The Best SHOPLINE Profit and Margin Apps in 2026 (What Actually Exists)
Search "shopline profit app" and you won't find the mature app category Shopify merchants take for granted. Here's what actually exists on the SHOPLINE marketplace, SHOPLINE's own native Profit Margin Report, and where a checkout-enforcement layer like Agentis fits.
The honest answer to "shopline profit app"
If you search for a shopline profit app the way you'd search for a Shopify one, you're going to be disappointed, and it's worth saying so plainly instead of padding a listicle to a round number. Shopify has a mature, crowded category of dedicated profit-tracking apps. SHOPLINE, as of mid-2026, does not. We checked the SHOPLINE App Store directly, searched it for "profit," and got three results, none of which is a dedicated margin or cost-of-goods tool.
That's not a reason to give up on tracking your margin. It's a reason to know exactly what you actually have available, in order of how much it helps, so you're not wasting time hunting for an app that doesn't exist.
What actually showed up when we searched
Searching apps.shopline.com for "profit" returned:
- Smart Inventory Management — a cost-effective inventory system across locations, positioned around reducing inventory losses. It touches profitability indirectly, through shrinkage and stockout prevention, not through margin calculation.
- Attribuly Analytics — a marketing-attribution and ad-ROAS tool. It measures which channel actually drove a sale and prevents double-counting across ad platforms, which affects your real customer acquisition cost. It does not calculate gross margin or track COGS.
- Anti-fraud of WeTech — payment risk control, aimed at protecting revenue from fraudulent transactions, not margin tracking.
None of these tells you whether an order was profitable after discounts, shipping, and cost of goods. If you came here looking for a SHOPLINE equivalent of BeProfit or TrueProfit, it doesn't exist yet on this platform.
Why the gap exists
This isn't a SHOPLINE shortcoming so much as a function of ecosystem size. Shopify's third-party developer network is enormous and global, which means a dedicated profit-tracking category can exist, compete, and mature over years. SHOPLINE's merchant base, concentrated in Hong Kong, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, and a growing set of other markets, is a smaller and more regionally specific pool for independent developers to build for. That's not a knock on SHOPLINE merchants, it's just a smaller addressable market for a niche app category, which is exactly why a native, built-in report matters more here than it would on a platform with dozens of third-party alternatives to choose from.
Start with what's actually free: the native Profit Margin Report
Before installing anything, use what SHOPLINE already gives you. The Profit Margin Report, built into the SHOPLINE admin, analyzes gross profit and gross margin three ways: by product, by multi-variant, and by POS location for stores selling in person as well as online.
The catch, and it's an important one: the report only calculates profit for products that have a cost record at the time of sale. If you haven't entered a cost per item on your products, the report has nothing to work with. This is the single most common reason merchants think SHOPLINE "doesn't have" margin reporting when the feature is sitting there unused. Go add your product costs first. It takes an afternoon and it's the prerequisite for every other option on this list actually meaning anything.
The report also isn't real-time in the way a checkout-side tool is: it takes one to two minutes to load current data, and it's a look-back, not a live gate. It tells you what already happened, not what's about to happen.
Attribuly Analytics, correctly framed
We're including Attribuly Analytics here because it's real and it does affect your profit picture, just not the part most merchants mean when they say "profit app." It measures true ad ROI across 10+ networks and prevents the double-counting that makes a channel look more profitable than it is. If your margin problem is actually a marketing-spend problem, meaning you're acquiring customers at a cost that erases the margin on their first order, this is the right category of tool. It will not tell you that a specific order shipped below cost because of a stacked discount code. That's a different problem.
Smart Inventory Management, correctly framed
Similarly real, similarly adjacent. Inventory shrinkage, stockouts, and multi-location tracking errors are a genuine margin leak, just a slower and quieter one than a bad discount code. If you're running SHOPLINE POS across multiple locations, this closes a real gap. It is not a per-order profitability check.
The gap none of these apps close
Here's what's actually missing from the SHOPLINE app ecosystem: something that checks, at the moment an order is placed, whether the combination of discount, shipping cost, and gateway fee just pushed that specific order below your floor. The native Profit Margin Report tells you after the fact, once a day or once a week when you go look. None of the marketplace apps above do it at all.
This is the gap Agentis is built for. It's not a SHOPLINE marketplace app in the traditional sense, it's a real-time checkout enforcement layer: it reads each order after discounts, shipping, gateway fees, FX, and duties, and flags or fixes the ones that lose money before they ship. Where the native report answers "what happened," Agentis answers "should this order have gone through at all," at the moment it matters.
What to actually do, in order
- Enter cost-per-item on your products if you haven't. Nothing below this works without it.
- Turn on the native Profit Margin Report and check it weekly, by product and by variant. It's free and it's already there.
- If your CAC is the suspect, not your checkout math, look at attribution tooling like Attribuly to find out which channels are actually paying for themselves.
- If it's shrinkage or multi-location inventory drift, an inventory tool like Smart Inventory Management closes that gap.
- If you need to catch bad orders before they ship, rather than discover them a week later in a report, that's the real-time enforcement layer, and as of today that's not something the SHOPLINE app marketplace offers natively.
For a deeper breakdown of exactly what selling on SHOPLINE actually costs before you even get to discounts, see the real cost of selling on Shopline. And if you want to see the blended take-rate on a specific order right now rather than wait for a weekly report, run it through the gross profit per order calculator.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a dedicated profit-tracking app for SHOPLINE like BeProfit or TrueProfit for Shopify?
Not as of mid-2026. Searching the SHOPLINE App Store for "profit" surfaces an inventory tool, an ad-attribution tool, and a fraud-prevention tool, none of which calculates per-order gross margin. SHOPLINE's own native Profit Margin Report is the closest built-in equivalent, but it requires you to have entered product costs and it's a look-back report, not a real-time check.
Why doesn't the SHOPLINE Profit Margin Report show any data?
The most common cause is that your products don't have a cost record entered. The report only calculates margin for products where a cost per item exists at the time of sale. Add costs to your product catalog and the report starts populating.
Can I use a Shopify profit app on my SHOPLINE store?
No. Shopify apps run on Shopify's platform and APIs; they are not installable on a SHOPLINE store. The two platforms have separate app marketplaces and separate integration surfaces.
What's the difference between an analytics app and a checkout enforcement tool?
An analytics or reporting tool, including SHOPLINE's native Profit Margin Report, tells you what already happened, usually with a delay of hours to days. A checkout enforcement tool like Agentis evaluates each order in real time, before or as it's confirmed, and can flag or block the ones that don't meet your margin floor. Both have a role; enforcement catches problems reporting can only describe after the damage is done.