KOR order limit alternative for simpler Shopify MOQ rules. This page is ready
KOR order limit alternative for simpler Shopify MOQ rules
A conservative migration guide for Shopify merchants evaluating MOQ and order-limit apps. Competitor features change, so verify current app listings before switching.
If your current KOR workflow feels too complex for simple minimum order quantity, minimum cart value, or limited-drop quantity limits, use this page to plan a low-risk migration into Minimum Order Quantity.
Safe first step
Create rules paused, run sample carts, and enable only the rules you trust.
Operational view
Track blocked signals, protected cart value estimates, and bounded logs.
Bulk-friendly
Use CSV import/export, multi-select, and bulk delete for catalog cleanup.
Best-fit merchant profile
- Merchants who want a simple Shopify Polaris admin instead of theme-code edits.
- Stores that need to test MOQ and order-limit rules before checkout enforcement.
- Teams that want bounded validation logs, CSV import/export, and affordable hosted pricing.
Migration checklist
- Export or document every existing minimum quantity, maximum quantity, quantity increment, and minimum cart-value rule.
- Group rules by product, variant, collection, customer tag, B2B buyer segment, and market so risky rules can be reviewed first.
- Recreate rules as paused presets, run the simulator with real cart scenarios, then enable only the rules that pass.
- Sync checkout validation for supported cart, product, and variant rules, and keep storefront hints aligned with the same message.
Differentiation to validate during your trial
- Paused starter templates reduce first-setup mistakes for non-technical merchants.
- The dry-run simulator and conflict detector make rule changes easier to trust before going live.
- Impact estimates turn blocked cart signals into an approximate protected-cart-value view without pretending to be accounting data.
- D1 retention policies keep validation events, webhook rows, billing history, and rate-limit data from growing forever.
This page is designed for high-intent merchants who already understand the cost of bad quantity limits: support tickets, failed wholesale orders, unprofitable small carts, and manual cleanup after launches.