ThriveCart and WooCommerce both enable selling through WordPress but serve different use cases. Choosing between them depends on what you sell and how you sell it.
The Core Difference
WooCommerce is a full ecommerce platform built into WordPress. It handles product catalog, inventory, shipping, tax, checkout, and orders. You own and manage everything on your server. It handles physical and digital products equally.
ThriveCart is a conversion-optimised checkout platform. It excels at the checkout page and post-purchase sequence (upsells, order bumps, affiliates) but outsources the product experience to your existing WordPress site. Better suited for digital products and services.
Checkout Conversion
ThriveCart’s checkout pages are designed specifically for conversion — tested templates, one-click upsells, order bumps, and scarcity elements. WooCommerce’s default checkout converts adequately but lacks these features natively. With WooCommerce, you can add CheckoutWC or CartFlows for an improved checkout experience, but this adds cost and complexity.
Product Types
| Product Type | ThriveCart | WooCommerce |
|---|---|---|
| Digital downloads | Yes | Yes |
| Physical products | Basic only | Full support |
| Subscriptions | Yes (built-in) | Yes (extension required) |
| Payment plans | Yes (built-in) | Extension required |
| Courses | Via ThriveCart Learn | Via LMS extension |
| Inventory management | No | Full |
Cost Comparison
ThriveCart: $495 one-time, no transaction fees (only Stripe/PayPal standard rates).
WooCommerce: Free plugin, but real-world cost includes: hosting ($20-200/month), WooCommerce Subscriptions if needed ($279/year), payment gateway fees, and ongoing maintenance. For a simple store, WooCommerce total cost of ownership can exceed ThriveCart’s lifetime fee within 1-2 years.
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Which to Choose
Use ThriveCart if: you sell digital products, courses, or services; conversion optimisation at checkout matters; you want built-in affiliates and subscription billing; or you prefer managed infrastructure over self-hosted.
Use WooCommerce if: you sell physical products; you need full product catalog features; you have a large existing WooCommerce store; or you want maximum control over your ecommerce infrastructure.
Support and Community
WooCommerce has the larger community by an enormous margin. There are thousands of developers, hundreds of extensions, dozens of YouTube channels dedicated to WooCommerce tutorials, and active forums with answered questions for almost every scenario. Finding a WooCommerce developer or freelancer is straightforward.
ThriveCart has a smaller but engaged community — primarily digital product sellers, course creators, and affiliate marketers. The ThriveCart Facebook group is active and the support team is responsive. Finding a ThriveCart specialist is less straightforward than WooCommerce but the platform’s features are simpler so less specialist knowledge is required.
Data Ownership and Portability
With WooCommerce, all your data — orders, customers, products — lives in your own WordPress database. You own it completely and can export it in standard formats at any time.
With ThriveCart, your order and customer data lives on ThriveCart’s servers. You can export it, but you are dependent on ThriveCart’s export functionality and the data is not in your WordPress database. If ThriveCart’s API changes or the service has downtime, your order data access is affected. For businesses where data sovereignty is a requirement, this is a meaningful distinction.