Shopify vs Amazon: Which Platform Should UK Fashion Brands Choose?

Shopify vs Amazon: Which Platform Should UK Fashion Brands Choose?

UK fashion e-commerce generated £21.7 billion in consumer spend in 2024, with online channels accounting for 31% of total fashion retail — yet the platform decision that determines how a brand captures its share of that market is one most startup founders make on instinct rather than data, according to InternetRetailing’s UK Fashion Sector Report 2024.

Shopify and Amazon are not competing versions of the same solution. They are structurally different business models — one builds a brand asset, one rents access to an audience. Choosing the wrong platform at the wrong stage of your brand’s development does not just cost you revenue. It shapes the commercial identity of your business in ways that are expensive to reverse.


Summary

  • Shopify is a brand-building platform — you own the customer relationship, the data, and the brand experience, at the cost of building your own traffic
  • Amazon is an audience-access platform — you rent access to 30+ million UK active shoppers, at the cost of customer ownership, margin compression, and brand control
  • Gross margins on Shopify typically run 55–70% for clothing brands; Amazon FBA clothing margins typically run 25–40% after all fees
  • Neither platform is wrong — but they serve different commercial objectives and different brand stages
  • Most UK clothing startup brands should launch on Shopify and evaluate Amazon as a secondary or growth channel — not the reverse

The Structural Difference That Changes Everything

Before comparing features, fees, and functionality, the most important comparison is structural.

Shopify: you build and own a destination. Every visit to your store, every purchase, every email address, every review — you own all of it. The customer relationship is yours. The data is yours. The brand experience is entirely within your control. The challenge is that you must generate every visitor yourself — Shopify brings no audience.

Amazon: you access a marketplace. Amazon’s 30+ million UK active customers can discover your product through search. The challenge is that Amazon owns the customer relationship. You receive an order notification — not a customer. Amazon’s terms prohibit direct customer contact outside the platform. The data stays with Amazon.

McKinsey’s State of Fashion 2024 identifies customer relationship ownership as one of the strongest predictors of long-term DTC brand value — brands that own their customer data and relationship build compounding commercial advantages that marketplace sellers cannot replicate.

What guides get wrong: Shopify vs Amazon is presented as a traffic problem — Amazon has traffic, Shopify does not. That framing misses the structural point. Amazon has traffic and keeps the customer. Shopify requires traffic investment and gives you the customer permanently. Those are different commercial models with different long-term economics, not different solutions to the same problem.


Fee Structures: The True Cost of Each Platform

Headline platform fees are not the number that matters. The number that matters is net revenue per unit sold after all platform costs — fees, commissions, fulfilment, advertising — are deducted.

Shopify fee structure:

PlanMonthly FeeTransaction Fee (own payment)Credit Card Rate
Basic£19/month0%2% + 25p
Shopify£49/month0%1.7% + 25p
Advanced£259/month0%1.5% + 25p

For a startup DTC clothing brand, Shopify Basic at £19 per month is the appropriate starting point. The primary cost is not the platform fee — it is customer acquisition cost (CAC), which for a new clothing brand on paid social typically runs £8 to £25 per order.

Amazon fee structure (FBA, clothing):

Fee TypeRate / AmountNotes
Referral fee15% of sale priceApplied to every sale
FBA fulfilment fee£2.30–£4.50 per unitSize and weight dependent
FBA storage fee£0.40–£0.56 per cubic foot/monthOngoing inventory holding cost
Amazon advertising (PPC)Variable — £0.30–£2.00+ per clickEffectively mandatory for new listings
Returns processing£1–£3 per returnClothing return rates ~30%

Net margin comparison — same product, £55 RRP, UK manufacture at 100 units:

Cost ItemShopify DTCAmazon FBA
RRP / sale price£55.00£55.00
Landed cost (COGS)−£14.00−£14.00
Platform / referral fee−£1.10 (2%)−£8.25 (15%)
Fulfilment−£4.00 (3PL)−£3.20 (FBA)
Returns provision (30%)−£5.50−£5.50
Payment processing−£1.10included in referral
CAC / advertising−£10.00 (paid social)−£6.00 (Amazon PPC)
Net margin per unit£19.30 (35.1%)£18.05 (32.8%)
Gross margin74.5%74.5%

The net margin difference at a single-unit level is modest. The structural difference — customer ownership, brand control, data — is not captured in this table and compounds significantly over time.

UKFT data on UK fashion brand commercial performance shows that DTC-first brands that invest in owned customer relationships achieve customer lifetime value (LTV) 2 to 3 times higher than marketplace-first brands in the same product category over a 24-month period.


Brand Control: Where the Real Difference Lies

For a clothing startup, brand control is not a philosophical preference — it is a commercial asset.

On Shopify:

  • Full control over brand presentation, photography, copy, and customer experience
  • Product page design is entirely yours — no competitor products shown alongside yours
  • Customer communications are entirely yours — email, SMS, post-purchase flows
  • Pricing is entirely yours — no algorithmic price pressure
  • Reviews are yours to manage and display

On Amazon:

  • Product listing format is dictated by Amazon — all sellers use the same template
  • Competitor products appear on your product page — including, often, cheaper alternatives or counterfeit versions of your product
  • Amazon controls post-purchase communication — you receive an order notification, not a customer relationship
  • Amazon’s algorithm can suppress your listing for reasons outside your control
  • Amazon can change the rules of the marketplace at any time — and has done so repeatedly

What guides get wrong: Amazon’s brand control limitations are presented as a minor inconvenience for brands that can win on product quality. For a fashion startup whose differentiation is brand identity, positioning, and visual language — not just product specification — Amazon’s constraints are not minor. They are structural barriers to the very thing that makes the brand worth buying.

For a brand whose commercial case rests on “who we are” rather than “what we make,” Amazon is the wrong primary channel.


Traffic: The Shopify Challenge

The genuine structural challenge of Shopify is that the platform provides no organic traffic. Every visitor must be acquired — through organic social, paid advertising, SEO, press, influencer, or email.

Statista UK e-commerce data shows that 92% of UK consumers shop online, with fashion e-commerce consistently one of the top online categories. The audience exists. The challenge is reaching it without Amazon’s built-in search traffic.

Traffic acquisition options for Shopify clothing brands:

ChannelCostSpeedBrand ValueSustainability
Organic social (Instagram / TikTok)TimeSlowHighHigh
Paid social (Meta / TikTok ads)£300–£1,000+/monthFastModerateMedium — requires ongoing spend
Google Shopping£200–£800+/monthMediumLowMedium
SEO / blog contentTime + small budgetVery slowHighVery high — compounds over time
Micro-influencer seeding£200–£600 + productMediumHighMedium
Email marketingNear zeroFast (to list)HighVery high
Press / PRTimeSlowVery highHigh

The traffic challenge on Shopify is real. It is also solvable — and the solution (building owned channels: email list, social following, press relationships) creates brand assets that compound in value over time.

An Amazon listing that drives traffic today drives the same traffic in three years, with no brand equity accumulation. An email list of 5,000 engaged customers acquired over two years on Shopify is a commercial asset with measurable and growing value.

“We advise every startup brand to treat their first 12 months on Shopify as audience-building, not just revenue generation. The brands that understand this consistently outperform those who optimise purely for first-year sales — because they are building something Amazon cannot replicate.” — Silk Routes Manufacturing Team


Amazon’s Genuine Advantages: When It Makes Sense

We do not say Amazon is wrong for clothing brands. We say it is wrong as a primary launch channel for most clothing startups. As a secondary or growth channel, it has specific advantages worth understanding.

Amazon’s genuine advantages for clothing brands:

Established customer trust: Amazon’s returns policy and purchase protection are well understood by UK consumers. A buyer uncertain about a new brand is more likely to purchase via Amazon than via an unknown brand’s website — because the risk feels lower. For brands trying to reach risk-averse customers, Amazon reduces purchase friction.

Built-in product discovery: Amazon’s search function is used by UK consumers specifically to find products — high purchase intent compared to social media where discovery is passive. A well-optimised Amazon listing can capture demand that would otherwise go to a competitor.

FBA logistics: Amazon’s fulfilment network handles storage, picking, packing, shipping, and returns. For a brand without a 3PL relationship or self-fulfilment capability, FBA removes logistics infrastructure as a barrier.

International reach: Amazon’s EU marketplaces (Germany, France, Italy, Spain) are accessible from a single seller account — a relatively low-friction route to testing European demand before investing in country-specific infrastructure.

According to McKinsey’s State of Fashion research, fashion brands that use Amazon as a secondary channel — capturing demand-driven search traffic while building brand relationships on owned channels — achieve stronger combined unit economics than single-channel brands in either direction.

The correct framing is not Shopify vs Amazon. It is: Shopify first, Amazon later — when the brand has an established identity, a customer base, and the operational capacity to manage a second channel without cannibalising the first.


The Intellectual Property and Brand Risk on Amazon

We are direct about this because it is the issue most guides understate.

Amazon’s marketplace creates specific IP risks for clothing brands that are not present on Shopify. Understanding them before listing is not optional.

Counterfeit risk: once a product gains traction on Amazon, counterfeit versions appear on the same listing — sometimes as third-party sellers fulfilling against your ASIN. Amazon’s Brand Registry provides some protection, but enforcement is reactive rather than preventive.

Hijacked listings: third-party sellers can list against your ASIN at lower prices, including potentially inauthentic product. This occurs after a product establishes search ranking — which means it happens to successful listings, not failing ones.

Pricing race to the bottom: Amazon’s algorithm favours lower prices when multiple sellers list the same product. If your product is available elsewhere at a lower price — including your own Shopify store with a discount applied — Amazon may suppress your listing or reduce your Buy Box share.

Under UK intellectual property law, a registered trademark provides the strongest protection against counterfeit listings and gives Amazon’s Brand Registry the authority to remove inauthentic sellers. Filing a UK trademark application in Class 25 (clothing) before listing on Amazon is not optional — it is the minimum IP protection required to defend a successful listing.

Our guide to low MOQ and private label clothing manufacturers UK covers how private label production — product designed and made specifically for your brand — creates the product differentiation that makes counterfeiting less commercially attractive and harder to replicate.


Clothing Return Rates: The Platform-Specific Challenge

UK online clothing return rates average approximately 30% — clothing is the most returned e-commerce category, with fit and style mismatches as the primary drivers, according to Retail Economics Annual Returns Benchmark 2024.

Both platforms handle returns — but differently, and with different commercial implications.

Returns FactorShopifyAmazon FBA
Return rate triggerYour returns policyAmazon’s 30-day no-questions policy
Customer contact on returnYes — you communicate directlyNo — Amazon manages the process
Returned item conditionInspected by brandMay be relisted as “used” without brand inspection
Returns dataFull — reason, product, sizeLimited — reason codes only
Returns cost£1–£3 per unit (3PL)£1–£3 per unit (FBA return fee)
Impact on listingNoneMultiple returns can suppress listing ranking

The data gap on Amazon is significant for a clothing brand. Understanding why customers return — wrong size, colour different from photography, fabric feel — is the information that drives product development decisions. Amazon’s return data does not provide this at a useful resolution.

On Shopify, direct customer communication on returns produces the exact product feedback that informs tech pack decisions on the reorder. That feedback loop does not exist on Amazon.


Head-to-Head Comparison

FactorShopifyAmazonWinner for Startup Brand
Customer ownershipYes — fullNo — Amazon owns itShopify
Brand controlFullConstrained by Amazon templateShopify
Traffic providedNone — must acquireYes — 30m+ UK shoppersAmazon
Gross margin55–70%55–70%Draw
Net margin after all fees30–40%25–35%Shopify (marginal)
CAC / advertising cost£8–£25 per order£5–£12 per order (PPC)Amazon (marginal)
Setup cost£19–£259/month + apps£25/month (Professional)Shopify (for startup)
IP protectionBrand controls allRequires Brand Registry + trademarkShopify
Returns data qualityFullLimitedShopify
Logistics options3PL or self-fulfilFBA or self-fulfilDraw
International expansionShopify MarketsAmazon EUAmazon (marginal)
Long-term brand asset builtYes — compoundingNo — rented audienceShopify
Right for launch stageYesNo — secondary channelShopify

The Platform Decision Framework

Choose Shopify first if:

  • Brand identity is central to your commercial proposition
  • You are launching a new brand that needs to establish its own customer relationships
  • Your product is differentiated by design, quality, or brand story — not by price
  • You have a marketing plan that can generate traffic (social, paid, PR, email)
  • You are building for long-term brand equity, not short-term transaction volume

Consider Amazon as a secondary channel when:

  • Your Shopify brand is established with a clear identity and a customer base
  • You have registered your trademark and enrolled in Amazon Brand Registry
  • Your product has a specific use-case or keyword that captures demand-driven search
  • You have the operational capacity to manage FBA inventory alongside your DTC fulfilment
  • You want to test international markets (EU) with low infrastructure investment

Do not choose Amazon first if:

  • You are launching a brand whose differentiation is identity, not product specification
  • You do not yet have a trademark registered
  • You cannot absorb the 15% referral fee at your current unit cost and margin structure
  • You are not prepared to manage counterfeit risk and listing hijacking actively

Common Platform Mistakes UK Clothing Startups Make

1. Launching on Amazon before establishing brand identity on Shopify A brand that has not established a clear visual identity and customer proposition will find that Amazon’s constraints make that establishment significantly harder — because there is no brand environment in which to build it.

Fix: launch on Shopify first. Build the brand world, the customer relationship, and the email list. Bring that identity to Amazon as a secondary channel when it is established.

2. Treating Amazon advertising as optional New Amazon listings without advertising spend do not rank. The organic search ranking that established Amazon sellers have built over years is not accessible to a new listing without paid traffic to accelerate it.

Fix: budget Amazon PPC at £300 to £600 per month for the first 90 days on the platform. Treat it as a customer acquisition cost in the unit economics model, not a marketing expense.

3. Not registering a trademark before listing on Amazon A successful Amazon listing without a registered trademark is a listing without Brand Registry protection. Counterfeit sellers and listing hijackers specifically target high-ranking ASINs without brand protection.

Fix: file a UK trademark application before any Amazon activity. The £170 UKIPO filing fee is the cheapest insurance a clothing brand can buy against the most common Amazon risk.

4. Using the same imagery for Amazon and Shopify Amazon’s product listing requirements favour white-background hero images with the product filling 85% of the frame. Shopify’s conversion optimisation favours lifestyle and editorial photography that communicates brand world.

Fix: produce both image types in the same photography session — one set of clean white-background product images for Amazon compliance, one set of editorial lifestyle images for Shopify and social. The marginal cost of capturing both in one shoot is low; the cost of reshooting is high.

5. Setting different prices on Amazon and Shopify without an explicit strategy Amazon’s pricing algorithm monitors price parity across channels. If your Shopify store runs a discount that makes the Shopify price lower than your Amazon listing, Amazon may suppress the Buy Box on your Amazon listing — reducing your sales velocity precisely when your Shopify campaign is at its most active.

Fix: decide your pricing strategy before launching on both channels. Either maintain price parity, or accept that Shopify promotions will affect Amazon ranking, and schedule promotions accordingly.


FAQ

Should a UK clothing startup launch on Shopify or Amazon first?

Shopify first. A clothing startup’s commercial proposition is almost always brand-led — the design, identity, and story are what differentiate it from generic alternatives. Amazon’s structural constraints make it extremely difficult to communicate brand identity effectively. Launch on Shopify, establish the brand identity and customer base, then evaluate Amazon as a secondary demand-capture channel with Brand Registry protection in place.

How much does it cost to sell clothing on Amazon UK?

The total cost of selling clothing on Amazon FBA includes: £25/month (Professional seller account), 15% referral fee on every sale, FBA fulfilment fees of £2.30 to £4.50 per unit, FBA storage fees, and Amazon PPC advertising (effectively mandatory for new listings). At a £55 RRP, total Amazon costs typically run £18 to £22 per unit sold — leaving a net margin of approximately 25 to 35% before COGS.

Can I sell on both Shopify and Amazon simultaneously?

Yes. Many UK clothing brands run both channels — Shopify for brand building and DTC margin, Amazon for demand capture and international reach. The operational requirements are different: Amazon FBA requires separate inventory held at Amazon fulfilment centres, and pricing strategy must account for Amazon’s price parity monitoring. Most brands add Amazon as a secondary channel 6 to 12 months after establishing their Shopify presence.

Does Amazon own my customer data if I sell there?

Yes. Amazon does not share customer contact data with sellers. You receive order details (name, delivery address, item ordered) but you cannot add Amazon customers to your email list, contact them directly, or retarget them with advertising. Every customer acquired through Amazon remains Amazon’s customer — not yours.

What gross margin do I need to make Amazon FBA work for clothing?

A minimum 70% gross margin (before Amazon fees) is required to absorb Amazon’s 15% referral fee and FBA fulfilment costs while leaving a viable net margin. At a £55 RRP and a £14 landed cost, your gross margin is approximately 74.5% — sufficient for Amazon FBA to work commercially. At lower gross margins, Amazon’s fee structure can reduce net margin to below 15%, which is insufficient to cover operating costs and reinvest in growth.


The Decision Is Not Technical — It Is Strategic

Shopify and Amazon are both functional, reliable, and well-supported platforms. The decision between them is not about which platform works better. It is about what commercial model your brand is building.

A brand that builds on Shopify builds a customer asset — an owned audience, a data set, a relationship that compounds in value over time. A brand that builds on Amazon builds a transaction channel — accessible, high-volume, and entirely dependent on a platform the brand does not control.

For most UK clothing startups, whose differentiation rests on design, identity, and brand story — not on price or commodity product specification — the first platform is Shopify. Not because Amazon does not work, but because the assets Shopify builds are the assets that eventually make Amazon a powerful secondary channel rather than a dependency.

For the full picture on how your manufacturing model and unit economics affect your platform decision, our guide to low MOQ and private label clothing manufacturers UK covers how to structure your first production run to support the margin model required for both channels.

Ready to discuss how your production unit cost affects your Shopify and Amazon margin models? Find out how Silk Routes works with startup clothing brands from brief to delivery.


Citations and Sources

[1]. InternetRetailing — UK Fashion Sector Report 2024. https://internetretailing.net/report-hub/uk-fashion-sector-report-2024/

[2]. McKinsey & Company — The State of Fashion 2024. https://www.mckinsey.com/industries/retail/our-insights/state-of-fashion-2024

[3]. UKFT — UK Fashion & Textile Industry: Facts and Figures 2024. https://ukft.org/facts-and-figures24/

[4]. Statista — Clothing Industry in the United Kingdom. https://www.statista.com/topics/1581/clothing-industry-in-the-united-kingdom/

[5]. Retail Economics — Annual Returns Benchmark 2024. https://www.retaileconomics.co.uk/retail-insights/thought-leadership-reports/the-cost-of-serial-returners-in-2024-zigzag-retail-economics

[6]. UK Government — UKIPO Trademark Registration. https://www.gov.uk/how-to-register-a-trade-mark

Shopify vs Amazon: UK Fashion Brands Guide | Silk Routes
SilkRoutes.co.uk
UK Clothing Manufacturing · Low MOQ · Private Label
Interactive Visual Guide · UK Fashion 2025–26

Shopify vs Amazon
UK Fashion Brands Guide

Which platform builds a brand — and which just sells a product? Data, margin models, and a decision tool for UK clothing startups.

£21.7bnUK Fashion Spend 2024
31%Online Share
30m+UK Amazon Shoppers
15%Amazon Referral Fee
~30%UK Clothing Return Rate
The Structural Difference

Shopify builds a brand asset. Amazon rents you an audience. These are not the same commercial model.

Shopify

Brand-Building Platform

  • You own every customer relationship and their data
  • Full brand control — design, photography, copy, pricing
  • No competitor products on your product pages
  • Email, SMS, and remarketing data stays with you
  • Customer LTV compounds over time on your platform
  • No built-in traffic — you must acquire every visitor
  • £19–£259/month platform fee, no referral commission
Amazon

Audience-Access Platform

  • Amazon owns the customer — you receive an order, not a relationship
  • Product listing format dictated by Amazon template
  • Competitor and counterfeit products appear on your listing
  • No post-purchase email, retargeting, or customer contact allowed
  • 15% referral fee on every clothing sale
  • 30m+ UK active shoppers with high purchase intent
  • FBA handles logistics — storage, packing, shipping, returns
UK Fashion Market 2024
£21.7bn
Annual UK fashion consumer spend. Online accounts for 31% of total. Women's apparel dominates at ~50% share.
Amazon UK Active Customers
30m+
UK active Amazon shoppers with stored payment details. High purchase intent for search-driven product discovery.
Online UK Fashion Share
31%
Online fashion's share of total UK fashion retail in 2024. UK leads Europe in e-commerce turnover. (InternetRetailing 2024)
Amazon Clothing Referral Fee
15%
Applied to gross sale price on every clothing transaction. Single largest Amazon cost for fashion sellers.
UK Online Clothing Returns
~30%
Average UK online clothing return rate. Clothing is the most returned e-commerce category. (Retail Economics / ZigZag 2024)
DTC Customer LTV Advantage
2–3×
DTC-first brands achieve 2–3× higher customer lifetime value vs marketplace-first brands over 24 months. (UKFT 2024)

Sources: InternetRetailing UK Fashion Sector Report 2024 · Retail Economics Annual Returns Benchmark 2024 · UKFT Facts & Figures 2024 · McKinsey State of Fashion 2024

Margin Analysis

True cost comparison: same product (£55 RRP, UK manufacture at 100 units) sold on each platform.

Cost Item
Shopify DTC£55 RRP
Amazon FBA£55 RRP
Sale / RRP£55.00£55.00
Landed Cost (COGS)−£14.00−£14.00
Platform / Referral Fee−£1.10 (2%)−£8.25 (15%)
Fulfilment (3PL / FBA)−£4.00−£3.20
Returns Provision (~30%)−£5.50−£5.50
Payment Processing−£1.10Incl. in referral
CAC / Advertising−£10.00 (paid social)−£6.00 (PPC)
Net Margin per Unit £19.30 (35.1%) £18.05 (32.8%)
ℹ️
Gross margin is identical on both platforms (74.5% at £55 RRP / £14 landed cost). The net margin gap is modest at unit level. The structural difference — customer ownership, data, brand equity — compounds over time and is not captured in per-unit economics.

Margin Comparison at £55 RRP

UK manufacture, 100 units — all fees included
Shopify — Gross Margin74.5%
Amazon — Gross Margin74.5%
Shopify — Net Margin (after all costs)35.1%
Amazon — Net Margin (after all costs)32.8%

Calculation based on: £55 RRP · £14 landed cost · UK CMT manufacture · ~30% return provision · standard platform fees. Sources: Amazon Seller Central UK · Shopify Pricing 2024 · Retail Economics Returns Benchmark 2024

Where Revenue Goes: Fee Stack Comparison

Per-unit revenue allocation at £55 RRP — Shopify vs Amazon FBA

Sources: Amazon Seller Central UK Fee Schedule 2024 · Shopify Payment Processing Rates 2024 · Retail Economics 2024

Amazon Min Gross Margin Needed
70%+
Minimum gross margin required to absorb Amazon's 15% referral fee and FBA costs while maintaining viable net margin.
Amazon FBA Fulfilment Fee (clothing)
£2.30–£4.50
Per unit fulfilled by Amazon FBA. Size and weight dependent. Does not include returns processing fee of £1–£3.
Shopify Basic Monthly Cost
£19/mo
Starting plan for DTC clothing brands. No transaction fee on Shopify Payments. 2% + 25p per card transaction.

Sources: Amazon Seller Central UK · Shopify Pricing Page 2024 · Retail Economics Annual Returns Benchmark 2024

Platform Data Charts

UK fashion e-commerce benchmarks, traffic models, and return rate data — all from verified sources.

UK Fashion E-Commerce Market 2024

Market composition by channel. Source: InternetRetailing UK Fashion Sector Report 2024

Source: InternetRetailing UK Fashion Sector Report 2024

Traffic Acquisition Cost by Channel

Estimated CAC range for UK clothing brands — Shopify DTC channels vs Amazon PPC. Source: McKinsey 2024; industry benchmarks

Sources: McKinsey State of Fashion 2024; Shopify UK industry data 2024

UK Online Return Rates by Category 2024

Clothing leads all e-commerce return categories. Source: Retail Economics / ZigZag Annual Returns Benchmark 2024; Statista 2024

Sources: Retail Economics Annual Returns Benchmark 2024 · Statista UK eCommerce Returns 2024

Platform Fee Comparison (% of Revenue)

Total platform fee burden as % of sale price — Shopify vs Amazon FBA at different price points

Sources: Amazon Seller Central UK Fee Schedule 2024 · Shopify Payment Processing Rates 2024

Customer Lifetime Value: DTC vs Marketplace — 24-Month Model

Projected cumulative CLV — Shopify DTC brand vs Amazon marketplace seller. Assumes 2.4 purchases/year, 35% retention. Source: UKFT 2024; McKinsey State of Fashion 2024

Model based on: UKFT data on DTC vs marketplace CLV differential (2–3× advantage over 24 months) · McKinsey customer relationship ownership research 2024

Full Head-to-Head Comparison

Every key factor rated for UK clothing startups at the launch stage.

FactorShopifyAmazon FBAWinner for Startup
Customer OwnershipFull — all data yoursNone — Amazon owns itShopify
Brand ControlComplete — design, copy, priceConstrained by Amazon templateShopify
Built-in TrafficNone — must acquire all30m+ UK shoppersAmazon
Gross Margin55–70% (clothing DTC)55–70% (same product)Draw
Net Margin (after all fees)~35% at £55 RRP~33% at £55 RRPShopify (marginal)
Platform / Referral Fee£19–£259/month, 2% card15% referral + £25/monthShopify
CAC / Ad Spend£8–£25/order (paid social)£5–£12/order (PPC)Amazon (marginal)
Logistics3PL or self-fulfilFBA — Amazon managesDraw
Returns Data QualityFull — reason, product, sizeLimited reason codes onlyShopify
IP & Brand ProtectionYou control allBrand Registry req. + trademarkShopify
Counterfeit RiskNoneHigh for successful listingsShopify
International ExpansionShopify MarketsAmazon EU (DE, FR, IT, ES)Amazon (marginal)
Long-term Brand AssetYes — compoundingNo — rented audienceShopify
Right for Launch StageYesNo — secondary channelShopify

Sources: Amazon Seller Central UK · Shopify Pricing 2024 · UKFT Facts & Figures 2024 · McKinsey State of Fashion 2024 · Retail Economics 2024

When Each Platform Makes Sense
Choose Shopify First When
  • Brand identity is central to your commercial proposition
  • You are launching a new brand needing its own customer relationships
  • Product is differentiated by design, quality, or brand story — not price
  • You have a traffic plan: social, paid, PR, email
  • You are building for long-term brand equity
  • You want full returns data to inform product development
Add Amazon as Secondary When
  • Shopify brand is established with a clear identity and customer base
  • Trademark registered and enrolled in Amazon Brand Registry
  • Product captures specific demand-driven search keywords
  • You have operational capacity to manage FBA inventory alongside DTC
  • You want to test EU markets (Germany, France, Italy, Spain)
  • Gross margin is 70%+ to absorb Amazon's fee structure
Platform Decision Tool

Answer four questions to get a tailored platform recommendation for your UK clothing brand.

Tell us about your brand

1. What is your primary commercial goal?
2. How is your product differentiated?
3. Do you have a trademark registered or pending?
4. What stage is your brand at?

Quick Reference: Amazon Fees for UK Clothing
Fee TypeRate / AmountNotes
Referral Fee15% of sale priceApplied to every clothing sale — largest single fee
FBA Fulfilment£2.30–£4.50/unitSize and weight dependent. Standard clothing item ~£3.20
FBA Storage£0.40–£0.56/cu ft/monthOngoing inventory holding cost — rises Oct–Dec
Professional Plan£25/monthRequired for clothing category access and Brand Registry
Amazon PPC£0.30–£2.00+/clickEffectively mandatory for new listings to achieve ranking
Returns Processing£1–£3/returnClothing ~30% return rate = significant ongoing cost

Source: Amazon Seller Central UK Fee Schedule 2024 · Amazon UK Clothing Category Guidelines 2024

Quick Reference: Shopify Plans for UK Clothing Brands
PlanMonthly FeeCard Rate (Shopify Payments)Best For
Basic£19/month2% + 25pStartup brands, first production run
Shopify£49/month1.7% + 25pGrowing brands, 2–5 staff
Advanced£259/month1.5% + 25pScaling brands, advanced reporting

Source: Shopify Pricing Page 2024 — shopify.com/gb/pricing

SilkRoutes.co.uk

UK clothing manufacturer specialising in low MOQ private label production. 15 years factory experience. Working with startup brands from 30 units — on the unit economics that make both Shopify and Amazon viable.

Low MOQ & Private Label Manufacturing Guide →

Data sources: InternetRetailing UK Fashion Sector Report 2024 · McKinsey State of Fashion 2024 · UKFT Facts & Figures 2024 · Retail Economics Annual Returns Benchmark 2024 · Amazon Seller Central UK Fee Schedule 2024 · Shopify Pricing 2024 · Statista UK eCommerce Returns 2024

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