BigCommerce vs Shopify for B2B Commerce: Which Platform Fits Your Operating Model?

BigCommerce vs Shopify for B2B Commerce: Which Platform Fits Your Operating Model?

Choosing the right B2B ecommerce platform goes beyond storefront design — it impacts scalability, operations, buyer experience, and long-term growth.


BigCommerce is built for complex B2B commerce with native features like company accounts, approval workflows, quotes, invoices, multi-storefront support, and advanced catalog management. Shopify focuses on simplicity, speed, and app-driven flexibility, making it ideal for brands with lighter B2B requirements and faster launch goals.


This comparison breaks down the key differences between BigCommerce and Shopify across B2B functionality, catalog complexity, integrations, automation, customization, and scalability — helping businesses choose the platform that fits their operational needs best.

High-level feature comparision - BigCommerce vs Shopify

Flow / Capability BigCommerce Shopify Notes
Company Accounts (Core B2B Model) Company accounts, account hierarchies, standard & user-defined roles & permissions Company accounts with limited standard roles (location admin, ordering only) & permissions. An app is needed to add custom roles & permissions BigCommerce has advanced B2B capabilities OOB
Buyer Portal / Self-Service Dashboard Dedicated Buyer Portal with multiple features - Company Orders, My Orders, Quick Order, Quotes, Invoices, Shopping Lists, User Management, Account Settings Limited features - Orders, Company Profile, User Management Shopify is missing multiple features that are native in BigCommerce - Quotes, Invoices, Quick Order, Company Orders, Shared Shopping Lists
Quote Management Robust quote management features Requires third party app or a custom build via open source buyer portal BigCommerce has CPQ capabilities OOB
Price Lists / Customer-specific Pricing Advanced price lists feature, bulk pricing rules Advanced price lists, bulk pricing rules Both provide good support to manage B2B pricing
Tiered / Volume Pricing Strong native support Strong native support Tie, both platforms support it
Custom Catalogs per Customer Yes (via price lists + category inclusions) Yes (via catalogs) Shopify makes it easier to create custom catalogs. Provides more granular control on what products to include in a catalog
Payment Terms (Net terms) Net 5–60 Net 7 to 90 + “no payment terms” options Shopify offers a few extra options for Payment Terms
Purchase Orders (PO Number) Native for B2B customers. Configurable per customer Not available out of the box. Offered as a global payment method, not B2B customer specific BigCommerce allows more configurability
Order Approval Workflows Built-in approval flows based on buyer roles & permissions Limited support. Requires customization Sample BigC Flow: Jr Buyer creates shopping list, Sr Buyer approves & converts to quote, Admin converts quote to an order
Reorder Native reorder flows Requires apps/custom build BigCommerce has reorder capabilities OOB
Quick Order by SKU (via UI & File Upload) Native feature Requires apps/custom build BigC has an AI app to upload CSV/XLSX to create orders. PDF upload coming soon
Multi-storefront (B2B + B2C) Strong native multi-storefront Requires multiple stores or workarounds BigCommerce is more efficient in this area
Headless Commerce (B2B) Strong APIs, B2B supported Strong APIs, but B2B gaps BigCommerce has more complete B2B features and API coverage for those
Checkout Customization For all plans. Flexible (Stencil + APIs) For Plus plan only. Flexible Both are flexible
Order Search & Management Limited search filters but functional. Cannot search custom order fields out of the box Provides more search filters (including search by CC, tags, etc). Configurable Order ID Shopify has stronger order search and usability features
Custom Fields (Orders) Can create metafields via API, limited UI visibility Can create metafields via UI. They’re visible and easier to manage Shopify is more advanced and user friendly
ERP / PIM Integrations Strong (open APIs). No API access (to WebDAV) for non image file upload Strong (open APIs). Shopify allows API access to non image files (e.g. .glb, .pdf files) Shopify is slightly better at file management
Catalog Complexity Handling (100k+ SKUs) Handles large catalogs well. Better modeling features - more flexible variant modeling, product hierarchies, modifier options (non SKU affecting), brands, complex product rules Simple, not as flexible. Smart Collections is a good feature. Limited to 3 variant options per product. Allows 2048 vs 600 variants Shopify is awkward for configurable / industrial / B2B catalogs that require sophisticated data modeling
Variant Limits 600 variants per product Up to 2048 in theory

Not every Shopify store or setup will handle this cleanly without:

  • Theme updates
  • App compatibility
  • Data modeling adjustments
Workflow Automation Limited native support via UI. Automations must be API-driven Strong via Shopify Flow (in-app, no-code automation) Shopify has easier to use no-code automation features
App Ecosystem (B2B) Smaller but focused Large ecosystem. Heavier reliance on apps, especially for B2B features  
Performance (Frontend UX) Depends on implementation quality Strong out-of-the-box, but also depends on setup

Performance is heavily impacted by:

  • Apps / scripts
  • Images & media
  • Theme quality
  • Custom code
Customization Flexibility High flexibility, fewer restrictions Structured extensibility, more guardrails

BigC provides more control over themes, APIs, URLs, and more for complex builds. Shopify is easier to customize

  • Best for: DTC, speed, design-first teams

BigCommerce is more customizable

  • Best for: B2B, complex catalogs, integration heavy builds
Security / Access Control (B2B) Good for true B2B operations (regional catalogs, complex market specific pricing, multi-store architecture) Good for more centralized operations and simple B2B models Shopify optimizes for simplicity
BigCommerce optimizes for real-world B2B complexity
And international B2B is inherently complex
International B2B (multi-currency, regions) Strong support for regional catalogs & pricing Better for centralized/simple operations BigCommerce handles international complexity better.
Time to Launch (B2B) Faster for complex B2B (less customizations) Faster for simple setups Shopify apps and relatively more implementation effort required to achieve parity with BigC features
Buyer Portal Customization Offer an open-source buyer portal with access to the underlying code B2B features are enabled by a new customer accounts screen, limited customization ability, cannot be open sourced BigCommerce offers a structured, extensible Buyer Portal, while Shopify relies on a standardized customer account UI with limited customization

BigCommerce vs Shopify for B2B: which one should you choose?

BigCommerce

  • You need advanced B2B features
    • Approvals, quotes, invoices, shared shopping lists, multi-user accounts, account hierarchy
  • You have a large or complex catalog
    • Industrial, configurable, B2B catalogs, or 100k+ SKUs
  • You rely on:
    • ERP
    • PIM
    • Integrations
  • You are running:
    • Multiple sites (B2B and/or B2C) in one ecosystem
BigC buyer portal

Shopify

  • Your B2B is simple or emerging
    • Wholesale, light B2B
  • You prioritize:
    • Quick launch with basic B2B capabilities
    • More out of the box capabilities to build front-end experience
  • Your team prefers:
    • App-based solutions
    • Low-code automation (Shopify Flow)
    • Your catalog is relatively simple
shopify buyer portal

How B2B actually gets implemented

Area BigCommerce Shopify
Starting Point B2B features available out-of-the-box B2B features partially available, rest built via apps
Initial Setup Configure companies, hierarchies, pricing, workflows Configure basics + install apps for missing features or build them out
Time to MVP Slightly longer for complex B2B (more configuration upfront) Faster for Basic B2B (simpler setup, fewer dependencies initially)
Handling Core B2B Needs Highly configurable out of the box Mix of apps, custom logic, and platform features
Custom Requirements Extend via APIs, theme, open source buyer portal Add apps or build custom components
System Complexity Over Time Grows gradually Grows as more apps and logic are added
Ongoing Maintenance Platform-driven with integrations App updates, compatibility, and custom logic management
Debugging Issues Typically within platform + integrations Often across apps, custom code, and platform
Team Dependency Lower reliance on third party apps Higher reliance on apps and partners

Common B2B challenges and what you actually need

Customer-specific pricing becomes hard to manage
→ You need scalable price lists and centralized pricing control

Approvals slow down purchasing
→ You need role-based workflows built into the buying process

Repeat buyers don’t use the site
→ You need fast ordering (SKU entry, bulk order, reorder flows)

Catalog complexity increases over time
→ You need flexible product modeling, not rigid structures

Sales, pricing, and orders fall out of sync
→ You need connected workflows across pricing, quoting, and ordering

ERP/PIM becomes critical to operations
→ You need clean, API-first integrations with minimal duplication of logic

Scaling across regions creates inconsistency
→ You need market-level control over catalogs, pricing, and customers, with a consolidated view of orders, customers, and scoped content per storefront

Conclusion

Both BigCommerce and Shopify can support B2B.

The decision comes down to where you want the complexity handled:

 

  • If your model includes structured pricing, approvals, complex catalogs, and tight system integrations, you will need a platform that supports these directly.
  • If your model is simpler or evolving, you can assemble these capabilities as needed.

 

The right choice is the platform that aligns with your current operating model and how you expect it to scale.

Exploring B2B Commerce Platforms?

Learn more about our B2B commerce capabilities and how we help businesses implement scalable commerce solutions.

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