Migrate from WooCommerce to Shopify: Step-by-Step Guide for a Smooth Transition

If you’re moving your store to Shopify and prefer full control over your data, manually importing your products is a smart option.
Although it’s more hands-on than using an app, manual import ensures you can fine-tune each detail exactly how you want.

This guide will walk you through how to manually import products into Shopify step-by-step.

Migrate from WooCommerce to Shopify: Step-by-Step Guide for a Smooth Transition

Why Manually Import?

Sometimes manual import is the better choice, especially when:

  • Your WooCommerce data is messy or inconsistent.
  • You want to start fresh with updated product information.
  • You’re importing a small numb22er of products.
  • You want precise customization during the import.

Step-by-Step: Manual Import to Shopify

Step 1: Prepare Your Product Data

Before anything, get your products organized.

If exporting from WooCommerce:

  • Go to WooCommerce β†’ Products β†’ Export.
  • Choose all columns.
  • Save the file as a CSV (Comma-Separated Values) file.

Or, if starting from scratch:

  • Create a new CSV file with product details.

A basic Shopify CSV requires:

Column NameExample
Handlesummer-shirt
TitleSummer Shirt
Body (HTML)Light, breathable fabric…
VendorYour Brand Name
TypeShirt
Tagssummer, shirt, fashion
Price29.99
Image Srchttps://example.com/image.jpg
Variant SKUSS001
Variant Inventory Qty10

Step 2: Format Your CSV for Shopify

Shopify expects data in a specific format.
Important tips:

  • Handle must be unique for each product.
  • Images must be online (hosted publicly).
  • HTML is allowed in the description field.
  • Inventory quantities must be numbers.

You can use Google Sheets, Excel, or any spreadsheet editor.

πŸ‘‰ Official Shopify CSV format guide

Step 3: Import Your CSV into Shopify

Once your file is ready:

  1. In Shopify admin, go to Products β†’ Import.
  2. Click Add file, upload your CSV.
  3. Click Upload and continue.
  4. Review the product preview carefully.
  5. Click Import products.

Step 4: Review and Fix Any Errors

After the import finishes:

  • Open a few products to check formatting.
  • Verify that images display correctly.
  • Double-check prices, stock quantities, and variants.

If errors exist:

  • Download the Error Report from Shopify.
  • Fix the CSV based on errors.
  • Re-upload the corrected CSV.

Best Practices for Manual Import

βœ… Always backup your CSV files.
βœ… Use correct column headers.
βœ… Host images on a fast, reliable server.
βœ… For larger catalogs, split the upload into smaller batches (Shopify allows 50MB max file size).
βœ… Test a small batch first before bulk upload.

Bonus: Sample Starter CSV

Here’s a mini example of a basic CSV you can copy:

HandleTitleBody (HTML)VendorTypeTagsPriceImage Src
summer-shirtSummer Shirt<p>Light fabric, perfect!</p>MyBrandShirtssummer,shirt29.99https://yourdomain.com/image1.jpg
winter-coatWinter Coat<p>Stay warm in style.</p>MyBrandCoatswinter,coat89.99https://yourdomain.com/image2.jpg

Final Thoughts

Manually importing your products into Shopify gives you maximum flexibility and full control over your data.
While it takes a bit more time upfront, the result is a clean, professional store set up exactly how you want it.

If you’re ready to manually import: πŸ‘‰ Start in your Shopify admin under Products β†’ Import

Quick Recap

βœ… Export or create your product CSV
βœ… Format carefully according to Shopify rules
βœ… Upload CSV to Shopify
βœ… Check for errors and fix if needed
βœ… Launch your new product catalog!

Need help with Migration? 

If you need help with the migration, setup, or choosing the right platform for your business

πŸ“ž Contact us anytime:
🌐 https://webw.us/contact/

We offer expert WooCommerce and Shopify consulting and can guide you through the migration process from start to finish.


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