Editing shipping fees in an order

You can add a custom shipping fee to your order. You can also remove a custom shipping fee from your order.

When you edit an order, the order total is updated to reflect these changes and the order displays whether a refund is owed to the customer or a balance is owed to you. Depending on the adjustment to your order, you might need to issue a refund or collect payment from your customer.

Before you edit an order, review the considerations for editing orders.

Add a shipping fee to an order

You can add a custom shipping fee to your order. After you add a shipping fee, you can edit or delete the fee before updating the order, or you can add a new shipping fee.

When you add a shipping fee, you can email an invoice to your customer with a link to the checkout page, or you can accept payment for the order.

Steps:

  1. From your Shopify admin, go to Orders.

  2. Click the order that you want to edit.

  3. Click Edit.

  4. In the Payment section, click Add shipping fee.

  5. Enter a name and a price for the shipping fee, and then click Done.

  6. Optional: In the Reason for edit section, enter a note about the order edit. This note isn’t displayed to your customer.

  7. After you finish editing the order, review and update the order.

Remove a shipping fee from an order

You can also remove a shipping fee from your order. If you want to edit a shipping fee, then you need to remove the shipping fee and add a new shipping fee.

Steps:

  1. From your Shopify admin, go to Orders.

  2. Click the order that you want to edit.

  3. Click Edit.

  4. In the Payment section, click Edit shipping fees.

  5. Click the trash can icon next to the shipping fee that you want to remove, and then click Remove.

  6. Optional: In the Reason for edit section, enter a note about the order edit. This note isn’t displayed to your customer.

  7. After you finish editing the order, review and update the order.

Reviewing and updating an edited order

After you edit an order, you need to review the updated order total and verify that it's accurate. Depending on the edits you make, the total cost of the order might increase or decrease from what your customer paid at checkout.

Review the following table to learn more about the flow of funds when editing orders and what actions you need to take in specific situations.

Flow of funds when editing orders
SituationExampleAction
The total order decreases and you owe the customer money. The order summary displays that there is an amount to refund.You remove an item or decrease an item quantity in an order.You need to issue a refund to your customer. The refund isn't complete when you edit an order and send your customer a notification. You need to refund your customer after you update the order.
The order total increases and the customer owes you money. The order summary displays that there is an amount to collect.You add a new product, increase an item quantity, or add a custom shipping fee.You need to collect payment by sending an invoice to your customer with a link to the checkout page, or you can accept payment for the order.
The order total doesn't change.You add a custom item that has a 0 price. No action is required. You can choose whether you want to send a notification about the edit to your customer.

After you edit an order, you can customize the order edit invoice or notification that's sent to your customer by editing the template.

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