Export Wix Shopify Integration to HTML
Want Shopify's ecommerce power with Wix's design flexibility? Here's how to integrate them, and whether you should.
What you get
Everything Included
HTML, CSS, JS, images, and fonts - all in one ZIP.
Links Just Work
Navigation works offline, no broken links.
Host Anywhere
Your server, Netlify, Vercel - you choose.
Pixel Perfect
Your design, exactly as you built it.
Ready in Minutes
Most sites export in under 2 minutes.
Full Site Export
Every page, not just the homepage.
About Wix Shopify Integration Export
Wix and Shopify don't play nice together. They're competitors, neither wants to make integration easy. But people ask about this constantly because they want Wix's design flexbility with Shopify's ecommerce muscle.
Is it possible? Yes, with workarounds. Is it ideal? Almost never.
Here's how people typically combine them:
Method 1: Shopify Buy Buttons
Shopify offers embeddable "Buy Buttons", product cards you can add to any website. Create them in Shopify, copy the embed code, paste into Wix using an HTML embed element.
What you get: Product images, descriptions, and an "Add to Cart" button that triggers Shopify's checkout. The actual transaction happens through Shopify.
The downsides: Styling is limited. The buttons don't match your Wix design automatically. And you're paying for both platforms, Wix hosting plus Shopify's Buy Button plan (starting at $5/month plus transaction fees).
Method 2: Link to a Shopify store
Keep your Wix site for branding and content. Link "Shop" to a separate Shopify store. Simple but disjointed, customers jump between two different-looking sites.
Method 3: Iframe embedding
Technically you can iframe a Shopify storefront into a Wix page. Don't do this. It's janky, mobile-unfriendly, and terrible for SEO.
When this approach makes sense:
You have an established Wix site with significant content or SEO value, and you want to add occasional products without rebuilding everything. Buy Buttons let you sell without migrating.
You're testing whether ecommerce works for your audience before commiting to a full store migration.
Your business is primarily content or services, with products as a secondary offering. A few embedded Buy Buttons might be all you need.
When you should just pick one platform:
If ecommerce is core to your business, use one platform. Running both costs more money and creates a fragmented experience.
For serious ecommerce: Use Shopify. Its online store builder has improved significantly. You probably don't need Wix's design tools anymore.
For a website with occasional sales: Use Wix Stores. It's good enough for most small catalogs and keeps everything in one place.
For content sites that want to sell: Consider Squarespace. It balances design and commerce better than a Wix-Shopify frankenstein.
The real question: What do you actually need? Most people looking into this integration are overcomplicating things. One platform almost always makes more sense.
If you're on Wix and want better ecommerce, consider migrating to Shopify entirely. Export your Wix content, rebuild on Shopify. Painful upfront, simpler long-term.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I connect Shopify to my Wix website?
Sort of. There's no direct integration, but you can embed Shopify Buy Buttons on Wix pages. This adds product cards and checkout without rebuilding your whole site.
Why would I use Shopify with Wix instead of Wix Stores?
Shopify's ecommerce features are more powerful, better inventory management, more apps, stronger analytics. Some people want Wix's design tools but Shopify's selling power.
Is there an official Wix-Shopify integration?
No. Wix and Shopify are competitors. There's no official app or built-in connection. You have to use workarounds like Buy Buttons or iframes.
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