How Much It Actually Costs to Start an Online Store

Real numbers on what you'll spend launching an online store — from platform fees to inventory to the hidden costs nobody warns you about.

Storehaus Team7 min read

The average ecommerce entrepreneur spends about $40,000 in their first year, according to a survey of 450 store owners. But that number is wildly misleading. It includes people who leased warehouse space, hired employees, and bought thousands of units upfront. A home-based seller running a store from their living room? Closer to $18,000 for the year — and you can launch for well under $2,000.

What a realistic first year looks like

Forget the $40K headline. If you're already selling through Instagram or TikTok and want to set up a real store, here's what the money looks like — no warehouse, no employees, just you and your products.

Platform subscription (12 months)$390.00
Domain name$15.00
Initial inventory / product samples$500.00
Product photography$150.00
Packaging and shipping supplies$200.00
Marketing and ads (first 3 months)$600.00
Business registration / LLC$150.00
Total cost$2005.00
Your margin$0.00 (0%)
Selling price$2005.00

That's roughly $2,000 to launch and cover your first few months. Some of it is flexible — you can shoot product photos on your phone and use free Canva templates. But you can't skip having actual products to sell.

Here's the number that matters: the gap between $18,000 (home-based) and $60,000 (rented space) tells you that where you work matters far more than which platform you choose. The biggest budget decision isn't which platform you choose. It's whether you need a dedicated space or can ship orders from your kitchen table.

Where the money actually goes

Not all costs hit equally. Here's what eats the most of your budget, in order of impact.

Inventory is the big one. If you make your products, it goes to materials. If you buy products to resell, it goes to your first batch of inventory. Either way, testing the actual product your customers receive is non-negotiable. Budget $200-2,000 depending on your model.

Marketing is the second hit, and it keeps getting worse. Customer acquisition costs have risen 40-60% across ecommerce in recent years. Organic reach on social media keeps shrinking, which means paid ads take a bigger bite than they would have even two years ago. Of the entrepreneurs surveyed, 66% started their businesses with personal savings — which means every advertising dollar comes straight out of pocket.

40-60%

rise in customer acquisition costs across ecommerce in recent years

First Page Sage, 2025

Platform costs are actually the smallest line item. Most ecommerce platforms run $29-39/month. That's around $400/year — a fraction of what you'll spend on inventory and marketing. Don't pick your platform to save $10/month. Pick the one that helps you sell more.

The costs that catch you off guard

Every experienced seller has a story about an expense they didn't see coming. These are the ones that hit most often.

Transaction fees add up quietly. At 2.9% + $0.30 per sale, you lose about $1.46 on every $40 order. Sell 100 products a month and that's $146 gone — nearly $1,750 a year — just in payment processing. It never shows up as a big expense, but it compounds.

App subscriptions stack. You start with an email marketing tool ($20/month), add a reviews plugin ($15/month), tack on an SEO tool ($30/month), and suddenly you're paying $65/month in extras on top of your platform fee. A Forrester study found that 33% of total platform costs come from add-ons and third-party integrations, not the base subscription.

Your time is real money. Photography, customer service, packing orders, social media, inventory management — it all takes hours. In the early days, you're not paying employees. You're paying with your evenings and weekends. That's fine at first. Just don't pretend it's free.

Three budget tiers for different starting points

Not everyone begins from the same place. Here's what each level looks like in practice.

CategoryLean ($500)Comfortable ($2,000)Ambitious ($5,000+)
InventoryMade-to-order / 10-20 units50-100 units200+ units or custom production
PlatformFree trial → $29/mo$29-39/mo from day one$79-299/mo (advanced features)
PhotographyPhone + natural lightPhone + basic lightbox ($30)Professional shoot ($300-500)
MarketingOrganic only$100-200/mo in ads$500+/mo in ads + influencers
Best forTesting an ideaSellers ready to go legitScaling an existing audience

If you're already selling through social media, the Comfortable tier is your sweet spot. You have products and an audience — you're not testing a concept, you're building proper infrastructure. That $2,000 investment pays for itself fast when you stop losing sales to DM-based checkout.

How to spend less without hurting your store

87% of small businesses start with personal savings, not loans or investors. Every dollar counts. Here's where you can cut without damage.

Skip the premium theme. Free themes look fine in 2026. A $180 theme won't boost conversions if your product photos are bad. Spend that $180 on a lightbox instead.

Launch with fewer products. You don't need 50 listings on day one. Start with your 10-15 best sellers — the ones you already know move on Instagram. Add more as you learn what your store customers want, which might be different from your social media buyers.

Use your existing audience first. You're already on social media. That's your unfair advantage. Post about your store, share behind-the-scenes content, direct followers to your site. Exhaust free channels before touching paid ads.

Don't stack apps in month one. Email marketing, reviews, loyalty programs — useful eventually, unnecessary at launch. Start with free tiers. Upgrade when you have enough customers to justify the cost.

Budget for the long game, not just launch day

Here's what 34% of surveyed entrepreneurs wished they'd known: the upfront cost isn't the hard part. It's the monthly spend before you break even.

Most online stores take 6-12 months to turn a consistent profit. That means budgeting not just for launch, but for the months of learning that follow. If you have $2,000, don't dump it all into inventory. Keep half as runway for marketing, unexpected costs, and the mistakes you'll inevitably make.

The cost of starting an online store has genuinely never been lower — 31.6% of small businesses now launch with under $5,000. But the cost of growing — acquiring customers, running ads, handling returns — is higher than ever. Budget for both stages, and you won't be the seller who builds a beautiful store and then can't afford to tell anyone about it.

Ready to map out everything you need before launch? Our online store launch checklist walks you through every step from registration to your first sale.

References

  1. [1]How Much Does It Cost to Start a Business — Shopify Entrepreneur Survey(accessed Feb 2026)
  2. [2]Small Business Statistics 2025 — Shopify(accessed Feb 2026)
  3. [3]Customer Acquisition Cost by Industry — First Page Sage(accessed Feb 2026)
  4. [4]Ecommerce Return Rate Report — Channelwill(accessed Feb 2026)
  5. [5]Forrester Consulting TCO Study — Forrester / Shopify(accessed Feb 2026)

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