Alternatives to Magento logo

Alternatives to Magento

WooCommerce, WordPress, OpenCart, BigCommerce, and PrestaShop are the most popular alternatives and competitors to Magento.
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What is Magento and what are its top alternatives?

Magento Community Edition is perfect if you’re a developer who wants to build your own solution with flexible eCommerce technology. You can modify the core code and add a wide variety of features and functionality.
Magento is a tool in the Ecommerce category of a tech stack.
Magento is an open source tool with 11.3K GitHub stars and 9.3K GitHub forks. Here’s a link to Magento's open source repository on GitHub

Top Alternatives to Magento

  • WooCommerce
    WooCommerce

    WooCommerce is the most popular WordPress eCommerce plugin. And it's available for free. Packed full of features, perfectly integrated into your self-hosted WordPress website. ...

  • WordPress
    WordPress

    The core software is built by hundreds of community volunteers, and when you’re ready for more there are thousands of plugins and themes available to transform your site into almost anything you can imagine. Over 60 million people have chosen WordPress to power the place on the web they call “home” — we’d love you to join the family. ...

  • OpenCart
    OpenCart

    It is an online store management system. It is PHP-based, using a MySQL database and HTML components. Support is provided for different languages and currencies. It is freely available under the GNU General Public License. ...

  • BigCommerce
    BigCommerce

    It is a true all-in-one ecommerce platform with the power to grow your business & help you sell more. It empowers you to rise above complexity – and ultimately focus on optimizing your business for growth. ...

  • PrestaShop
    PrestaShop

    PrestaShop is written in PHP, is highly customizable, supports all the major payment services, is translated in many languages and localized for many countries, and is fully responsive (both front- and back-office). ...

  • Shopify
    Shopify

    Shopify powers tens of thousands of online retailers including General Electric, Amnesty International, CrossFit, Tesla Motors, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Foo Fighters, GitHub, and more. Our platform allows users to easily and quickly create their own online store without all the technical work involved in developing their own website, or the huge expense of having someone else build it. Shopify lets merchants manage all aspects of their shops: uploading products, changing the design, accepting credit card orders, and viewing their incoming orders and completed transactions. ...

  • Broadleaf Commerce
    Broadleaf Commerce

    It provides the most sought-after eCommerce functionality for supporting B2C, B2B, Marketplace, Multi-Site, Multi-Tenant and API Commerce at the best value in the market. Every solution can be customized to ensure your eCommerce site is tailored to your specific requirements. Robust functionality within a lightweight framework lend to some of the characteristics that cause it to stand out from the rest. Never feel restricted by a features list again. ...

  • Django
    Django

    Django is a high-level Python Web framework that encourages rapid development and clean, pragmatic design. ...

Magento alternatives & related posts

WooCommerce logo

WooCommerce

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The most popular WordPress eCommerce plugin
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PROS OF WOOCOMMERCE
  • 12
    Easy to extend and customize
CONS OF WOOCOMMERCE
  • 1
    Slow if not optimized

related WooCommerce posts

Samuel Webster
Principal Developer at Colart · | 7 upvotes · 292K views

We needed our e-commerce platform (built using WooCommerce) to be able to keep products in sync with our #pim (provided by #akeneo) which is built in Symfony . We hooked into the kernel.event_listener to send RabbitMQ messages to a WordPress API endpoint that triggers the updated product to rebuild with fresh data.

See more
Dan Platon
PHP Software Developer · | 5 upvotes · 188.2K views

I'm looking to build an eCommerce website and seeking advice from professionals on the most reliable tech stack that I can use. Currently, the website is built on top of WordPress with WooCommerce, but the company has grown up, and evidently, the number of products have been increased. The site needs a fresh code because WordPress doesn't make it anymore.

The stack I'm most familiar with is PHP + Symfony + MySQL + Apache HTTP Server or NGINX. Headless eCommerce is the one I'm looking for, because of the huge complexity, it would be great to separate the backend from the frontend. Not sure about CMSs, because they had a huge amount of functionality that the application doesn't need. I've been looking also at PrestaShop, it seems ok, but not sure about customization and front-end integration. As a custom solution, I have found Sylius or Aimeos for the backend, but I'm not too sure about a frontend stack.

Could you please give some suggestions about the frontend stack and if the ones for the backend are ok?

See more
WordPress logo

WordPress

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A semantic personal publishing platform with a focus on aesthetics, web standards, and usability.
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PROS OF WORDPRESS
  • 415
    Customizable
  • 366
    Easy to manage
  • 354
    Plugins & themes
  • 258
    Non-tech colleagues can update website content
  • 247
    Really powerful
  • 145
    Rapid website development
  • 78
    Best documentation
  • 51
    Codex
  • 44
    Product feature set
  • 35
    Custom/internal social network
  • 18
    Open source
  • 8
    Great for all types of websites
  • 7
    Huge install and user base
  • 5
    Perfect example of user collaboration
  • 5
    Open Source Community
  • 5
    Most websites make use of it
  • 5
    It's simple and easy to use by any novice
  • 5
    Best
  • 5
    I like it like I like a kick in the groin
  • 4
    Community
  • 4
    API-based CMS
  • 3
    Easy To use
  • 2
    <a href="https://secure.wphackedhel">Easy Beginner</a>
CONS OF WORDPRESS
  • 13
    Hard to keep up-to-date if you customize things
  • 13
    Plugins are of mixed quality
  • 10
    Not best backend UI
  • 2
    Complex Organization
  • 1
    Do not cover all the basics in the core
  • 1
    Great Security

related WordPress posts

Dale Ross
Independent Contractor at Self Employed · | 22 upvotes · 1.5M views

I've heard that I have the ability to write well, at times. When it flows, it flows. I decided to start blogging in 2013 on Blogger. I started a company and joined BizPark with the Microsoft Azure allotment. I created a WordPress blog and did a migration at some point. A lot happened in the time after that migration but I stopped coding and changed cities during tumultuous times that taught me many lessons concerning mental health and productivity. I eventually graduated from BizSpark and outgrew the credit allotment. That killed the WordPress blog.

I blogged about writing again on the existing Blogger blog but it didn't feel right. I looked at a few options where I wouldn't have to worry about hosting cost indefinitely and Jekyll stood out with GitHub Pages. The Importer was fairly straightforward for the existing blog posts.

Todo * Set up redirects for all posts on blogger. The URI format is different so a complete redirect wouldn't work. Although, there may be something in Jekyll that could manage the redirects. I did notice the old URLs were stored in the front matter. I'm working on a command-line Ruby gem for the current plan. * I did find some of the lost WordPress posts on archive.org that I downloaded with the waybackmachinedownloader. I think I might write an importer for that. * I still have a few Disqus comment threads to map

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A White
Front End Web Dev at Burnt Design · | 21 upvotes · 58.4K views

Below is my own professional history to give some context to my current skill set. I have been a front-end dev for 18 years. My tools of choice are:

  • HTML5
  • CSS 3
  • JavaScript
  • WordPress
  • PHP (but not my strongest skill as I don't write it too often)

I first of all would like to become a better and more 'full stack' developer, and I have a business idea that will hopefully allow me to move in this direction. The queries I have will result in which approach I take here. One of the most important aspects to me is the system being 'future proof'. If successful I know I will eventually bring additional developers on board, and they will likely be better developers than me! I want to avoid them having to rebuild the system and would like it to be something that they can just expand and improve on.

The business which I'd like to create is the following (in a nutshell), I have ideas for many more features, but this is how I'd like to begin:

Web-based system for gym management & marketing. Specifically a class-based gym

  1. One-stop shop for a class-based gym owner
  2. Sell memberships
  3. Manage class bookings
  4. Reporting
  5. Automatically generated website
  6. Choose a pre-designed template and amend the content through their dashboard
  7. Marketing
  8. Easily send a newsletter to members
  9. Book a free trial form on the website linked directly to the booking system

Important requirements

  1. One system, one dashboard. I would like the gym owner to have one place to control everything. Members, marketing, and website amendments.
  2. Future proof. These features are the bare minimum and I'd like to keep expanding on the features as time goes on. Things like uploading programming for members, messaging between members and admin, and selling merchandise via the website.
  3. Fast to load & secure. I live in the WordPress world right now, which isn't the fastest or most secure environment. I appreciate there are better ways to develop a system like this, but I'm a little clueless about where to start.
  4. Mobile. The data created should easily communicate with a mobile app that customers will download to manage their memberships and class bookings.

TIA to anybody that can provide some guidance on where to start here.

See more
OpenCart logo

OpenCart

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A free and an open source e-commerce shopping cart system
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PROS OF OPENCART
    Be the first to leave a pro
    CONS OF OPENCART
      Be the first to leave a con

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      BigCommerce logo

      BigCommerce

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      Ecommerce platform which allows you to create an online store
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      PROS OF BIGCOMMERCE
        Be the first to leave a pro
        CONS OF BIGCOMMERCE
          Be the first to leave a con

          related BigCommerce posts

          PrestaShop logo

          PrestaShop

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          Free, Open Source eCommerce Solution powering 185,000 active stores worldwide
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          PROS OF PRESTASHOP
          • 21
            Free
          • 15
            Powerful
          • 15
            Customisable
          • 14
            Easy to understand code
          • 13
            Scalable
          • 12
            Great community
          • 11
            Easy to customize with plugins
          • 10
            Easy learning
          • 8
            Fast
          • 7
            Rich features with powerful functions
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            Feature rich
          • 4
            Learning
          • 4
            Easy to handle
          CONS OF PRESTASHOP
            Be the first to leave a con

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            I am consulting for a company that wants to move its current CubeCart e-commerce site to another PHP based platform like PrestaShop or Magento. I was interested in alternatives that utilize Node.js as the primary platform. I currently don't know PHP, but I have done full stack dev with Java, Spring, Thymeleaf, etc.. I am just unsure that learning a set of technologies not commonly used makes sense. For example, in PrestaShop, I would need to work with JavaScript better and learn PHP, Twig, and Bootstrap. It seems more cumbersome than a Node JS system, where the language syntax stays the same for the full stack. I am looking for thoughts and advice on the relevance of PHP skillset into the future AND whether the Node based e-commerce open source options can compete with Magento or Prestashop.

            See more
            Dan Platon
            PHP Software Developer · | 5 upvotes · 188.2K views

            I'm looking to build an eCommerce website and seeking advice from professionals on the most reliable tech stack that I can use. Currently, the website is built on top of WordPress with WooCommerce, but the company has grown up, and evidently, the number of products have been increased. The site needs a fresh code because WordPress doesn't make it anymore.

            The stack I'm most familiar with is PHP + Symfony + MySQL + Apache HTTP Server or NGINX. Headless eCommerce is the one I'm looking for, because of the huge complexity, it would be great to separate the backend from the frontend. Not sure about CMSs, because they had a huge amount of functionality that the application doesn't need. I've been looking also at PrestaShop, it seems ok, but not sure about customization and front-end integration. As a custom solution, I have found Sylius or Aimeos for the backend, but I'm not too sure about a frontend stack.

            Could you please give some suggestions about the frontend stack and if the ones for the backend are ok?

            See more
            Shopify logo

            Shopify

            11.9K
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            Quickly and easily create a beautiful online store with Shopify.
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            PROS OF SHOPIFY
            • 23
              Affordable yet comprehensive
            • 14
              Great API & integration options
            • 11
              Business-friendly
            • 10
              Intuitive interface
            • 9
              Quick
            • 3
              Liquid
            • 3
              Awesome customer support
            • 2
              POS & Mobile
            • 1
              Dummy Proof
            • 0
              Nopcommerce
            CONS OF SHOPIFY
            • 1
              User is stuck with building a site from a template

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            Dennis Kraaijeveld
            Shared insights
            on
            MongoDBMongoDBShopifyShopify

            For learning purposes, I am trying to design a dashboard that displays the total revenue from all connected webshops/marketplaces, displaying incoming orders, total orders, etc.

            So I will need to get the data (using Node backend) from the Shopify and marketplace APIs, storing this in the database, and get the data from the back end.

            My question is:

            What kind of database should I use? Is MongoDB fine for storing this kind of data? Or should I go with a SQL database?

            See more
            Tim Little
            Software Consultant at timlittletech · | 7 upvotes · 100.6K views

            Hi there, I am trying to figure out if it's worth creating a Braintree account to do subscription billing in my Shopify store. The goal is to have as little custom code as possible for the store but be able to do subscription billing services, we already have a PayPal business account, but from the looks of it, we can't use PayWhirl directly with Paypal.

            See more
            Broadleaf Commerce logo

            Broadleaf Commerce

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            A framework for building e-commerce websites & backends
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            PROS OF BROADLEAF COMMERCE
              Be the first to leave a pro
              CONS OF BROADLEAF COMMERCE
                Be the first to leave a con

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                Django logo

                Django

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                The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines
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                PROS OF DJANGO
                • 670
                  Rapid development
                • 487
                  Open source
                • 424
                  Great community
                • 379
                  Easy to learn
                • 276
                  Mvc
                • 232
                  Beautiful code
                • 223
                  Elegant
                • 206
                  Free
                • 203
                  Great packages
                • 194
                  Great libraries
                • 79
                  Comes with auth and crud admin panel
                • 79
                  Restful
                • 78
                  Powerful
                • 75
                  Great documentation
                • 71
                  Great for web
                • 57
                  Python
                • 43
                  Great orm
                • 41
                  Great for api
                • 32
                  All included
                • 29
                  Fast
                • 25
                  Web Apps
                • 23
                  Easy setup
                • 23
                  Clean
                • 21
                  Used by top startups
                • 19
                  Sexy
                • 19
                  ORM
                • 15
                  The Django community
                • 14
                  Allows for very rapid development with great libraries
                • 14
                  Convention over configuration
                • 11
                  King of backend world
                • 10
                  Full stack
                • 10
                  Great MVC and templating engine
                • 8
                  Fast prototyping
                • 8
                  Mvt
                • 7
                  Easy to develop end to end AI Models
                • 7
                  Batteries included
                • 7
                  Its elegant and practical
                • 6
                  Have not found anything that it can't do
                • 6
                  Very quick to get something up and running
                • 6
                  Cross-Platform
                • 5
                  Easy Structure , useful inbuilt library
                • 5
                  Great peformance
                • 5
                  Zero code burden to change databases
                • 5
                  Python community
                • 4
                  Map
                • 4
                  Just the right level of abstraction
                • 4
                  Easy to change database manager
                • 4
                  Modular
                • 4
                  Many libraries
                • 4
                  Easy to use
                • 4
                  Easy
                • 4
                  Full-Text Search
                • 3
                  Scaffold
                • 1
                  Fastapi
                • 1
                  Built in common security
                • 1
                  Scalable
                • 1
                  Great default admin panel
                • 1
                  Node js
                • 1
                  Gigante ta
                • 0
                  Rails
                CONS OF DJANGO
                • 26
                  Underpowered templating
                • 22
                  Autoreload restarts whole server
                • 22
                  Underpowered ORM
                • 15
                  URL dispatcher ignores HTTP method
                • 10
                  Internal subcomponents coupling
                • 8
                  Not nodejs
                • 8
                  Configuration hell
                • 7
                  Admin
                • 5
                  Not as clean and nice documentation like Laravel
                • 4
                  Python
                • 3
                  Not typed
                • 3
                  Bloated admin panel included
                • 2
                  Overwhelming folder structure
                • 2
                  InEffective Multithreading
                • 1
                  Not type safe

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                Dmitry Mukhin
                Engineer at Uploadcare · | 25 upvotes · 2.4M views

                Simple controls over complex technologies, as we put it, wouldn't be possible without neat UIs for our user areas including start page, dashboard, settings, and docs.

                Initially, there was Django. Back in 2011, considering our Python-centric approach, that was the best choice. Later, we realized we needed to iterate on our website more quickly. And this led us to detaching Django from our front end. That was when we decided to build an SPA.

                For building user interfaces, we're currently using React as it provided the fastest rendering back when we were building our toolkit. It’s worth mentioning Uploadcare is not a front-end-focused SPA: we aren’t running at high levels of complexity. If it were, we’d go with Ember.js.

                However, there's a chance we will shift to the faster Preact, with its motto of using as little code as possible, and because it makes more use of browser APIs. One of our future tasks for our front end is to configure our Webpack bundler to split up the code for different site sections. For styles, we use PostCSS along with its plugins such as cssnano which minifies all the code.

                All that allows us to provide a great user experience and quickly implement changes where they are needed with as little code as possible.

                See more

                Hey, so I developed a basic application with Python. But to use it, you need a python interpreter. I want to add a GUI to make it more appealing. What should I choose to develop a GUI? I have very basic skills in front end development (CSS, JavaScript). I am fluent in python. I'm looking for a tool that is easy to use and doesn't require too much code knowledge. I have recently tried out Flask, but it is kinda complicated. Should I stick with it, move to Django, or is there another nice framework to use?

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