Coming soon · for Shopify merchants leaving Stocky
Stocky shuts down August 31. Parwise brings the everyday basics back: alerts, reorder points, and purchase orders. Free to start.
Shopify removed Stocky from the App Store on February 2, 2026, and its APIs go dark on August 31. Parwise is the flat-priced replacement built for stores that just want the everyday jobs back: know what's running low, know when to reorder and how much, raise a purchase order and receive it. No revenue-scaled pricing.
Get notified at launch — enter your email at the tool your team uses to collect the waitlist (wire this field to your email capture tool).
Founding-merchant access for the first stores. No spam, just a launch notification and the occasional build note. Unsubscribe anytime.
The deadline is real
Stocky wound down in three steps, and the last one is close:
- July 7, 2025: Stocky stopped supporting inventory transfers between locations and min/max forecasting.
- February 2, 2026: removed from the Shopify App Store. No new installs, no reinstalls.
- August 31, 2026: full shutdown. The app and its APIs stop. Anything wired to Stocky breaks with it.
One more thing most merchants miss: your Stocky data does not migrate automatically. Purchase orders, stocktakes, and inventory records need to be exported manually before the deadline. And Stocky can't export your supplier list, so lead times, MOQs, and vendor contacts have to be re-entered by hand in whatever you move to. Budget a day for it.
Shopify's native admin absorbed Stocky's basic PO and receiving workflows, so you can still raise and receive purchase orders without a third-party app. What it won't do is tell you when to reorder or how much. For more than a handful of SKUs, figuring that out by feel gets old quickly.
What you get with Parwise
Free: everything to get unstuck
- Low-stock alerts and an on-hand dashboard: the daily "what's running low" view, no subscription required.
- Reorder points built from your real sales velocity:
average daily sales × lead time + safety stock. The math is shown, not hidden, and you can override any SKU. Free, with no order cap. - Days-of-cover per SKU so you know how much runway you actually have.
- A first-run backfill from your Shopify order history so the reorder math isn't starting from scratch.
- CSV export.
Pro ($39/mo, flat): the full purchase-order lifecycle
Everything in Free, plus:
- Purchase orders with a real receiving lifecycle: draft, send, partial-receive, receive and close.
- Supplier CRUD with lead time, MOQ, and unit cost per supplier. Makes re-adding the vendor list Stocky won't export much faster.
Scale ($79/mo, flat): automation and multi-location
Everything in Pro, plus:
- Automated supplier-feed ingestion: supplier pushes updated stock and pricing; Parwise pulls it in.
- Per-location stock visibility across multiple warehouse and retail locations.
- Priority support.
The pricing rule: flat tiers, never metered by revenue, orders, SKUs, or locations. The number you budget now is the number next year.
Honest about what Parwise is not
Parwise is the simple, affordable replacement for Stocky's everyday jobs. A few things it's not, stated plainly so you can make the right call:
- Not a demand-planning platform. Parwise does not do machine-learning forecasting or seasonal trend modelling. Its reorder point is deterministic velocity math, transparent and editable. If you're a larger, multi-channel brand whose P&L depends on forecast accuracy through strong seasonal swings, a dedicated planner (Prediko, Inventory Planner, Cogsy) is probably worth the higher price.
- Not a WMS. Parwise tracks reorder and purchase-order status for a single Shopify store. It doesn't manage warehouse locations, pick/pack, or multi-channel fulfilment across Amazon and eBay.
- Not a forecaster that "anticipates" peaks. A trailing 30-day velocity average won't see a Black Friday spike coming on its own. You'd raise that reorder point by hand ahead of a known peak. We say so rather than hoping you find out the hard way.
Founding merchants
The first stores to join the waitlist get founding-merchant access: early entry into the app plus a lower price locked in for as long as you stay subscribed. It's our thank-you for betting on an app that's still earning its track record. No strings, and nothing tied to leaving a review. That's something we'd rather earn on its own merits.
FAQ
When does Parwise launch? The listing goes live before the August 31 Stocky shutdown. Waitlist members get access first and the founding-merchant price.
Does it replace Shopify's native inventory tracking? No, and it doesn't try to. Shopify's admin tracks on-hand quantities, transfers, and basic POs natively. Parwise adds the per-SKU reorder intelligence that native won't make for you: the automated "this SKU needs restocking now, here's how much" decision, plus the full supplier-facing purchase-order workflow.
Is the reorder math a black box? No. The formula is average daily sales × lead time + safety stock, shown per SKU in the dashboard. Lead time and safety stock are editable per SKU or store-wide. You can agree with the calculation or override it.
What will it cost? Free ($0) covers low-stock alerts, the on-hand dashboard, and reorder points. Pro ($39/mo) adds purchase orders and the receiving lifecycle. Scale ($79/mo) adds supplier-feed automation and multi-location visibility. Flat tiers, no revenue bands, 14-day trial on Pro and Scale.
Do you read my customers' data? No. Parwise reads orders for SKU, quantity, cost, and date only. There is no read_customers scope and no customer names, emails, or addresses are read or stored. Raw order webhook payloads are purged within 7 days.
What about multi-location? Per-location stock visibility is on the Scale tier ($79/mo). Multi-location on-hand tracking (how many at each warehouse or retail location) works across all the locations synced to your Shopify admin.
Is there a free trial? Pro and Scale each include a 14-day free trial. The Free plan has no trial period; it's free permanently.
Can I import my data from Stocky? Parwise imports your products and on-hand quantities directly from Shopify at first run, so the on-hand state transfers automatically. Purchase orders and stocktake history from Stocky need to be exported from Stocky manually and kept for your own records; they don't flow into Parwise. Supplier details (lead times, MOQs) are re-entered through the supplier CRUD on Pro.