BigCommerce Integrations
8
Focused pages with known intent and use-case data.
Flexible, enterprise-grade e-commerce platform for fast-growing brands.
BigCommerce delivers a powerful storefront with enterprise scalability. Integrating BigCommerce ensures orders and customer data flow into your CRM, accounting, and marketing systems—so you can automate invoicing, run targeted email campaigns, and get real-time alerts on every sale.
BigCommerce has 8 native integrations in its API directory. This page focuses only on guides we publish and maintain.
Start with the implementation model, not the connector. We map each pair by intent so you can decide if native sync is enough or if this workflow needs stronger controls.
8
Focused pages with known intent and use-case data.
Direct Paths
6
Native in at least one direction.
Connector Paths
2
Usually require mapping, retries, or approval gates.
Most BigCommerce integrations are built for Standard setup use cases. Open any guide below to see the recommended setup path and cost estimate.
These are the only partners recommended on this hub, selected from workflow intent and risk signals. Use one path first, then expand only if your use case truly needs it.
2 of this tool's published integration guides require connector logic — field mapping, retries, and conditional routing.
Make is the fastest no-code path to production-ready syncs. Free plan includes 1,000 operations/month; paid plans from $9/mo.
Try Make free — 1,000 ops/month →If your workflow is fully native and low risk, skip paid automation and keep the stack simple.
These guides cover integrations where BigCommerce includes a direct native path.
Cloud spreadsheets for data analysis and collaboration.
CRM platform for marketing, sales, and service automation.
Marketing automation platform for e-commerce.
Cloud accounting software for small business bookkeeping.
Team messaging platform for collaboration and alerts.
Cloud accounting software for small businesses.
These workflows usually need connector logic. Open each setup guide to confirm scope before choosing a platform. If you need a starting point, use the recommendations in the section above.
BigCommerce's App Marketplace has 1,000+ apps. Deep natives: Stripe, PayPal, Klaviyo, Mailchimp, HubSpot, Salesforce, QuickBooks, Xero, ShipStation, and major channel-sync tools (Amazon, eBay, Facebook Shop). BigCommerce positions itself as more API-friendly than Shopify and tends to attract larger merchants — many integrations are built more deeply via API than as canned apps.
Yes. BigCommerce's REST and GraphQL APIs cover products, orders, customers, and content. Webhooks fire on most object events. The API is generally regarded as more permissive than Shopify's (looser rate limits, easier bulk operations). For low-code use Make or n8n.
BigCommerce has historically been stronger for B2B — built-in customer groups with price lists, quote management, and PO/net-terms checkout. Shopify B2B (released in 2022) has closed much of the gap, but for complex B2B catalogs with company-specific pricing, BigCommerce typically requires less customization. For DTC, Shopify's app ecosystem and theme polish are still ahead.
The native QuickBooks and Xero integrations work for most ordinary DTC use cases. For higher complexity (multi-currency, tax jurisdictions, B2B with net terms), Make gives you field-level control: trigger on order, look up the customer's accounting record, post the invoice with the right class/department/tax codes.
Compare with similar platforms in the e-commerce category.