If Weglot's bill has crept up every time you added a language, you're not the only Shopify merchant looking for a Weglot alternative. Weglot is a capable app — fast to set up, no code, with search-friendly translated pages — but its price climbs with both your word count and your language list, and growing catalogues tend to outrun the plan they started on. The good news is that Shopify has a deep bench of translation apps, several of them strong, and the right one depends less on price than on how your store is built and where it's headed.
This is a plain, current comparison of the best Weglot alternatives for Shopify in 2026 — what each app does well, what users flag, what it costs, and who it suits — followed by a short framework for matching one to your store. The aim isn't to crown a winner; it's to help you ask the right questions and read the answers honestly.
In this guideWeglot earns its reputation: it installs without a developer, its multilingual SEO is server-side and indexable, and its support is well regarded. For a store that needs a couple of languages live quickly with clean, rankable pages, it does the job.
The reason it shows up so often in "alternative" searches is its pricing model, not its quality. Weglot charges on two axes at once — the total translated words across your site and the number of languages — and the word allowance is a fixed ceiling rather than a monthly refill. Add a language or translate your full catalogue, blog and policies, and you can move up a tier faster than expected; the plan also auto-upgrades when you hit a limit. For a small site that stays small, the cost stays low. For a growing catalogue across several markets, merchants often start shopping around. None of that makes Weglot a poor app — it makes it worth checking whether a different pricing model fits your store better. If pricing is the specific sticking point, our breakdown of Weglot's pricing as you add languages goes deeper.
Six alternatives worth a serious look, with Weglot kept in the table as the baseline you're measuring against. "SEO model" is the distinction that matters most for organic traffic: server-side, indexed translations get their own URLs and hreflang tags so they can rank, while a client-side widget translates in the browser and generally won't.
Ratings, review counts and prices below are taken from each app's own Shopify App Store listing and vendor pricing page, captured June 2026. Third-party "best app" blogs often quote higher numbers than the App Store shows, so we used the listings themselves. These figures move — always check the current listing before you subscribe.
| App | Starting price | Languages | SEO model | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weglot (baseline) | Free; paid from €15/mo (in euros) | 110+; capped 1–20 by plan | Server-side, indexed | Fast no-code launch with clean, rankable pages |
| Shopify Translate & Adapt | Free | 2 auto-translated free; manual unlimited | Native to Shopify Markets, indexed | Starting on 1–2 markets and keeping your translations |
| Langify | $17.50/mo (no free plan) | Up to ~20 | Indexed, hreflang; Shopify-native | Hands-on manual control at a flat, predictable price |
| Transcy | Free; paid from $11.90/mo | 110+ | Indexed via Markets | Translation and currency conversion in one app |
| GTranslate | Free; paid from $9.99/mo | 100+ | Widget on free; server-side on paid | The lowest-cost route to broad machine translation |
| LangShop | Free; paid from ~$10/mo | 240+ | Indexed; Markets, subfolders/domains | Widest language and currency reach; human-translation option |
| T Lab | Free; paid from $9.99/mo | 130+ | Indexed; Markets integration | Flexible mix of manual, bulk and AI workflows |
Each profile below pairs what merchants consistently praise with what they flag, drawn from public Shopify App Store reviews and listings as of June 2026.
Shopify's own free app, rated around 4.5 stars across roughly 1,400 reviews. It auto-translates two languages free using Google Translate, lets you add unlimited manual translations, and stores everything inside Shopify — so your work stays with the store even if you change apps later. It's the natural first step for most merchants.
What users flag: only two languages are auto-translated, automatic translation is capped by an annual character limit, and the app can miss fields such as metafields and menus, which means some manual auditing. Best for testing one or two markets at no cost, with tight Shopify Markets integration.
One of the oldest Shopify translation apps (since 2014), holding around 4.6 stars. It's deeply Shopify-native, with a flat $17.50/month price that many reviewers single out as refreshingly predictable, plus optional auto-translation word packs. Reviewers praise its stability and support.
What users flag: there's no permanent free plan, no built-in currency conversion (it leans on Shopify Markets for that), and a minority report performance or translation-persistence issues on large stores. Best for merchants who want hands-on manual control and a fixed monthly cost rather than usage-based billing.
A feature-rich app (around 4.4 stars across roughly 2,500 reviews) that bundles translation and currency conversion together, with geolocation auto-detection, 110+ languages and unlimited words on paid plans. Merchants like having language and currency handled in one place, and support is generally well rated.
What users flag: there are public reviews citing unexpected plan changes and billing surprises, and the free plan covers only one language. Best for stores that want translation and a currency switcher from a single app, with strong automation.
The budget pick, at around 4.7 stars. Its free, forever plan offers machine translation across all languages with no word cap — though on the free tier that's a client-side widget, which generally isn't indexed for SEO. Paid plans from $9.99/month add neural translation, translated URLs and indexed multilingual SEO.
What users flag: the free tier won't help you rank, some reviewers report SEO inconsistencies after backend changes, and its reputation is more mixed outside the Shopify ecosystem. Best for merchants who need broad, cheap translation fast and will move to a paid tier if search visibility matters.
A powerhouse for reach (around 4.6 stars), supporting 240+ languages and 80+ currencies — among the widest coverage on the store. It combines machine translation (DeepL, Google, ChatGPT) with the option to order human translation, and works comfortably with Shopify Markets, subfolders and market-specific domains.
What users flag: the breadth brings interface complexity that can feel heavy for a simple store, and costs rise across its higher tiers. Best for merchants targeting many locales, or who need human-verified or right-to-left language support.
A flexible all-rounder from Sherpas Design (around 4.6 stars) that lets you translate manually, in bulk via CSV, or automatically through its Autopilot AI across 130+ languages, using DeepL, Google or ChatGPT. Reviewers highlight that flexibility and the support team.
What users flag: the range of options carries a learning curve before it clicks. Best for merchants who want one app that covers manual edits and AI automation rather than choosing between them.
The baseline you're comparing against (around 4.5 stars, and one of the most-installed translation apps on Shopify). Its strengths are genuine: no-code setup, indexable server-side SEO and dependable support. The recurring critique in reviews is cost — the word-by-language model and fixed word ceiling can escalate as catalogues and languages grow. Best when speed-to-launch and clean SEO matter more than predictable cost at scale.
The right alternative isn't the cheapest app on the list — it's the one whose pricing model and language path match how your store will actually grow.
— On choosing a translation appThe fastest way to narrow the field is to answer these about your own store first, then read each app's listing against your answers.
One question sits underneath the other six: is translation actually the whole job, or just the visible part of it? A translation app prices the words. Selling into a new market also means showing prices in local currency, handling duties and taxes at checkout, offering payment methods people recognise, and ranking in-country — and those aren't things a translation app is built to do.
For many Shopify stores, a good translation app is genuinely most of what they need, and one of the seven above will fit. If you're planning a serious cross-border push, it's worth seeing how the main Weglot alternatives compare before you commit to a tool, so the app you choose slots into the bigger picture rather than boxing you in. Either way, start with your languages, your word count and your SEO needs — the right choice tends to answer itself once those are on the table.