Shopify's appeal among first-time sellers has stayed consistently high for a pretty simple reason: you don't touch a server, you don't need to know code, and you can have your first product live the same day you create an account. This guide assumes zero prior store-building experience and walks through the full process from scratch.
A quick word on budget first: the Shopify Basic plan currently runs around $39/month (worth double-checking the latest pricing on their site before you launch), and once you factor in a domain and a handful of paid apps you'll likely add later, most new stores end up somewhere in the $40โ100/month range. That number moves depending on how many apps you install, so it's good to set that expectation early.
Create Your Account and Pick a Store Name
Head to the Shopify website, enter your email, password, and store name, and your account is ready within minutes. The store name step is where a lot of people get stuck overthinking it โ my honest advice: keep it short, easy to spell, and brandable down the line. Avoid keyword-stuffed names (something like "BestCheapWirelessHeadphonesShop") and skip special characters. This name follows you into your domain, social handles, and packaging โ changing it later is a hassle, so it's worth getting right from the start.
Connect a Domain
Shopify gives you a default subdomain like yourstore.myshopify.com, which works fine for testing โ but before you actually launch, you'll want to switch to a custom domain. A subdomain looks unpolished at checkout and in your emails, and that can quietly chip away at buyer trust.
For the domain suffix, .com is the safest default for the broadest reach; .store is a solid alternative for an e-commerce-specific project. Namecheap, Cloudflare Registrar, or GoDaddy all work fine as registrars, usually running $10โ20/year. Once you've bought the domain, head back to Shopify's Domains settings to add it and complete verification โ the system walks you through the DNS setup, so just follow the prompts.
Choose a Theme
Your theme sets the overall visual style of the site, and there's no need to buy a paid one right out of the gate. Shopify's free official theme, Dawn, covers most use cases well โ it loads quickly, handles mobile nicely, and works fine as a starting point for both brand stores and dropshipping projects. Once your traffic and conversion numbers stabilize, that's the point to consider whether a more design-forward paid theme is worth the upgrade.
Set Up the Basic Pages
Beyond your product pages, there are a few pages you'll want filled in before going live:
Homepage: Lead with your brand positioning and core products. No need to cram in too much โ put what you most want visitors to see right at the top.
About Us: A clear, simple version of your brand story. Even a few sentences beats a blank page.
Contact: Leave an email and a way to reach you โ buyers need to be able to find someone when something goes wrong.
Policy pages (Refund Policy, Privacy Policy, Shipping Policy): These aren't just for buyers to read. Shopify Payments and any third-party payment gateway you add later will check whether these pages exist during account review, and missing them can hold up your payment setup โ don't skip this step. Shopify has templates ready to go under Settings โ Policies; just adjust the wording to match your actual business and you're set.
Upload Your Products
Go to Products โ Add Product and fill in the title, description, images, price, and SKU.
There's a common trap with titles: a lot of beginners stuff in keywords, something like "Best Cheap Wireless Bluetooth Headphones 2026," thinking it helps SEO. In practice it hurts both conversion and the search experience. A clean product title should be simple and clear โ "Wireless Noise Cancelling Headphones," for instance โ with keywords saved for the description and meta fields. The title is for the human reading it.
For images, mix white-background shots, in-context scene shots, and lifestyle shots together. White-background images serve shoppers who want clear spec details; scene and lifestyle shots help people picture the product in their actual life. Both psychological needs matter, so cover both.
Set Up Payment Methods
This is the single most important step in the whole process โ get it wrong and everything else stops mattering. Shopify Payments is the official option, the easiest to set up, supports credit cards and Apple Pay, and is available in most regions directly โ use this as your default. I'd recommend turning on PayPal alongside it โ a meaningful chunk of shoppers in Europe and the US still prefer clicking PayPal over typing in a card number at checkout, and skipping it costs you some of those conversions. If Shopify Payments isn't available where you're based, Stripe is a solid fallback, with decent flexibility for multi-currency collection too.
Go to Settings โ Payments and enable each one following the prompts โ and run a test order through the full flow afterward to confirm charges actually go through correctly.
Set Up Shipping
Go to Settings โ Shipping and Delivery. For a new store, flat-rate shipping is the easiest place to start โ one shipping cost regardless of order size, simple and clear. Once your traffic and order volume pick up, you can refine this further by country, weight, or zone, which more accurately reflects your real shipping costs and avoids eating a loss on long-distance orders with free shipping.
Install a Few Essential Apps
Don't go overboard with Shopify apps โ too many will drag down your site speed. For a new store, these three are worth starting with:
Judge.me โ a product review system. Social proof has a direct effect on conversion rate, and a new store with zero reviews tends to convert worse. The earlier you start building this up, the better.
Klaviyo โ email marketing. Abandoned cart recovery emails alone tend to recover a meaningful chunk of orders that would otherwise be lost โ set it up once and it mostly runs itself.
DSers โ if you're running a dropshipping store, this app handles importing products from AliExpress and processing orders, saving a significant amount of manual work.
Don't Skip Basic SEO
A lot of beginners assume Shopify is mainly an ads game and SEO can wait. That mindset means missing out on traffic you could otherwise get for free, long-term.
A few things worth doing from day one: set a custom Title and Meta Description on every product page rather than relying on the system-generated default; keep product URLs short instead of letting the system generate long, messy paths; add Alt text to every image, which helps both Google understand your content and improves accessibility for visually impaired visitors. If you have the bandwidth, start a Shopify blog โ product guides, industry content, scenario-based posts. It's one of the few channels that keeps delivering free traffic to an independent store over time, and the early investment pays off gradually.
Connect Your Tracking Tools
Before you start spending on ads, get these tools wired up โ otherwise you'll be spending money with no idea whether it's actually working: Google Analytics (traffic analysis), Google Search Console (SEO monitoring), Meta Pixel (Facebook/Instagram ad tracking), and TikTok Pixel (TikTok ad optimization). All four are free โ each platform generates a code snippet, and you paste it into Shopify's Settings โ Customer events. No coding required.
Work through these ten steps and you should have a Shopify store that's ready to take orders. What actually determines whether it sells, though, comes next โ product selection and traffic. Building the store is just the starting line; the real work is everything that happens after.