
- Custom pricing for enterprise buyers
- Built for large stores with AI-powered merchandising, multi-site selling, and support for millions of SKUs
- Includes robust B2B tools such as company accounts, quotations, and role-based purchasing

- Over 500 Professionally Designed Website Templates
- Drag and Drop Website Builder for Total Design Freedom
- Free Trial with No Credit Card Required
Magento vs. Wix: Quick Summary
Magento and Wix both power online stores. The resemblance stops there.
Wix is a visual website builder with eCommerce built in, designed for non-technical users who want a working store without hiring a developer. Magento is an open-source eCommerce platform built for complex, high-volume retail operations. It gives you complete control over every aspect of your store, and hands the responsibility for hosting, security, development, and maintenance directly to you or your development team.
For most businesses reading this, Wix is the faster, cheaper, and simpler path to a functioning store.
1. Pricing and Value for Money
Wix wins on total cost of ownership for any business that cannot absorb significant developer spend. Magento Open Source has a $0 license fee, but a realistic first-year cost that runs far higher.
| Tier | Magento Open Source | Adobe Commerce | Wix |
| License | Free | From ~$22,000/yr | N/A |
| Hosting | $10–$500+/mo (your choice) | Separate (On-Premise) or included (Cloud) | Included in plan |
| Entry eCommerce | $5,000–$15,000+ first-year real cost | Not suitable for small businesses | Core: $29/mo |
| Mid-tier | Scales with developer and extension costs | From ~$40,000/yr (Cloud) | Business: $39/mo |
| Advanced | No ceiling; cost scales with scope | Custom pricing | Business Elite: $159/mo |
Magento
Magento Open Source is free to download, but not free to operate. Real costs include:
- Hosting, often ranging from entry-level VPS to high-performance cloud environments
- Developer setup and configuration
- Paid extensions for advanced functionality
- Security hardening and ongoing maintenance
A realistic first-year budget for even a modest Magento store typically lands in the several-thousand-dollar range, once hosting, setup, and support are factored in. The software license may be free, but the infrastructure and expertise are not.
Adobe Commerce (the paid Magento version) operates at a completely different tier. Entry pricing begins in the tens of thousands per year, with enterprise implementations scaling much higher. These plans are designed for mid-market and enterprise businesses, not small stores.
Magento offers maximum flexibility and scalability. It also assumes technical resources and ongoing management.
Wix
Wix eCommerce unlocks from the Core plan and includes:
- Hosting
- Security and SSL
- Abandoned cart recovery
- Subscriptions
- POS integration
- Ongoing platform maintenance
All of this is bundled into one predictable subscription. There are no separate server contracts, no developer setup required, and no paid extensions needed for core selling features.
Billing flexibility also allows shorter commitments compared to enterprise software models.
Wix trades deep backend flexibility for cost clarity and ease of operation.
2. Core Features and Capabilities
Magento has no ceiling. Wix is better-equipped for small-to-medium stores that want predictable monthly costs and fast setup.
Magento
Magento Open Source supports unlimited currencies, unlimited product SKUs, and complex catalogue structures out of the box. Abandoned cart recovery is available on all editions but requires cron job configuration rather than a one-click toggle.
Subscriptions require a third-party extension from the Adobe Commerce Marketplace. B2B features including quoting, credit lines, and company accounts are available in Adobe Commerce.
Custom checkout flows, multi-warehouse inventory, and completely bespoke storefront experiences are all within reach, but every one requires developer time to implement.

For businesses running large-scale, complex, or enterprise retail operations, Magento provides capabilities that no SaaS platform including Wix can match.
Wix
Wix Core at $29/mo includes abandoned cart recovery, subscriptions via Wix Pricing Plans, and POS integration through Wix Mobile POS, Square, and SumUp. Business at $39/mo adds automated sales tax up to 100 transactions per month and a loyalty programme.
The app market provides access to over 600 third-party tools. Wix supports up to 50,000 products, which covers the vast majority of small-to-medium store needs.
The platform does not support B2B catalogues, custom checkout flows, or multi-warehouse inventory management.

3. Ease of Use
Wix wins by a wide margin for any user without a dedicated developer. Magento is not a self-service platform.
Editor
How much time and skill will building and maintaining this site actually cost me?
Wix is the faster platform to launch on, and the gap is significant. The drag-and-drop editor requires no technical background, and the AI Website Builder generates a full site from a conversational prompt. For most users, this reduces initial setup from weeks to hours.

Magento Open Source includes Page Builder, a drag-and-drop tool for creating and editing CMS pages and blocks. It provides live previews and lets non-developers manage content areas without writing code. What it does not cover:
- Product pages and category layouts
- Checkout flow and cart design
- Theme-level styling and global design changes

All of those still require developer involvement. Page Builder is a content tool, not a full site editor. For anyone without a dedicated developer, the practical editing experience on Magento remains significantly more constrained than the table below might suggest.
The mobile editing situation follows the same pattern. Wix includes a dedicated mobile editor where you can adjust layouts specifically for smaller screens.

Magento relies on its theme’s responsive CSS, with no separate mobile editing view. Any mobile-specific fix that falls outside what the theme handles requires code.
AI Features
Will AI meaningfully reduce setup time and ongoing work, or is it mostly marketing?
Wix’s AI tools are genuinely functional, not just marketing copy. The AI Website Builder generates a complete site, including pages, layout, copy, and design from a conversational prompt.
Within the editor, AI writing tools produce product descriptions, blog posts, and SEO-optimized page copy on demand.

Magento Open Source has no native AI features at all. Adobe Commerce includes Adobe Sensei for product recommendations and intelligent search, but these are merchandising tools, not content creation tools. There is no AI site builder and no in-admin AI text generator in any Magento edition.
The practical gap is widest during setup. A Wix user can go from blank slate to a designed, copy-filled site in a single session using AI. A Magento user cannot get a functioning storefront without developer hours, regardless of which edition they are on.
4. Design Quality and Templates
Wix wins for anyone managing their own site without developer support. Magento’s theme flexibility is a real advantage, but only when a developer is already part of the workflow.
Will I be happy with how my site looks, and what happens if I’m not six months from now?
Wix gives non-technical users direct control over how their site looks. The visual editor lets you adjust fonts, colours, and layouts without touching a stylesheet, and global style controls mean a brand refresh happens in one action across the entire site.

Magento’s design system is built for developers. Themes are installable packages that require code-level configuration to modify beyond the most basic surface settings. Page Builder adds drag-and-drop editing for CMS content blocks, but as covered in the Editor section, it does not extend to product pages, category layouts, or storefront-level design.
If you want to change how your store looks, you are commissioning developer work, not adjusting a slider.

The template switching difference is where long-term consequences come into focus:
- Magento allows theme switching at any time via the Admin panel or CLI. If your brand evolves, if a theme develops performance issues, or if you simply want a different look, you can swap it out, though developer time is still required to execute the change cleanly.
- Wix locks you to your template at launch. If you want a different design six months in, your only option is building a new site from scratch and transferring your domain and plan.
For a business that expects to grow and evolve, that asymmetry is worth factoring into the initial decision.
5. Performance and Reliability
Wix wins on infrastructure transparency and managed reliability for non-technical users. Magento’s performance ceiling is higher, but reaching it requires significant technical investment in hosting and configuration.
Wix
Wix operates on a multi-cloud infrastructure combining Google Cloud, AWS, Fastly, and its own distributed data centres, supported by 200+ CDN nodes worldwide. Paid plans are backed by a 99.99 per cent uptime SLA, with automatic disaster recovery that reroutes traffic during regional disruptions.
Performance features are automatic:
- WebP image conversion
- Brotli compression
- Server-side rendering with CDN-cached HTML
- Built-in site speed dashboard with Core Web Vitals tracking
Third-party data in 2025 places the average Wix load time around 2.7 seconds, with Core Web Vitals compliance reported near 77 per cent across the ecosystem.
The infrastructure is fully managed. No server tuning, caching setup, or maintenance is required from the user.
Magento
Magento Open Source provides no hosting infrastructure. Performance depends entirely on your hosting stack.
A properly configured Magento setup typically requires:
- PHP 8.1+
- MySQL 8.0
- Minimum 2GB RAM
- Elasticsearch
- Redis for cache and sessions
- Varnish for full-page caching
- NGINX or equivalent
- A CDN
On managed cloud hosting with this stack correctly configured, Magento can achieve sub-second page loads and uptime between 99.9 per cent and 99.99 per cent, depending on provider.
On budget or shared hosting, performance can degrade significantly, with higher TTFB, instability during traffic spikes, and increased security risk.
Magento does not include built-in performance monitoring. Tools such as New Relic or external performance scanners must be configured separately.
The performance ceiling is high, but reaching it requires technical setup and ongoing maintenance.
6. SEO and Marketing Tools
Magento wins for large stores requiring unlimited redirects and full server-level SEO control. Wix covers every foundational SEO requirement for small-to-medium sites natively, without plugins.
Will this platform help or hurt my ability to get found on Google?
Both platforms cover the core SEO controls competently, but Magento gives you more direct server-level access.
Custom URL slugs, robots.txt editing, and 301 redirects are available on both. The difference is in depth and limits.
Magento’s URL Rewrite Management system supports automatic and custom 301/302 redirects for products, categories, and CMS pages with no stated limit.

Wix’s redirect manager is built-in and accessible via the SEO Dashboard, but is capped at 5,000 redirects per site. For large catalogs with frequent URL changes, that ceiling matters.

The robots.txt situation is accurate on both platforms, which is worth noting because this is commonly wrong in competitor articles.
Magento’s robots.txt editor is built into Admin and can also be edited as a physical file on the server. Wix provides a built-in robots.txt editor in the SEO Dashboard on all plans.
7. Integrations and Ecosystem
Magento has the larger ecosystem by volume, with thousands of extensions covering enterprise use cases. Wix’s app market covers most small business needs without requiring developer involvement to deploy.
Magento
The Adobe Commerce Marketplace provides thousands of extensions covering payment gateways, shipping, ERP integration, CRM, loyalty, subscriptions, B2B tools, and much more.

Because Magento is open-source with full server access, any integration that can be built is available, including entirely custom API connections, custom payment gateways, and platform-specific ERP or warehouse management systems.
The tradeoff is that every extension must be evaluated for compatibility, installed by a developer, and maintained through Magento version upgrades.
Wix
The Wix app market provides access to over 600 third-party and native applications. Wix Payments, Wix Bookings, Wix Loyalty, and POS integration via Wix Mobile POS, Square, and SumUp are all built in at the relevant plan tiers.

The Velo developer platform allows custom JavaScript and external API connections for users who need capabilities beyond the visual editor.
Wix Email Marketing with AI content generation is included at Business tier and above.
The Bottom Line
Wix is the winner for the overwhelming majority of users. Its accessible editor, predictable pricing from $29/mo for full eCommerce, 24/7 support on all paid plans, managed infrastructure with a published 99.99% uptime SLA, and built-in AI tools make it the practical choice for any business without developer resources on staff.
Magento is the right answer only if you are building a large-scale, developer-managed eCommerce operation where platform-level customisation depth, unlimited product catalogues, B2B capabilities, or enterprise-grade scalability are non-negotiable.


