---
title: "How to Set Up Shopify Multi-Currency (Step-by-Step 2026 Guide)"
description: "Learn how to set up multi-currency on Shopify. Enable Shopify Markets, configure exchange rates, set rounding rules, and display local currencies to international customers."
url: https://easyappsecom.com/guides/how-to-set-up-shopify-multi-currency.html
date: 2026-03-20
---

# How to Set Up Shopify Multi-Currency (Step-by-Step 2026 Guide)

EasyApps Ecommerce

Last updated: March 2026

How to Set Up Shopify Multi-Currency (Step-by-Step 2026 Guide)

By Jack Smith · Updated March 19, 2026 · 18 min read

TL;DR: Multi-currency selling lets international customers browse and pay in their local currency, which increases conversion rates by up to 33%. Enable it through Shopify Markets in Settings, activate Shopify Payments in each target currency, configure rounding rules so prices look natural, and test the checkout flow for each currency. Pair with EA Auto Language Translate for a fully localized international shopping experience.

Why Multi-Currency Matters for Revenue

International customers who see prices in a foreign currency are significantly less likely to complete a purchase. Research from Shopify shows that offering local currency pricing increases conversion rates by up to 33% in international markets. The reason is straightforward: currency conversion creates friction, uncertainty, and distrust.

When a customer in Germany sees a price in USD, they have to mentally calculate the EUR equivalent, wonder about exchange rate fees their bank might charge, and worry about the final amount that will appear on their credit card statement. Each of these uncertainties is a reason to abandon the purchase. By displaying prices in EUR, you eliminate all three concerns simultaneously.

Beyond conversion rates, multi-currency selling signals professionalism and commitment to international markets. A store that displays local currency tells customers it takes their market seriously and is likely to provide better support, faster shipping, and a more tailored experience. This perception matters especially for first-time customers who have no prior relationship with your brand.

The financial impact can be substantial. If you currently get 20% of traffic from international markets with a 1.5% conversion rate, and multi-currency increases that to 2%, you have just gained 33% more international orders without spending a dollar on additional marketing. For a store doing $50,000/month with $10,000 from international orders, that is an additional $3,300/month in revenue.

Requirements and Prerequisites

Before setting up multi-currency, ensure you meet Shopify requirements:

Shopify Payments: Multi-currency requires Shopify Payments as your payment processor. Third-party payment gateways do not support Shopify native multi-currency feature. If you are using a third-party gateway, you will need to switch to Shopify Payments or use a currency conversion app instead.

Shopify plan: All Shopify plans support multi-currency through Shopify Markets. However, the number of markets and the level of customization varies by plan. Basic plans can create up to 3 markets, while Shopify and Advanced plans support more markets with additional features like market-specific pricing.

Tax compliance: Selling in multiple currencies often means selling in multiple countries, which may have tax obligations. Understand the VAT, GST, or sales tax requirements for each market you plan to target. Shopify can handle tax calculations for many countries, but you are responsible for registering and remitting taxes where required.

Shipping configuration: Ensure you have shipping rates configured for the countries where you plan to sell in local currency. There is no point displaying EUR prices if you cannot ship to Germany. Set up shipping zones for each target market.

Setting Up Shopify Markets

Shopify Markets is the centralized system for managing international selling, including multi-currency. Here is how to set it up:

Step 1: Go to Settings > Markets in your Shopify admin. You will see your primary market (typically your home country) already configured.

Step 2: Click "Add market" to create a new market. You can create a market for a single country (like Germany) or a region (like European Union). Regional markets apply the same settings to all countries in the group.

Step 3: Name your market and select the countries or regions to include. Shopify will suggest groupings based on common ecommerce market segments.

Step 4: Configure the market settings. For each market, you can set the local currency, language, domain (subfolder or country-code top-level domain), and pricing adjustments. The currency setting is what enables multi-currency for customers in that market.

Step 5: Activate the market by toggling it on. Once active, customers from the market countries will automatically see prices in the configured local currency based on their IP address or browser settings.

For most merchants, starting with 2-3 key international markets is sufficient. Analyze your Google Analytics data to identify which countries generate the most traffic, and create markets for those first. You can always add more markets later as your international business grows.

Activating Currencies in Shopify Payments

After creating markets, you need to enable the corresponding currencies in Shopify Payments:

Step 1: Go to Settings > Payments in your Shopify admin. Click "Manage" next to Shopify Payments.

Step 2: Scroll to the "Countries/regions" section. Click "Add country/region" for each market you created.

Step 3: For each country, Shopify will show the available local currency. Enable it. You may also need to provide additional business information for certain countries due to payment regulations.

Step 4: Configure your payout currency. You can choose to receive all payouts in your home currency (Shopify handles the conversion) or receive payouts in each local currency (requires bank accounts in those currencies). Most merchants choose home currency payouts for simplicity.

When customers pay in a foreign currency and you receive payouts in your home currency, Shopify applies a currency conversion fee (typically 1.5-2% depending on your plan). This fee is separate from your payment processing rate. Factor this into your pricing strategy to ensure your margins remain healthy on international orders.

Understanding Exchange Rate Options

Shopify offers two approaches for determining foreign currency prices:

Automatic exchange rates: Shopify converts your base prices using real-time exchange rates updated twice daily. This ensures your prices always reflect current market rates. The advantage is zero maintenance; the disadvantage is that prices fluctuate with currency markets, which can confuse returning customers who see different prices on different visits.

Manual exchange rates with price adjustments: You set a fixed percentage adjustment for each market. For example, you might set European prices at +5% compared to your base USD prices to account for higher shipping costs, VAT, and currency conversion fees. This gives you more control over international pricing but requires periodic review to ensure rates remain competitive.

Market-specific product prices: On Advanced and Plus plans, you can set completely custom prices for each market at the product level. This is the most flexible option and allows you to implement true international pricing strategies — different markets may have different price sensitivities and competitor landscapes.

For most merchants, automatic exchange rates with a small market adjustment (3-5%) work well. The adjustment covers your currency conversion fees and any additional costs associated with international orders, while automatic rates keep prices competitive and current.

Configuring Price Rounding Rules

When Shopify converts prices using exchange rates, the resulting numbers are often awkward. A product priced at $29.99 USD might convert to 27.43 EUR, which looks unprofessional and random. Price rounding rules fix this by adjusting converted prices to look natural in each currency.

Setting rounding rules: In each market configuration (Settings > Markets > click your market), you can set rounding rules. Common options include rounding to the nearest .99, .95, or whole number. For example, 27.43 EUR woul...
