Two different approaches with different operating implications. Below is the honest, agency-perspective comparison: who each fits, who each does not, and how we'd decide.
Pick BigCommerce if b2b-led commerce (better catalog + price-tier features). Pick WooCommerce if wordpress-anchored content sites. The right call almost always comes down to scale, team, and where your real bottleneck is, not which tool ranks better on a generic feature comparison. We've made the call both ways across our portfolio in the same year.
| Dimension | BigCommerce | WooCommerce |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | $39-$400/mo for SMB; Enterprise plans negotiated. | Free core + $0-$3,000/yr for plugins. Hosting $30-$500/mo. |
| Learning curve | Medium, competent in weeks | High, months to mastery |
| Scalability | Scales to $50M+. Stronger headless story than Shopify in some configurations. | Scales technically but ops burden compounds past $5M GMV. |
| Ideal for | B2B-led commerce (better catalog + price-tier features); Brands needing strong SEO controls | WordPress-anchored content sites; Brands with in-house dev resource |
| Integrations | Smaller app ecosystem; better B2B and headless tooling | Vast WordPress plugin universe, quality varies |
| Support | Email + chat; account team at Enterprise. | Community + paid via hosts. |
| Best at | Shopify's closest peer. | Free until you count developer hours and security patches. |
$39-$400/mo for SMB; Enterprise plans negotiated.
Free core + $0-$3,000/yr for plugins. Hosting $30-$500/mo.
Medium, competent in weeks
High, months to mastery
Scales to $50M+. Stronger headless story than Shopify in some configurations.
Scales technically but ops burden compounds past $5M GMV.
B2B-led commerce (better catalog + price-tier features); Brands needing strong SEO controls
WordPress-anchored content sites; Brands with in-house dev resource
Smaller app ecosystem; better B2B and headless tooling
Vast WordPress plugin universe, quality varies
Email + chat; account team at Enterprise.
Community + paid via hosts.
Shopify's closest peer.
Free until you count developer hours and security patches.
BigCommerce fits when your bottleneck is what bigcommerce solves well. Shopify's closest peer. Better B2B catalog and SEO controls; thinner DTC app ecosystem. The operating reality is that b2b-led commerce (better catalog + price-tier features), brands needing strong seo controls is where it earns its keep, the rest of the feature surface tends to be a tie or close to one.
WooCommerce fits when your bottleneck shifts. Free until you count developer hours and security patches. Best for content-led brands already on WordPress. The cases where it actually outperforms bigcommerce cluster around wordpress-anchored content sites, brands with in-house dev resource. Outside of those, the choice is closer to a coin-flip, and operational fit usually decides it.
If we were scoping this for a US operator at the $5M-$30M revenue band, the call usually goes to BigCommerce, it covers b2b-led commerce (better catalog + price-tier features) with the least operational burden, the lowest learning curve for the in-house team, and the deepest ecosystem of agency partners who actually know it. We'd switch to WooCommerce the moment wordpress-anchored content sites becomes the binding constraint, and we've watched brands make that switch at the right time (usually) and the wrong time (occasionally). Below $5M revenue the answer is almost always whichever option lets the founder ship faster; above $50M the answer shifts toward whichever option produces the cleanest data and the strongest integration story with the rest of the stack. We've made this call both ways inside the same client portfolio in the same year, it is rarely a permanent decision and almost never the most important one the company will make this quarter.
Migration between BigCommerce and WooCommerce is a real engagement, not a weekend task. Expect to spend 2-8 weeks of calendar time depending on data depth, integration count, and team experience with the destination. The cost lives in the integration work, not the platform itself, most teams underestimate the rebuild of the analytics layer, the customer-facing flows, and the operational reporting that quietly sits behind the existing setup.
Common reasons teams leave BigCommerce: subscription-first dtc (shopify ecosystem is deeper). Common reasons teams leave WooCommerce: operators without dev capacity; fast-moving dtc brands. Sometimes the right answer is to fix the operating model rather than switch tools, we've talked operators out of migrations that wouldn't have solved what they thought they were solving.
Before a migration we audit the existing data, freeze writes during cutover, and run staging in parallel for 1-2 weeks. The post-migration period is the highest-risk window for the business, search rankings, attribution, and customer-facing flows all need to be retested under load. We have seen brands lose 6-12% of revenue or attribution during sloppy migrations. Almost always recoverable. Never costless.
Send a 1-page brief with your stack and goals. We'll respond with a written recommendation between BigCommerce and WooCommerce, and the cost / timeline math for the migration if it's the right call.