Most Shopify stores fail for one simple reason. The product might be good, the site might look nice, but the settings behind the scenes are wrong. These hidden settings control how customers pay, how orders process, and how much money you actually keep.
Here are the most important Shopify settings beginners miss and how to fix them.
Starting from $17/month
Get your free trial and $1 for the first month + Free store builder
Key Features
AI-powered product recommendations and marketing
Advanced fulfillment and inventory management
Seamless omnichannel selling
Why We Recommend It
Storage and Bandwidth:
Unlimited storage allows you to upload as many products and images as needed
Unlimited bandwidth means your site can handle many visitors and lots of activity without slowing down
Extras and Inclusions:
Secure, integrated payment gateway, with transaction fees waived if you use Shopify Payments
Access to an extensive app store to add features and functionality
Built-in tools for SEO, marketing, and analytics
Pros & Cons
- Comprehensive store management tools
- Wide range of themes and apps
- Excellent 24/7 customer support
- It can get expensive with additional apps and transaction fees
- Limited SEO capabilities compared to other platforms
1. Payment Methods
Many new stores only enable one payment option. This kills sales.
Go to Settings, then Payments. Turn on:
- Shopify Payments
- PayPal
- Local payment options
The more ways people can pay, the more likely they are to complete checkout.
2. Checkout Settings
Your checkout should be simple.
Go to Settings, then Checkout.
Make sure:
- Guest checkout is enabled
- You do not force account creation
- Email and phone number fields are visible
Every extra step loses customers.
3. Abandoned Checkout Recovery
This is free money most beginners ignore.
Go to Settings, then Checkout, and turn on abandoned checkout emails. Shopify will automatically send reminders to people who almost bought.
Many stores recover 10 to 20 percent of lost sales just from this one setting.
4. Order Confirmation Emails
Customers expect instant confirmation.
Go to Settings, then Notifications. Make sure order confirmation, shipping updates, and refund emails are active. These messages reduce support requests and increase trust.
5. Shipping Rates
Confusing shipping kills conversions.
Go to Settings, then Shipping. Use simple rates or free shipping. Avoid surprise fees at checkout. Most stores build shipping into the product price.
6. Taxes
Go to Settings, then Taxes. Select your country or state so Shopify can calculate basic tax. This protects you as your store grows.
7. Store Details
Your business information builds trust.
Go to Settings, then Store Details. Add:
- Business name
- Email
- Address or virtual address
- Support email
This helps with payments, shipping, and customer confidence.
8. Legal Pages
Every store should have:
- Privacy policy
- Refund policy
- Terms of service
- Shipping policy
Shopify can auto generate these. They protect you and reassure buyers.
9. Notifications and Alerts
Turn on low inventory alerts and order notifications. You never want to miss a sale or run out of stock without knowing.
10. Analytics
Go to Analytics and turn on basic reports. Connect Google Analytics if possible. You need to know:
- Where traffic comes from
- Which products sell
- How much profit you keep
Without data, you are guessing.
Final Thoughts
Most Shopify stores do not fail because of bad products. They fail because small settings are wrong. These details decide whether your store feels smooth and trustworthy or broken and risky.
Spend one hour setting these up. It can save you months of lost sales.
That is how real Shopify stores are built in 2026.
Starting from $17/month
Get your free trial and $1 for the first month + Free store builder
Key Features
AI-powered product recommendations and marketing
Advanced fulfillment and inventory management
Seamless omnichannel selling
Why We Recommend It
Storage and Bandwidth:
Unlimited storage allows you to upload as many products and images as needed
Unlimited bandwidth means your site can handle many visitors and lots of activity without slowing down
Extras and Inclusions:
Secure, integrated payment gateway, with transaction fees waived if you use Shopify Payments
Access to an extensive app store to add features and functionality
Built-in tools for SEO, marketing, and analytics
Pros & Cons
- Comprehensive store management tools
- Wide range of themes and apps
- Excellent 24/7 customer support
- It can get expensive with additional apps and transaction fees
- Limited SEO capabilities compared to other platforms