Before you hire any Shopify developer or agency, get clear on their pricing structure, timeline commitments, a portfolio of similar stores, post-launch support terms, and who owns your theme code once it's done. The single biggest red flag is vague pricing without an itemized scope behind it. Amwhiz answers all 15 questions below upfront: a flat Rs. 45,000, a 7-day delivery commitment, and full code ownership handed to you at launch.
Hiring a Shopify developer is a genuinely high-stakes call. Your store is your revenue engine, and a bad build costs you money twice over: once to build it wrong, again to fix it. Most of the disputes and disappointments store owners run into trace straight back to questions nobody thought to ask upfront. Here are the 15 that actually matter.
Hourly billing without a cap is where runaway costs almost always start. A flat-rate quote, like Amwhiz's Rs. 45,000 package, tells you exactly what you're paying before anything begins.
Get an itemized list. Theme setup, number of pages, app integrations, migration, testing. Vague scopes have a way of turning into vague, disappointing results.
Development cost and ongoing app fees are two different things entirely. Make sure you actually know which is which before you sign anything.
A developer you can trust tells you upfront what's *not* covered: custom app development, extra rounds of revisions, catalog sizes beyond a certain point.
Push for a specific number of days or weeks, not "it depends." Amwhiz commits to 7 days for standard builds, full stop.
A good developer already has a buffer built in and can tell you exactly how they'll communicate if something runs long.
Unlimited minor revisions during the build, or a capped number? Better to know this before you start than to find out mid-project.
Checkout flow, payment gateways, mobile responsiveness, and page speed all need testing. Ask who's actually responsible for that step, and don't accept a shrug as an answer.
This one should be a flat, non-negotiable yes. If a developer hesitates here, that's a real red flag. You should never be locked out of your own store.
A portfolio of stores that are *currently* active tells you far more than a polished case study PDF ever will.
A store that looks great but converts poorly isn't doing its job. Ask how they think about page speed, checkout friction, and mobile UX, not just how it looks in a screenshot.
If you're moving off WooCommerce, Magento, or something else, ask specifically about their experience with that exact migration path and how they handle SEO redirects.
Bug fixes for the first 30 days? A support retainer? Know exactly what happens the week after go-live, once real customers start actually using the thing.
Themes and apps need occasional updates as Shopify itself evolves. Find out whether keeping up with that falls on you or on them.
A developer or agency that's confident in their own process will happily put pricing, scope, timeline, and ownership terms into a written agreement. Anyone who hesitates on this is telling you something worth listening to.
Amwhiz, a listed Shopify Partner, was built specifically to remove this kind of uncertainty from Shopify development. Pricing is a flat Rs. 45,000, no hourly surprises down the line. Timeline is 7 days for standard builds and migrations. You own your theme code and files starting day one. Every build gets tested for checkout flow, mobile responsiveness, and page speed, and every project runs on a sales-first perspective, not just visual polish for its own sake.
You don't need to interrogate every candidate with all 15 questions read out word for word. A more natural way to do it: ask about pricing and scope first, since that filters out mismatched budgets almost immediately. Then ask to see live portfolio examples, which on its own eliminates anyone who can't back up their claims. Save the ownership and support questions for once you're seriously considering someone specific. By then you've already narrowed the field, and those details are what actually decide it.
Here's a pattern that comes up more often than you'd think: a store owner hires a cheap freelancer without ever asking about code ownership, only to find out after launch that the theme was built on a locked, non-transferable template the freelancer controlled personally. The freelancer goes quiet a few months later. Now the store owner can't hire anyone else to touch the site without rebuilding it entirely from scratch. A five-minute question before signing would've avoided months of lost time and a full rebuild bill. That's exactly why question 9 on this list isn't optional.
For a customized-theme store with standard functionality, Rs. 40,000-Rs. 1,50,000 is typical. Amwhiz's flat Rs. 45,000 sits right at the efficient end of that range.
Not automatically, but always ask for an estimated total and a cap. Open-ended hourly billing with no ceiling is exactly where budgets spiral out of control.
For standard catalog sizes with brand assets ready to go, yes. It just requires a tight, focused process instead of a slow, multi-stakeholder agency workflow.
You should, every time. If a developer builds on a locked template you can't export or transfer elsewhere, you don't actually own your store.
Ask for one directly before you go any further. A developer who's confident in their pricing will itemize it without pushback. Anyone who resists or gets vague is telling you something worth taking seriously.
Yes, no matter the size. A short written agreement covering price, scope, timeline, and ownership protects both sides and takes about ten minutes to put together.
If you want a developer who answers all 15 of these clearly before you sign anything, Amwhiz delivers a full Shopify store, sales-focused, fully owned by you, tested and live, for Rs. 45,000 in 7 days. Get in touch and let's scope your project.