Every successful Shopify store eventually faces the same question: should we handle shipping and fulfillment ourselves, or hand it off to a third-party logistics provider? The answer is not as straightforward as most people think. Going with a 3PL too early can eat into your margins and add unnecessary complexity. Going too late means you are spending your evenings packing boxes instead of growing your business.
What’s in This Article
For Australian Shopify stores, the 3PL decision is particularly nuanced because the local landscape is very different from the US. Our distances are vast, our population centres are concentrated on the coasts, and shipping costs are significantly higher than what American store owners deal with. Choosing the wrong 3PL — or the wrong time to switch — can cost you tens of thousands in unnecessary fees and slow delivery times that kill your customer experience.
Here is the framework we use with eCommerce Circle members to decide when to outsource fulfillment, how to choose the right 3PL partner, and how to make the transition without disrupting your operations.
When It Is Time to Consider a 3PL

There are five clear signals that self-fulfillment is holding your business back. If you are experiencing two or more of these, it is time to seriously explore 3PL options.
You are shipping more than 100 orders per week. Below 100 orders per week, self-fulfillment is usually manageable and cost-effective. Above that threshold, the time spent on picking, packing, and shipping starts to seriously compete with the time you should be spending on marketing, product development, and strategy. At 200+ orders per week, self-fulfillment is almost always the wrong choice.
Your shipping errors are increasing. As order volume grows, so do mistakes — wrong items, missed orders, late shipments. If your error rate is above 1-2%, it is costing you more in returns, replacements, and customer service time than a 3PL would charge.
You cannot offer fast shipping across Australia. If you are shipping from a single location (say, Melbourne), your Sydney and Brisbane customers might get 2-day delivery, but Perth and Darwin customers are waiting 5-7 days. A 3PL with multiple warehouse locations can dramatically reduce delivery times and costs for customers outside your local area.
Storage space is becoming a problem. If your garage, spare room, or small warehouse is overflowing, that is a sign your inventory is outgrowing your setup. Renting commercial warehouse space yourself adds fixed costs and management overhead. A 3PL gives you flexible storage that scales with your inventory.
You want to focus on growth, not operations. This is the biggest one. If you are spending 20+ hours per week on fulfillment instead of marketing, product, and customer acquisition, you are trading dollars for hours in the wrong direction.
What to Look for in an Australian 3PL

Not all 3PLs are created equal, and the Australian market has some unique characteristics you need to consider. Here are the non-negotiable criteria for choosing a 3PL partner.
Shopify integration. Your 3PL must integrate directly with Shopify so that orders flow automatically from your store to their warehouse. Manual order processing is a recipe for errors and delays. Look for native Shopify integrations or reliable middleware like ShipStation or Starshipit. The best 3PLs offer real-time inventory syncing so your Shopify store always shows accurate stock levels.
Australian warehouse locations. For domestic shipping, warehouse location matters enormously. A 3PL with warehouses in Sydney and Melbourne covers the majority of the Australian population within 1-2 day delivery zones. Some larger 3PLs also offer Brisbane or Perth locations for broader coverage. Ask about their delivery time maps and carrier partnerships.
Transparent pricing. 3PL pricing is notoriously confusing. Demand a clear breakdown of: pick and pack fees (per order + per item), storage fees (per pallet or per cubic metre per month), receiving fees (for inbound inventory), packaging material costs, and carrier rates. Calculate your total cost per order and compare it to your current self-fulfillment costs. A good 3PL should cost $5-$12 AUD per order for pick and pack, depending on complexity.
Scalability and peak season capacity. Ask how they handle Black Friday, Christmas, and other peak periods. Can they guarantee same-day dispatch during peak? What is their maximum daily order capacity? A 3PL that crumbles during your busiest sales period is worse than no 3PL at all.
Top Australian 3PLs for Shopify Stores
Based on our experience working with eCommerce Circle members, here are the 3PLs that consistently deliver good results for Australian Shopify stores across different sizes and categories.
ShipBob (Australia). The US-based global 3PL now has Australian fulfillment centres. Strong Shopify integration, good technology platform, and competitive pricing for stores shipping 500+ orders per month. Best for brands that also ship internationally and want a single platform for global fulfillment.
Hubbed / eStore Logistics. Well-established Australian 3PL with warehouses in Sydney and Melbourne. Good for mid-size Shopify stores doing 200-2,000 orders per month. Strong local carrier relationships and competitive domestic shipping rates. Their technology platform is solid and integrates well with Shopify.
StarTrack / Australia Post eParcel. Not a traditional 3PL, but Australia Post’s eParcel service combined with their fulfillment options works well for smaller stores. The advantage is nationwide coverage and consumer trust in the Australia Post brand. Best for stores under 200 orders per month that need reliable domestic delivery.

Making the Transition Without Losing Sales
Switching to a 3PL is a significant operational change. Here is how to do it without disrupting your customer experience.
- Run parallel operations for 2-4 weeks. Ship a portion of orders through your new 3PL while continuing to handle the rest yourself. This lets you catch integration issues, verify packing quality, and test delivery times before going all-in.
- Send test orders to yourself. Place test orders at different addresses to check packing quality, delivery speed, and accuracy. Do this before and during the transition period. Check that branded packaging, inserts, and marketing materials are being included correctly.
- Communicate with customers proactively. If there is any risk of delivery delays during the transition, email your customers. Transparency builds trust: “We are upgrading our fulfillment operations to bring you faster delivery times. You may notice a slight change in packaging over the next few weeks.”
- Monitor metrics closely for 30 days. Track order accuracy rate, average delivery time, customer complaints, and shipping costs daily for the first month. Set clear benchmarks: accuracy above 99%, delivery times equal to or better than before, and cost per order within your budget.
The Numbers: When a 3PL Pays for Itself
For a Shopify store shipping 300 orders per month, a typical 3PL cost breakdown looks like this: pick and pack at $7 per order ($2,100/month), storage at $400 per month, and carrier rates that are often 10-20% lower than what you get as an individual shipper (saving $1-$3 per order). Total 3PL cost: roughly $2,500-$3,000 per month. Compare that to the cost of your time (20+ hours per week at your effective hourly rate), warehouse rent, packaging supplies, and shipping at non-bulk rates. For most stores at this volume, the 3PL is cheaper — and it frees up 80+ hours per month. Understanding your true cost per order makes this decision much clearer for growth activities.
The 3PL Red Flags That Will Cost You Customers
Not every 3PL is created equal, and a bad partner can do more damage than handling fulfillment yourself. After working with dozens of Shopify brands through the 3PL selection process, here are the red flags we tell eCommerce Circle members to watch for.
No Shopify-native integration. If a 3PL tells you they will “sync manually” or use a CSV upload process, walk away. In 2025 and beyond, any serious 3PL should offer a direct Shopify integration — either native or through ShipStation, ShipBob, or a similar connector. Manual syncing means delayed tracking updates, missed orders, and inventory discrepancies that erode customer trust. Your customers expect real-time tracking from the moment they click “Buy Now.”
Vague SLA commitments. Ask every 3PL candidate for their Service Level Agreement in writing. The specifics matter: same-day dispatch cutoff time (ideally 2pm AEST for Australian stores), guaranteed accuracy rate (should be 99.5%+), and average pick-pack-ship time. If they cannot give you hard numbers, they do not track them — which means they cannot guarantee them. Top Australian 3PLs like ShipBob AU, Shippit-connected warehouses, and eStore Logistics will provide detailed SLAs without hesitation.
Hidden fees buried in the contract. The headline per-order rate is rarely the full cost. Ask about receiving fees (charged when your stock arrives at their warehouse), storage fees per pallet or cubic metre, returns processing fees, kitting or bundling charges, and minimum monthly order requirements. Some 3PLs charge $200-500 per month in minimums even during slow months. Run the total cost calculation across your peak month, average month, and slowest month before signing anything.
No returns management system. Returns are a reality of ecommerce — the average Australian online store sees a 20-30% return rate for apparel and 8-12% for other categories. Your 3PL should have a clear process for receiving returns, inspecting items, restocking sellable inventory, and notifying you of damaged goods. If they treat returns as an afterthought, your returns strategy will fall apart. Ask to see their returns workflow before committing.
No branded packaging options. Your unboxing experience is part of your brand. If a 3PL can only ship in plain brown boxes, you lose a critical touchpoint. The best 3PLs offer custom packaging inserts, branded boxes, tissue paper, thank-you cards, and even seasonal packaging variations. Some charge extra for this, and that is fine — but the capability needs to exist. Brands that invest in packaging see 25-40% higher social sharing rates and stronger repeat purchase behaviour.
Your 3PL Transition Checklist
If you have decided a 3PL is the right move, here is a practical week-by-week checklist to manage the transition without disrupting your customers.
Weeks 1-2: Research and shortlist. Contact 3-4 Australian 3PLs that specialise in your product category. Request detailed pricing proposals based on your current order volume, SKU count, and average package dimensions. Ask for references from Shopify brands of similar size.
Weeks 3-4: Trial run. Most reputable 3PLs will do a trial period of 2-4 weeks. Send 20-30% of your inventory to their warehouse and route a portion of your orders to them. Monitor accuracy, dispatch speed, and tracking notification timing closely. Check customer feedback during this period — silence is usually good news.
Weeks 5-6: Full migration. Once the trial confirms the 3PL meets your standards, transfer remaining inventory. Update your Shopify fulfillment settings to route all orders through the 3PL. Keep a small buffer of your top 5 best sellers in-house for the first month as a safety net.
Ongoing: Monthly performance reviews. Track order accuracy rate, average dispatch time, customer complaints related to shipping, and total fulfillment cost per order. Compare these against your in-house benchmarks. If the 3PL is not matching or beating your previous performance within 60 days, escalate or switch. Track these metrics alongside your other key Shopify KPIs for a complete picture.
Fulfillment Is a Growth Decision
Outsourcing fulfillment is not about being lazy — it is about being strategic. Every hour you spend packing boxes is an hour you are not spending on marketing, product development, or customer relationships. The right 3PL partner does not just move your products — they free you to grow your business. Make the switch at the right time, choose the right partner, and monitor the transition closely.
Inside the eCommerce Circle, fulfillment strategy is a core part of our Practice and People pillars. We help members evaluate 3PL options, negotiate pricing, and manage the transition process so nothing falls through the cracks.
If you are drowning in packing tape and wondering whether it is time to outsource, let’s talk. We will help you make the right call for your specific business stage and product type.



