eCommerce · websites
A store that loads in a second and belongs to you.
eCommerce website design with the receipts published: our own store rebuild cut mobile load from 13.5 seconds to about four, took first orders within 24 hours — and pays no platform rent. Fixed prices, from $7,500.
Every build ships this
The standard, not the upsell.
Speed you can verify
Modern storefront on edge hosting — pages paint in about a second on a phone. Our rebuilds publish their scores; our own store went from a 13.5s mobile load to ~4s.
Product pages that sell
Structured for buyers and for Google: real descriptions, reviews, schema and internal linking — not manufacturer boilerplate on a template.
Feeds & Merchant Center ready
Shopping feeds, policies and structured data built in from day one, so free listings and Shopping ads work at launch — not as a phase two.
Stripe checkout, nothing skimmed
Standard Stripe rates (~1.7% + 30¢) and that's it — no platform surcharge, no per-sale tax, no checkout lock-in.
Wholesale & B2B built in
Trade price tiers and account ordering included where you need them — not gated behind a $3,700/month enterprise plan.
Measured from day one
Full e-commerce analytics installed at launch, your old store's numbers frozen first — so the improvement is provable, not asserted.
Published pricing
Fixed-quoted. No platform rent after.
The build is the last big cheque — after that it's a flat care plan from $299/month instead of plan fees, app subscriptions and per-sale surcharges.
Starter store
$7,500–12,000
Up to ~100 products, standard checkout, content migration — shipped to our published standard: 90+ speed scores, full measurement, SEO structure.
Growth store
$12,000–25,000
Up to ~1,000 products, platform migration with rankings preserved (proper 301s), reviews & shopping feeds, integrations like Xero.
Complex / wholesale
from $25,000
B2B portals & trade price tiers, multi-warehouse, ERP/ops integrations, custom checkout flows — the things platforms gate behind enterprise plans.
Care and growth retainers on the eCommerce pricing section. Local currency (NZD/AUD) confirmed at the audit.
How it works
Audit → fixed quote → proven stack → published proof.
Audit & fixed quote
Free 30-minute audit: catalogue size, migrations, integrations. You get a fixed quote inside our published bands — the number we quote is the number you pay.
Build on the proven stack
Next.js storefront, open-source commerce engine, Stripe — the same repeatable stack behind our own stores, which is why we can fix-price it.
Migrate, launch, prove
Every URL redirected so rankings survive, baseline vs after published, and a care plan from $299/month so it stays fast and safe.
Questions
Before you brief anyone.
Our build prices are published: $7,500–12,000 for a starter store (≤100 products), $12,000–25,000 for a growth store with migrations and integrations, and from $25,000 for complex wholesale/B2B builds. Fixed-quoted after a free audit — no surprises, and no platform rent afterwards.
Our own proven stack: a Next.js storefront on edge hosting, the open-source Medusa commerce engine, and Stripe payments. You own all of it — code, data, customers. It's the same stack running our own stores, and its speed scores are published on this site.
For a day-one solo launch, honestly — maybe you should; read our three-way comparison. But templates and rented platforms cost you twice later: monthly rent that never ends, and a speed/customisation ceiling. An owned store costs more up front and then simply… stops costing.
Yes — it's the standard process: rankings, speed and revenue baselined first, every URL properly redirected, and the before/after published. Migration killed rankings is an avoidable failure; we've published migrations that gained.
A starter store is typically live within 4–6 weeks of content and product data being ready; growth builds with migrations run 6–10 weeks. You see it on a staging link throughout, and cutover happens without downtime.
Get a fixed quote on your store.
Book the free 30-minute audit. We'll scope your catalogue, migrations and integrations, and quote fixed inside the published bands — with your current numbers baselined so the improvement is provable.