If you’re researching a Shopify-NetSuite integration, you’ll run into three real contenders: Oracle’s own NetSuite Connector, Celigo’s iPaaS platform, or a native connector built and supported by an implementation partner. Two of these three actually sit in the same category. NetSuite Connector and a partner-built connector are both embedded SuiteApps that live directly inside NetSuite, no middleware, no separate platform in between. Celigo works differently: it’s an external layer sitting between Shopify and NetSuite. So the real decision usually isn’t “embedded vs. middleware.” It’s who built your embedded connector, how well they know both platforms, and who actually picks up the phone when something breaks.
This post breaks down all three honestly, so you can pick the Shopify NetSuite integration approach that fits your business, not the one that’s easiest for an agency to sell.
Oracle acquired FarApp in 2021 and folded it into NetSuite as “NetSuite Connector,” a bundled SuiteApp with pre-built integrations for major ecommerce platforms, Shopify included.
How it works: NetSuite Connector runs as a managed bundle inside your NetSuite account. Oracle owns the code, ships updates on its own release schedule, and handles standard order, inventory, and fulfillment sync between Shopify and NetSuite.
Advantages:
Limitations:
Best for: Merchants with a simple, low-volume Shopify store who want the lowest-cost option and don’t expect their workflows to get more complex.
Celigo is a well-established iPaaS (integration platform as a service) with strong pre-built Shopify-NetSuite flows. It’s widely used and genuinely well-built.
How it works: Celigo acts as a middleware layer. Shopify sends data to Celigo, Celigo maps and transforms it according to your configuration, then pushes it to NetSuite. The reverse flow works the same way, and all of it is managed through Celigo’s visual interface.
Advantages:
Limitations:
Best for: Merchants already using Celigo for other integrations who want to consolidate, teams that prefer a visual integration dashboard, and businesses with complex requirements that benefit from Celigo’s pre-built flow library.
We built our own Shopify-NetSuite Connector, and it sits in the same category as NetSuite Connector: a SuiteApp that runs directly inside NetSuite, no middleware, no third-party platform in between.
How it works: Same architecture as Option 1. Our connector runs as a SuiteScript process inside your NetSuite instance, creating sales orders from Shopify in real time and pushing inventory changes back out. The difference isn’t where it lives, it’s who built it and who’s behind it after launch.
Advantages:
Limitations:
Best for: Merchants who want an embedded, no-middleware connector, but built, supported, and evolved by a team with deep NetSuite and Shopify expertise, especially when workflows go beyond the standard order-inventory-fulfillment loop.
A few questions that make the decision clearer:
We build and support our own native NetSuite connector for Shopify, and we also implement Celigo for clients where that’s the better fit. If you’re evaluating options and want a direct conversation about which approach makes sense for your setup, that’s exactly what a discovery call is for.
Talk to Tavano Team about your Shopify-NetSuite integration
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