RevenueFlows AI
Shopify

Shogun Alternatives for Shopify, Ranked by Revenue

A founder rebuilt 19 pages on Shogun's $199 plan and her sales stayed flat. Here are the Shogun alternatives for Shopify that actually move revenue per visitor.

Buyer's Guide · Jun 11, 2026
$499
Shogun's top tier per month, conversion not included
RevenueFlows AI

Shogun Alternatives for Shopify, Ranked by Revenue

A founder got on a call with me last month. She'd just moved her whole store onto Shogun's Grow plan. Nineteen pages rebuilt, content scheduled out, global sections, the works. $199 a month, and proud of it.

Then she said the quiet part out loud. "The pages look so much better. But my sales are about the same."

That's the moment people start hunting for Shogun alternatives Shopify sellers can actually grow with. Not because Shogun is broken. Because they paid for a premium builder, spent two weeks rebuilding, and watched the one number that pays the bills sit exactly where it was.

I've rebuilt over 100 product pages for 6 and 7 figure Shopify brands. The builder was never the lever. The math was. So this guide ranks Shogun alternatives the way your profit-and-loss statement would rank them, not the way a feature checklist would.

What a Shogun Alternative Actually Has to Do

Before you compare a single tool, get clear on the job.

A real Shogun alternative has one job: raise your revenue per visitor, which is your conversion rate multiplied by your average order value. A store converting 2% of visitors at a $90 average order value earns $1.80 per visitor. The builder that lifts that number wins. The one with more templates does not.

Almost every "best Shogun alternatives" list you'll find ranks tools by features. Drag-and-drop smoothness. Template count. How many widgets ship in the box. None of that is the job. A page builder is a canvas. What you paint on it decides whether the page closes the sale.

So I'm ranking these by the only thing your bank account responds to: did the page start earning more from the same traffic, or didn't it?

What Shogun Actually Gets Right

Let me give Shogun real credit, because it earns it.

Shogun is the most enterprise tool in this whole comparison. Multi-store content syncing on the Advanced plan. Custom CMS collections. Content scheduling. Global sections you update once and push everywhere. If you're a team running content operations across three storefronts, Shogun's pricing at $499 a month for Advanced is built for exactly that job, and it does it well.

That's the strength. Shogun organizes and publishes content at scale better than anything else on this list.

Shogun is a content operations machine. The problem is that content operations and conversion are two different jobs, and you bought it to fix the second one.

Here's where founders get caught. They feel the polish of a big, capable platform and assume the polish will show up in the sales numbers. It usually doesn't. And the gap between "this looks expensive and professional" and "this earns more per visitor" is where a lot of monthly subscriptions quietly go to die.

The Question Shogun's Price Tag Can't Answer

The assumption underneath every page-builder switch is this: a better builder will fix my conversion rate.

It won't. And it's worth saying plainly.

Design control and conversion are different jobs. Shogun gives you total control over how a page looks and where every block sits. What it can't do is know the one question your buyer is silently asking at the moment of decision. "Why is this $89 instead of the $30 one in the next tab?" A content management system has no answer for that. Only the copy, the order of the page, and the objection you handle in the right spot can answer it.

That founder on the call had a gorgeous page. It still didn't say the one thing that would close the sale at full price. Shogun built her a better canvas. The blank spot on the canvas was the same.

Buyers don't leave because your page is ugly. They leave because it didn't answer the question they walked in with, and large-scale checkout and product-page UX research keeps landing on that same point: friction and unanswered doubt kill the sale, not the font.

7 Shogun Alternatives, Ranked by Revenue Not Features

This is the honest breakdown. I've put Shogun in the table too, as your baseline, so you can see what you'd be trading.

Tool Best at Entry price The revenue catch
Shopify native sections Owning your theme, zero cost Free A blank canvas, no conversion guidance
EComposer Cheapest real builder $19/mo Still a canvas, not a converting page
PageFly Templates and popularity from $24/mo Heavy pages can drag mobile speed
GemPages Drag-and-drop ease free, from $29/mo Templates don't answer the buyer's question
Shogun Enterprise content ops, multi-store free draft, $39 to $499/mo You pay for a CMS, not a higher conversion rate
Replo Modern speed, built-in testing free, $99 to $499/mo You still have to know what to test
RevenueFlows AI A page built around revenue per visitor free profit audit, done for you It's a rebuild, not a DIY builder

A few notes worth your time.

Shopify native sections are free and already in your theme editor. If your offer is simple and your theme is decent, the native Online Store 2.0 sections can carry it. Don't pay for a builder you don't need.

EComposer and PageFly are the value DIY picks. EComposer starts at $19 a month, PageFly from $24. Both give you the canvas cheaper than Shogun. If you go PageFly, watch your mobile load time, I broke down the page-speed trap and the PageFly alternatives separately.

GemPages is a smooth drag-and-drop builder at a free tier and up from $29 a month. Same honest caveat as the rest, and I ranked the GemPages alternatives by profit math here if it's on your shortlist.

Replo is the closest thing to Shogun on power. Free tier, then $99 a month for Starter and $499 for Pro, with A/B testing built in. It's fast and modern. But a testing tool only helps if you know which question to test, which is the part most pages get wrong.

RevenueFlows AI is the odd one out, on purpose. It's not a builder you log into and drag boxes around. We rebuild the page for you around revenue per visitor, the copy, the structure, the objections, in less than 15 minutes, then you keep it. Profit-first, not design-first. That's the trade.

The Math That Should Decide It

Run the math on a store like this. Conversion rate at 1%, average order value at $50. That's $0.50 of revenue for every visitor. Now lift conversion to 3% and average order value to $80. That's $2.40 per visitor. Same traffic, 4.8 times the revenue. So if that product was doing $10,000 a month, it's now doing $48,000, without spending an extra dollar on ads.

That's the lever every tool on this list is competing for. Most of them hand you the canvas and wish you luck.

Here's a real one. A bedding brand we rebuilt was at a 1.0% conversion rate and a $125 average order value. That's $1.25 in revenue per visitor. We rebuilt the top product pages and moved them to a 3.5% conversion rate and a $231 average order value. That's $8.10 per visitor, a 6.5x lift. On 10,000 visitors, that's $81,000 instead of $12,500, a gap of $68,500 a month from the same traffic. On their actual 8,200 clicks, the rebuild banked $67,565. You can see the full before and after numbers on our results page. Real client numbers, not typical results, and not a promise of what your store will do.

The bedding brand didn't switch builders. They changed what the page said, and in what order. That's the whole game.

Notice what moved those numbers. Not a fatter template library. The copy and the order of the page. If you want the plain-English version of why this one metric runs everything, I wrote the full breakdown of revenue per visitor here.

And here's the price of waiting. Every $1 of revenue per visitor you leave on the floor is $10,000 a month in profit for every 10,000 visitors. A flat conversion rate still costs you. It's a leak that bills you every single month you keep paying for a builder that can't plug it.

So Which Shogun Alternative Should You Pick?

No mushy tie. Here's the verdict by what you actually need.

The builder is never the lever. The math is. Pick the tool that moves your revenue per visitor, and ignore every feature that doesn't.

Get Your Free Profit Audit

Here's the move. Get your free profit audit and we'll show you exactly where your revenue per visitor is leaking right now, then rebuild your highest-traffic product page in less than 15 minutes.

No builder subscription to learn. No two weeks of dragging boxes. Just the math on your store and a page built to close.

Book your free profit audit and let's find the money your current page is leaving on the floor.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best Shogun alternative for Shopify?

It depends on the job. Replo wins on speed and built-in testing, EComposer wins on price at $19 a month, and a done-for-you rebuild wins on conversion. The best Shogun alternative is whichever one raises your revenue per visitor, your conversion rate multiplied by your average order value, not the one with the most templates.

How much does Shogun cost in 2026?

Shogun has a free Draft Mode with no published pages, then Build at $39 a month for 25 pages, Grow at $199 a month for unlimited pages, and Advanced at $499 a month for multi-store content syncing and custom collections. You are paying for content operations, not a higher conversion rate.

Is Shogun worth it for Shopify?

Shogun is worth it if it is actively moving your conversion rate and average order value. If those two numbers have sat flat for 90 days while you keep paying $199 or $499 a month, the builder is not your bottleneck and the subscription is overhead.

Shogun vs Shopify sections: do I even need a page builder?

Shopify's native Online Store 2.0 sections are free, fast, and already in your theme editor. A paid builder like Shogun only earns its price if it lifts your revenue per visitor. If the native sections can carry your offer, you do not need to pay for a builder at all.

What should I look for in a Shogun alternative?

Stop counting features and ask one question: will this raise my revenue per visitor, which is conversion rate multiplied by average order value? A $1 lift on 10,000 visitors is $10,000 in monthly profit. That number decides it, not the template library.

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