the license. For a serious mid-market store, expect a six-figure first year and a recurring annual run rate in the tens of thousands.

Does anyone still use Magento in 2026?

Yes. Live store counts have declined from earlier peaks to somewhere in the 100,000 to 130,000 range per BuiltWith and Store Leads, but Magento remains widely used by complex, high-volume, and B2B brands that need its flexibility. It is consolidating around the merchants it fits best, not disappearing.

The sticker price is the cheapest part of running Magento. If you want a clear, realistic number for your store across license, hosting, build, and maintenance, our team can map your Magento costs against your actual requirements.

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What Are Magento Certifications and Why They Matter for Your Build https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-certifications-explained/ Fri, 05 Jun 2026 09:19:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24963 A Magento certification validates an Adobe Commerce skill level. See what each proves, who should hold them, and how they de-risk your build.

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A Magento certification is a formal credential, issued by Adobe, that confirms a person has passed a proctored exam proving a defined level of skill on Magento (Adobe Commerce). It is a tested measure of whether someone can actually build, extend, configure, or architect a store on the platform.

For a merchant choosing a build partner, that distinction matters more than it first appears. Magento is a deep, opinionated platform, and the gap between a developer who has read the documentation and one who has passed an Adobe exam on it is the gap between a project that holds up under Black Friday traffic and one that does not. In this guide, we’ll explain the current certification tracks, what each one proves, who on a team should hold them, and how to read a vendor’s credentials when you are evaluating who to trust with your store.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Adobe runs Magento (Adobe Commerce) certifications at three levels: Professional, Expert, and Master. They map to developer, frontend, business practitioner, and architect roles. A partner with these credentials in the team is a concrete, verifiable signal of platform competence.

What a Magento certification actually proves

Each Adobe Commerce certification is tied to a specific job role and a specific depth of knowledge. Passing an exam confirms the holder can work fluently with the parts of the platform connected to that role, under exam conditions, without reference material in front of them.

The exams are quite practical. A developer exam tests how Magento’s module system, data models, and extension points behave in real implementations. A business practitioner exam tests catalog, promotion, and store configuration decisions. None of them rewards someone who has only watched tutorials. That is precisely why the credential carries weight when you are deciding who builds your store.

It is worth being clear about what certification does not prove. It does not measure how someone communicates, how they handle a deadline, or whether they have created a store at your scale. Treat it as a strong floor on technical competence, then verify the rest through references and case studies.

Diagram of Adobe Commerce certification levels and role tracks

The current Adobe Commerce certification tracks

Adobe organizes Magento certifications into three levels that rise with experience, and within those levels into role-based tracks. The structure below reflects the current program as published on Adobe Experience League.

Professional level

The entry tier, aimed at people with up to a year of focused Adobe Commerce experience. It confirms someone can work productively on the platform within their role.

  • Adobe Commerce Developer Professional (AD0-E717): backend development, modules, and core platform behavior.
  • Adobe Commerce Front-End Developer Professional (AD0-E721): theming, layout, and the storefront layer.
  • Adobe Commerce Business Practitioner Professional (AD0-E712): catalog, pricing, promotions, and store configuration for non-developers.

Expert level

The mid-to-senior tier, aimed at people with several years on the platform. It confirms a deeper command of how Magento behaves in complex, customized stores.

  • Adobe Commerce Developer Expert (AD0-E716): advanced backend work, performance, and extension design.
  • Adobe Commerce Front-End Developer Expert (AD0-E720): advanced storefront engineering.
  • Adobe Commerce Business Practitioner Expert (AD0-E708): advanced merchandising and platform configuration.

Master level

The top tier, for senior technical leaders who design whole solutions rather than build single features.

  • Adobe Commerce Architect Master (AD0-E722): full-solution architecture, integrations, scalability, and the decisions that hold a large build together.

Older “Magento Certified Developer” and “Solution Specialist” titles still appear on resumes and across the industry. The Solution Specialist credential, in particular, has long been a useful signal of platform-wide configuration knowledge for non-developer roles. We cover what that exam involves and how to prepare for it in our breakdown of the Solution Specialist exam.

Level Tracks available Best read as Exam fee (USD)
Professional Developer, Front-End Developer, Business Practitioner Can work confidently within a role $125
Expert Developer, Front-End Developer, Business Practitioner Deep command of complex stores $225
Master Architect Designs the whole solution $225
Adobe Commerce certification levels, tracks, and current exam fees. India-based candidates pay reduced rates ($95 and $150).

What the Business Practitioner track covers for non-technical buyers

If you are a head of eCommerce or a merchandising lead, the Business Practitioner track maps to your world. It tests whether someone can configure catalogs, price rules, promotions, store views, tax and shipping settings, and customer segments correctly inside the Adobe Commerce admin.

That matters because a surprising share of store problems are not bugs at all. They are misconfigurations: a cart price rule that stacks when it should not, a tax class applied to the wrong product set, a store view that breaks for one region. A certified Business Practitioner, on the agency side or in-house, is the person who prevents those quiet revenue leaks. It is also a credential worth funding for your own internal staff, so routine changes do not depend on a partner.

Does the certification matter for Magento Open Source too?

Adobe’s exams are branded Adobe Commerce, but most of what they test applies directly to Magento Open Source as well: the module system, theming, catalog logic, and admin configuration. If you run Open Source, weight the core developer and front-end tracks most heavily, and read a Master-level architect credential as a sign the partner can scale you onto Adobe Commerce later if you grow into it.

How much does Magento certification cost, and how do the exams work?

Professional exams cost $125 USD, while Expert and Master exams cost $225 USD, with reduced rates for candidates based in India ($95 and $150). Each exam runs 100 minutes with around 50 questions, and a passing score is typically set near 64%.

One change worth knowing as a buyer: since 2025, Adobe lets certified professionals renew for free through two short renewal modules of about 15 minutes each, rather than retaking the full exam. Certifications are valid for two years. So a partner with current credentials is not just qualified, they are demonstrably keeping pace with platform changes.

How the free renewal modules work in practice

The renewal change is more useful to merchants than it sounds. Before 2025, a lapsed certification meant booking and paying for a full proctored exam again, which discouraged teams from keeping credentials current. Now, Adobe pushes two short modules through Experience League that walk a certified professional through what has changed in recent releases, each capped at roughly 15 minutes, with a short knowledge check at the end.

In practice, that means a partner’s certifications should never quietly expire. When you ask a vendor for credential dates, a current renewal is a small but telling sign the team treats certification as a standard. A badge renewed within the last two years confirms familiarity with the platform as it stands today, not as it worked three releases ago.

Why Magento certifications matter when you choose a build partner

This is the part that affects your budget and your timeline. Magento is one of the most capable eCommerce platforms available, and it stays widely deployed: industry trackers such as BuiltWith and MGT-Commerce put it at roughly 8% of the global platform market in 2026, powering somewhere in the range of 113,000 to 163,000 live stores depending on the source.

Certification is one of the few signals that cuts through that range objectively. Here is what a credentialed team actually buys you.

It de-risks the technical decisions you cannot see

Most of the choices that decide whether a Magento store is fast, stable, and upgradeable are invisible to a non-technical buyer. Whether a developer extends the platform the supported way or hacks around it does not show up in a demo. It shows up two years later as an upgrade that breaks. Certified developers are tested precisely on doing this the supported way.

It signals investment in the platform

An agency that funds exams, study time, and renewals for its team is telling you it intends to stay current on Magento rather than coast on old knowledge. With the platform’s debated future a recurring question, that commitment is meaningful. We unpack where the platform actually stands in our look at whether Magento is dying, and the short version is that serious, certified partners are still investing heavily.

It supports your own due diligence

Adobe certifications are verifiable. A credible partner can point you to named, certified individuals on the team that will actually do your work, not a logo on a homepage. That verifiability is the practical core of the trust you are buying.

Who on a team should hold which certification?

A healthy Magento partner does not need every person certified at every level. It needs the right credentials in the right seats. Use this as a rough map when you review a team.

  • Hands-on developers: Developer Professional at minimum, with senior developers at Expert level.
  • Frontend and theming specialists: Frontend Developer Professional or Expert.
  • Solution leads and technical architects: Architect Master, the person who owns how the whole build fits together.
  • Project managers, merchandisers, and store admins: Business Practitioner, so the non-developer side speaks the platform fluently too.

A team with developer, frontend, and architect credentials covers the full surface of a build. A team where only one person holds everything is a single point of failure. If you are weighing partners on this basis, our comparison of top Magento development companies shows how established agencies distribute these credentials across their teams.

How to verify a vendor’s Magento credentials

You can confirm certifications quickly, which is exactly why they are useful. Ask the partner for the names and roles of the certified people who will work on your project, then request their Adobe credential profiles or Credly badges, which Adobe issues for its certifications and which carry a verifiable link.

Be specific in the ask. “Is your team certified?” invites a vague yes. “Which named developers on my project hold a current Adobe Commerce Developer Expert certification, and can I see the badge?” invites a real answer. A partner that cannot answer the second question is telling you something.

scandiweb has the world’s largest certified Adobe Commerce team and has built on the platform since 2003, with credentials spanning developer, frontend, and architect tracks. We mention it here as a concrete example of what a credentialed bench looks like in practice. The point holds for any vendor: insist on the verifiable version.

What certifications do not tell you

Credentials are a floor, not a finish line. They confirm platform competence, but they do not confirm that a team has delivered at your order volume, integrated with your ERP, or handled a peak-season cutover without downtime. They also do not measure communication, project governance, or how a partner behaves when something goes wrong at 2 am.

So pair the credential check with the things certification cannot prove: case studies at your scale, client references you can call, and a clear answer on who supports the store after launch. Ongoing eCommerce support is where a certified team earns its keep over the life of the store, long after the build is signed off.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Magento certification?

It is an official credential from Adobe confirming a person passed a proctored exam proving a defined level of skill on Magento (Adobe Commerce). It validates real, tested ability rather than course attendance.

What are the levels of Adobe Commerce certification?

There are three: Professional (entry), Expert (senior), and Master (architect). Within Professional and Expert, separate tracks exist for developers, frontend developers, and business practitioners. Master covers solution architecture.

How much does a Magento certification cost?

Professional exams are $125 USD, and Expert and Master exams are $225 USD. Candidates based in India pay reduced rates of $95 and $150, respectively.

How long is a Magento certification valid?

Adobe Commerce certifications are valid for two years. Since 2025, holders can renew for free through two short renewal modules of roughly 15 minutes each, rather than retaking the full exam.

Are Magento-certified developers worth more than uncertified ones?

For a merchant, the value is in risk reduction. Certified developers are tested on building the supported way, which is what keeps a store upgradeable and stable over time. The credential is a strong floor on competence, best paired with proven delivery experience.

Does Magento certification guarantee a good build?

No. It proves platform competence, not delivery track record, communication, or experience at your scale. Verify credentials, then verify case studies, references, and post-launch support separately.

How do I verify that a developer or agency is Magento certified?

Ask for the named individuals on your project and their Adobe credential profiles or Credly badges, which carry verifiable links. A credible partner can show certifications for the specific people who will do your work.

Want credentials that take the doubts out of a Magento build? Meet our certified team and see how a certified Adobe Commerce team de-risks your project from day one.

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Magento vs BigCommerce: Complete eCommerce Platform Comparison https://scandiweb.com/blog/magento-vs-bigcommerce/ Thu, 04 Jun 2026 07:41:00 +0000 https://scandiweb.com/blog/?p=24925 Magento vs BigCommerce compared on cost, customization, B2B depth, ease of use, security, and SEO, so you can pick the platform you can live with.

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Should you keep full control of your store on open-source software, or hand the infrastructure to a hosted platform and move faster with a smaller team? That is the real question behind Magento versus BigCommerce, and it is rarely about features alone. It is about who owns the code, who carries the maintenance burden, and which trade-off your business can live with for the next five years.

Magento (Adobe Commerce) is open-source and self-hosted (or runs on Adobe’s PaaS), built for merchants who need to control every part of the experience. BigCommerce is a fully hosted SaaS platform that handles servers, scaling, and security for you. Both are credible enterprise choices. The right answer depends on your catalog complexity, your B2B requirements, and how much engineering capacity you want to own.

This comparison covers hosting model, total cost of ownership, customization and B2B depth, ease of use and time-to-market, security, SEO, and support, then closes with a decisive “choose this one if” verdict. scandiweb has built and migrated stores on both platforms since 2003, so our take here is partner-neutral.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Choose Magento when you need deep customization, complex catalogs, or serious B2B, and you have or will hire engineering capacity. Choose BigCommerce when you want predictable costs, fast time-to-market, and managed hosting without a dedicated dev team. Magento gives control at a typically 3-5x higher total cost of ownership. BigCommerce gives speed and simplicity inside SaaS boundaries.

Magento vs BigCommerce: the key differences

The single biggest difference is the operating model. Magento is open-source software you (or your agency) host and maintain, which means total control and total responsibility. BigCommerce is SaaS, so the platform owns uptime, patching, and scaling, and you work inside its guardrails.

Everything else, cost structure, customization ceiling, B2B depth, ease of use, flows from that one architectural choice. The table below frames the comparison before we go angle by angle.

Category Magento (Adobe Commerce) BigCommerce
Software model Open-source / PaaS, self-hosted or Adobe-hosted Fully hosted SaaS
Hosting and scaling You own it (or Adobe Commerce Cloud manages it) Managed by BigCommerce, auto-scaling and CDN included
Maintenance and patching Merchant responsibility Automatic, handled by the platform
Customization ceiling Virtually unlimited, full code access High via APIs, bounded by the SaaS model
B2B depth Native, deeply configurable Strong built-in B2B Edition, less custom logic
Pricing model Free Open Source core or revenue-based Adobe Commerce license, plus build and hosting Predictable monthly tiers, roughly $39 to $399+
Time-to-market Months for complex builds Weeks to a few months
Best fit Complex, high-customization, enterprise and B2B Mid-market brands prioritizing speed and low overhead
High-level comparison of Magento (Adobe Commerce) and BigCommerce across the factors that drive a platform decision.

Hosting model: open-source control vs SaaS simplicity

Magento Open Source is free to download and runs on the infrastructure you choose, from a single server to a multi-node cloud setup. Adobe Commerce adds a licensed feature set and an optional managed PaaS (Adobe Commerce Cloud). Either way, the architecture is yours to shape, which is exactly why it appeals to teams with unusual requirements.

BigCommerce removes that decision entirely. Hosting, scaling, CDN, and PCI infrastructure are part of the subscription, and the platform handles traffic spikes without you provisioning anything. The trade is real: you gain operational calm and lose the ability to alter how the platform runs underneath you.

If the words “we will manage our own servers” make your CTO nervous, that anxiety is telling you something. Magento rewards teams that want control. BigCommerce rewards teams that want the control question to disappear.

Total cost of ownership

Which platform costs more over three years?

Magento typically carries a 3-5x higher total cost of ownership than BigCommerce for comparable mid-market stores, because the free or licensed core is only the starting line.

With Magento, the real budget lives in hosting, development, third-party extensions, and ongoing upgrades. Adobe Commerce licensing is revenue-based and can run into five or six figures annually before a single line of custom code is written. The upside is that, at a very large scale, owning the software can flatten the per-order cost curve imposed by fixed SaaS fees.

BigCommerce bundles hosting, security, and updates into predictable monthly tiers, roughly $39 to $399+, with enterprise pricing quoted above that. There are no surprise infrastructure bills and far less developer time. The ceiling is that you pay for the convenience, and high-GMV merchants can hit revenue-based pricing thresholds that change the math.

Bar chart comparing three-year total cost of ownership for BigCommerce versus Magento Adobe Commerce

A 2023 Forrester Total Economic Impact study commissioned by BigCommerce found a composite enterprise merchant achieved 211% ROI over three years with an eight-month payback, driven in part by developer time savings of 50% to 90% from the platform’s managed model and open APIs. Those numbers come from BigCommerce-sponsored research, so read them as directional rather than universal, but the direction is consistent with what merchants report: SaaS lowers the people cost of running a store.

🚀 Quick takeaway

Do not compare license price to license price. Build a three-year total cost of ownership model that includes hosting, development hours, extensions, upgrades, and the internal team you will need. Magento usually wins on flexibility and loses on overhead. BigCommerce usually wins on predictability and loses on custom-logic ceilings.

Customization and B2B depth

This is Magento’s home turf. With full access to the codebase, you can build multi-store networks, intricate catalog logic, custom pricing engines, and headless frontends without asking permission from a platform roadmap. For merchants running hundreds of thousands of SKUs or unusual fulfillment rules, that freedom is the entire reason to choose it.

B2B is the clearest dividing line. Adobe Commerce ships native B2B features, company accounts, shared catalogs, custom pricing, quoting, and approval workflows that are deeply configurable down to individual buyer behavior. BigCommerce offers a capable B2B Edition that delivers price lists, customer groups, quoting, and buyer portals out of the box, which covers most mid-market needs without development.

BigCommerce gets most B2B teams live faster, while Magento lets you model B2B relationships that a SaaS platform simply cannot express. If your B2B logic is standard, BigCommerce saves you months. If it is genuinely complex, Magento is the only one of the two that bends to fit.

Comparison of Magento custom B2B buyer portal and BigCommerce B2B Edition native features

Both platforms support headless and API-first builds, so neither locks you out of a modern composable frontend. The difference is depth: Magento exposes the full domain model to your developers, while BigCommerce exposes a well-documented but bounded API surface. For a broader composable comparison, our look at commercetools vs Adobe Commerce covers where pure headless platforms fit.

Ease of use and time-to-market

Which platform is faster to launch?

BigCommerce is meaningfully faster to launch and easier for non-technical teams to run day-to-day, because setup, hosting, and core features work out of the box.

Marketers and merchandisers can manage catalogs, content, promotions, and checkout in BigCommerce without a developer on call for routine work. A straightforward store can go live in weeks. Magento, by contrast, expects technical hands for setup and most meaningful changes, and a serious build usually takes months.

That gap is the cost of flexibility. The platform assumes you have a development partner. BigCommerce assumes you would rather not. Be honest about your internal capacity here, because choosing Magento without engineering support is the most common way these projects stall. If a hosted model appeals but you are weighing other SaaS options, our BigCommerce vs Shopify breakdown is a useful companion read.

Security and maintenance

On BigCommerce, security is the platform’s job. PCI DSS Level 1 compliance, patches, and infrastructure hardening are handled centrally, and updates roll out without merchant action. For lean teams, removing that burden is a genuine advantage and a quiet risk reducer.

On Magento, security ownership rests with you. You apply patches, monitor for vulnerabilities, manage PCI scope, and schedule upgrades. Done well, with a competent partner and a maintenance plan, Magento stores are highly secure. Done poorly, an unpatched Magento store is a known target.

This is why a Magento decision is really a decision about your operating model. The platform is only as safe and current as the team behind it, which is the same reason a structured Magento Migration matters as much as the build itself.

SEO and performance

Both platforms can rank. BigCommerce includes solid built-in SEO controls, customizable URLs, meta data, redirects, and a content delivery network tuned for Core Web Vitals, with little setup required. For most merchants, that is enough to compete.

Magento offers deeper, more granular SEO control, the kind that matters for large multi-language, multi-store catalogs where URL architecture and faceted navigation get complicated. The catch is that Magento performance depends on how well it is hosted, configured, and optimized.

BigCommerce gives you good SEO with almost no effort, while Magento gives you maximum SEO control if you invest in doing it right. Neither has an inherent ranking advantage at the same level of care.

Support: managed vs. partner-led care

BigCommerce provides 24/7 support across all plans through live chat, phone, and email, which suits teams without an agency on retainer. Help is a ticket away, and the SaaS model means most issues are the platform’s to resolve.

Magento support depends on your edition and partners. Magento Open Source leans on a large global community, while Adobe Commerce adds Adobe’s enterprise support. In practice, most serious Magento merchants work with a solution partner who owns development, monitoring, and incident response, which is closer to having an embedded team than a help desk.

Is Magento dying, and should that worry you?

Short answer: no. Magento powers well over 100,000 live stores in 2025, according to BuiltWith tracking, and remains a leading platform for complex and enterprise commerce, even as its store count trends gently downward year over year. BigCommerce, by the same trackers, runs roughly 37,000 to 42,000 live stores, concentrated in mid-market and B2B.

The “Magento is dying” worry usually stems from migration headlines and Adobe’s pricing, not from the platform losing capability. It is very much alive and actively developed. We dug into the numbers in detail in our analysis of whether Magento is dying, and the data does not support the obituary.

What is true is that some merchants outgrow the overhead and move to SaaS, while others move the other way for control.

Which should you choose: Magento or BigCommerce?

The verdict comes down to control versus convenience, and there is no universally right answer, only the right answer for your business.

Choose Magento (Adobe Commerce) if you run complex catalogs, need deep or custom B2B, want full ownership of the code and experience, plan to scale to high volume where owning the software pays off, and either have or will commit to engineering capacity (in-house or a partner). You are buying flexibility and control, and accepting a higher total cost of ownership and maintenance responsibility to get them.

Choose BigCommerce if you want predictable costs, a fast launch, managed hosting and security, and a platform your marketing and operations teams can run without a developer for everyday work. You are buying speed and simplicity, and accepting that highly unusual logic may require workarounds or third-party apps. For most mid-market brands with standard requirements, that trade is a good one.

If you find yourself listing many “we need it to work differently from the default” requirements, Magento is likely the fit. If your list is mostly “we need it to work well and launch soon,” BigCommerce probably is. For context on how Magento stacks up against the other dominant SaaS option, our Magento vs Shopify comparison is worth a look, and our honest BigCommerce review goes deeper on the SaaS side.

Frequently asked questions

Is Magento the same as Adobe Commerce?

Magento is the underlying software. Adobe Commerce is Adobe’s commercial edition, with added enterprise features, B2B tooling, and support, built on the same core. Magento Open Source is the free version. People still call both “Magento.”

Is BigCommerce cheaper than Magento?

For most mid-market stores, yes. BigCommerce bundles hosting, security, and updates into a predictable subscription, while Magento’s total cost of ownership is typically 3-5x higher once you add hosting, development, extensions, and upgrades. At very high volume, owning the Magento software can become more cost-efficient per order.

Which platform is better for B2B?

Both are strong. BigCommerce B2B Edition delivers price lists, quoting, and buyer portals out of the box and launches faster. Adobe Commerce offers a deeper, fully configurable native B2B that fits genuinely complex relationships and custom logic. Standard B2B favors BigCommerce; complex B2B favors Magento.

Can BigCommerce handle large, complex catalogs?

It handles substantial catalogs well and scales automatically, but very large SKU counts with intricate custom logic can hit SaaS limits that require apps or headless workarounds. Magento was designed for that level of catalog complexity natively.

How long does it take to launch on each platform?

A straightforward BigCommerce store can launch in weeks because hosting and core features are ready out of the box. A meaningful Magento build is usually measured in months, since it is custom by nature and assumes a development team.

Is Magento still a safe long-term choice in 2026?

Yes. Magento still powers well over 100,000 live stores and is actively developed by Adobe. It remains a leading platform for complex and enterprise commerce. The risk is choosing one that does not match your team and operating model.

Do I need a developer to run a store on either platform?

For BigCommerce, no, for everyday operations. Marketing and merchandising teams can manage most tasks themselves. For Magento, yes, a developer or solution partner is expected for setup and most meaningful changes. Plan for engineering capacity before choosing Magento.

This is the platform call you will live with for multiple years, so it is worth getting right. Talk to a team certified on both Magento and BigCommerce and pressure-test the decision against your real catalog, B2B, and growth requirements.

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