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Apple Pay has become a must-have checkout option for Shopify stores that want faster checkouts and fewer abandoned carts. Shoppers today expect to pay with one tap, without typing card details or filling out long forms, especially on mobile devices. That’s exactly where Apple Pay fits in. When it’s available, customers can complete their purchase in seconds using Face ID or Touch ID, which builds trust and reduces friction at checkout.
Recent industry data shows that nearly 1 out of every 2 iPhone users actively uses Apple Pay for online purchases, and mobile wallet payments continue to grow year over year. For Shopify merchants, this directly impacts conversion rates, especially in regions like the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and parts of Europe where Apple Pay adoption is already strong.
In this guide, we’ll walk through how to add Apple Pay to Shopify step by step, explain the exact requirements, and show you why Apple Pay sometimes doesn’t appear even after setup. Whether you’re running a standard Shopify store, Shopify Plus, a B2B setup, or selling subscriptions, this article helps you enable Apple Pay correctly and avoid common mistakes that cost sales.

Before turning on Apple Pay in Shopify, it’s important to understand the eligibility rules. Many setup issues happen because one small requirement is missed. Apple Pay works only when store settings, payment provider, customer device, and region rules all align.
Your Shopify store must meet these basic conditions:
If card payments are disabled, Apple Pay will not show, even if it’s turned on in settings.
Apple Pay does not work on its own. It runs through your card payment provider.
If Apple Pay does not appear in your payment settings, the provider is usually the limiting factor.
Apple Pay availability depends on two things:
For example:
This behavior is expected and does not indicate a setup issue.
Apple Pay is shown only when customers meet all device conditions:
If any of these conditions fail, Shopify automatically hides the Apple Pay button.
Understanding these eligibility rules upfront helps avoid confusion during setup and testing, and it makes the next steps much easier to follow.
Once the eligibility and device conditions are clear, enabling Apple Pay in Shopify takes only a few minutes. The steps below apply to most stores using Shopify Payments or a supported card payment provider.
Log in to your Shopify admin panel and follow this path: Settings → Payments
This section controls all payment methods available at checkout, including cards and wallet-based options like Apple Pay.
Under the Card payments section, locate your active payment provider.
Apple Pay is controlled from inside your card payment provider, not as a separate option.
Inside the payment provider settings:
If Apple Pay is missing here, it usually means your provider or store country does not support it.
After saving:
At this stage, Apple Pay is technically active. If you don’t see it on the storefront yet, that’s normal. Visibility depends on device, browser, customer setup, and theme behavior.
After Apple Pay is enabled in the Shopify admin, many store owners expect the button to show everywhere immediately. In reality, Apple Pay appears only in specific locations, and only when Shopify detects an eligible customer and device. Knowing where Apple Pay should appear helps you confirm whether the setup is working correctly.
On product pages, Apple Pay may appear as a dynamic checkout button. This depends on:
If Apple Pay is available, it usually shows near the “Buy Now” or add-to-cart area. Some themes hide wallet buttons by default, so Apple Pay may still be active even if it’s not visible here.
The cart page is one of the most common places for Apple Pay to appear.
If your store uses a slide-out cart drawer, Apple Pay may not appear unless the theme explicitly supports wallet buttons there.
The checkout page is where Apple Pay is most reliable.
If Apple Pay shows on checkout but not on product or cart pages, your setup is still correct.
Apple Pay visibility is customer-specific, not store-wide.
This happens because Shopify checks device type, browser, Apple Wallet setup, and region before showing the button. This selective behavior is expected and does not indicate a setup problem.

One of the most common reasons merchants think Apple Pay is “not working” is that they test it in the wrong environment. Apple Pay on Shopify is strictly device- and browser-dependent, and Shopify hides the option automatically when conditions are not met.
Apple Pay works only on Apple hardware where Apple Wallet is available and active:
If a customer is shopping from an Android, Windows, or Linux device, Apple Pay will never appear, and that is expected behavior.
Browser choice plays a big role in Apple Pay visibility:
This is why Apple Pay often appears on mobile but not during desktop testing.
Even if your store setup is perfect, Apple Pay shows only when the customer:
If any of these conditions fail, Shopify quietly removes the Apple Pay button instead of showing an error.
Most failed tests happen because:
Once these conditions are clear, Apple Pay behavior becomes predictable and easier to validate before moving into the actual setup steps.
Testing Apple Pay incorrectly is one of the biggest reasons merchants assume it’s broken. Since Apple Pay depends on the device, browser, and customer setup, testing must follow the same conditions a real customer would use.
To test Apple Pay properly:
Testing on Chrome, Windows, or Android devices will always fail, even if Apple Pay is enabled correctly.
Apple Pay does not appear on empty carts or restricted products.
If your store has shipping rules, tax settings, or address restrictions, those must be valid for Apple Pay to show.
To avoid affecting live customers:
This helps confirm whether Apple Pay visibility issues are theme-related without risking checkout disruptions.
Many false errors come from:
Once testing is done correctly, Apple Pay behavior becomes consistent and predictable. If the button still doesn’t appear after this step, the issue usually lies in the theme logic, payment provider rules, or regional limitations.

If Apple Pay is enabled but still doesn’t appear on your store, the issue is usually not with Shopify itself. In most cases, it’s caused by theme behavior, payment settings, or customer conditions. Below are the most common problems Shopify merchants face, and how to fix them.
This is the most reported issue.
What to check:
Open your theme settings and confirm that dynamic checkout buttons are enabled on product and cart pages. If you’re using a custom theme or a heavily modified cart, wallet buttons may be hidden by design.
If you don’t see Apple Pay under wallets at all:
What to check:
Confirm that Shopify Payments is active (or that your third-party gateway supports Apple Pay on web) and that at least one card payment method is enabled.
This is expected behavior.
What to check:
Test with multiple devices and locations. Apple Pay visibility is customer-specific, not global.
In some cases, customers can see Apple Pay, but the transaction does not complete.
What to check:
Review failed order logs in Shopify and confirm that your payment provider supports Apple Pay for your selling regions and currencies.
Once these issues are resolved, Apple Pay usually starts appearing consistently across eligible devices. If problems continue even after these checks, the store often needs a deeper review of checkout logic, theme code, or payment provider settings.
Apple Pay works well for most standard Shopify stores, but its behavior changes when you’re running Shopify Plus or a B2B setup. These cases need extra attention because checkout logic, buyer flows, and payment visibility can differ from regular stores.
On Shopify Plus, Apple Pay can be enabled the same way as any other store, but custom checkout logic can affect whether the button appears.
Key things to keep in mind:
If your Plus store uses a customized checkout, Apple Pay may be active but not visible until wallet support is added back into the checkout layout.
For Shopify Plus stores using a headless setup:
In these cases, Apple Pay behavior is not controlled only by the Shopify admin.
Apple Pay behaves differently in B2B environments.
This is expected and does not indicate a setup problem. B2B checkouts often rely on invoice-based or negotiated payment terms, where wallet payments are not always available.
For B2B-focused stores:
Understanding these limitations upfront helps avoid confusion and unnecessary troubleshooting.
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Apple Pay is not limited to one-time purchases. It also works with subscriptions and recurring billing on Shopify, but only when certain conditions are met. This is an area where many stores get confused, especially after enabling Apple Pay and seeing mixed results.
When a customer uses Apple Pay for a subscription:
From the shopper’s side, the experience feels simple and familiar, which helps reduce drop-offs during subscription signups.
For Apple Pay to work with subscriptions:
If any of these conditions are missing, Apple Pay may still show for one-time purchases but not for subscription products.
Common reasons include:
This often leads merchants to think Apple Pay is “partially broken,” when in fact it’s working as designed.
Before promoting Apple Pay for subscriptions:
When set up correctly, Apple Pay can make subscription signups faster and more reliable, especially on mobile.
Setting up Apple Pay looks simple, but in real stores, it often breaks because of theme customizations, cart logic, subscription apps, or region-based payment rules. That’s where CartCoders, a trusted Shopify development company, steps in.
We help Shopify merchants:
Whether you’re launching Apple Pay for the first time or fixing a setup that isn’t converting, our Shopify experts make sure it works the way customers expect, fast, secure, and reliable.
Adding Apple Pay to Shopify is one of the simplest ways to reduce checkout friction when it’s done correctly. The setup itself takes only a few minutes, but visibility and performance depend on meeting the right conditions.
Before going live, make sure you’ve checked the essentials:
Apple Pay is not meant to show for every visitor, and that’s normal. When it appears for the right customers, it shortens checkout time and improves purchase completion, especially on mobile.
If Apple Pay doesn’t show or behaves inconsistently, the issue is usually tied to theme logic, payment configuration, or region-specific rules. Fixing those early helps avoid lost sales and customer confusion.
Once everything is validated, Apple Pay becomes a reliable checkout option that works quietly in the background, letting customers pay faster while your store captures more completed orders.
Yes. You can add Apple Pay to Shopify if your store uses a supported card payment provider, most commonly Shopify Payments, and at least one card payment method is active.
Go to Settings → Payments → Card payment provider → Wallets, turn on Apple Pay, and save. Apple Pay is managed inside your card payment provider, not as a separate payment method.
Apple Pay shows only when all conditions are met. The most common reasons it doesn’t appear are:
– The customer is not using an Apple device
– The browser does not support Apple Pay
– Apple Pay is not set up in the customer’s Wallet
– The theme or cart layout hides wallet buttons
No. Shopify requires at least one credit or debit card payment method to remain active. Apple Pay cannot be used as a standalone checkout option.
Yes, but only if your third-party payment gateway supports Apple Pay on the web and is compatible with Shopify checkout. Many gateways claim support but do not fully support Apple Pay visibility.
Apple Pay availability depends on:
– Your store’s country (based on Shopify Payments support)
– Your customer’s country (Apple Pay availability)
It is widely supported in regions like the US, UK, Canada, Australia, and most of Europe, but not all countries are eligible.
Apple Pay visibility is customer-specific. Shopify checks the customer’s:
– Device type
– Browser
– Apple Wallet setup
– Location
If any requirement fails, Shopify hides the Apple Pay button automatically.
Yes. Apple Pay works on Shopify Plus, but custom checkout logic or checkout extensions can affect where the button appears. Apple Pay may be active but hidden due to customization.
Apple Pay can be enabled at the store level, but accelerated checkout options are limited for B2B buyers. Many B2B customers will not see Apple Pay during checkout, which is expected behavior.
Yes. Apple Pay supports subscriptions when:
– Shopify Payments (or a supported gateway) is used
– The subscription app supports Apple Pay
– The customer and region are eligible
Recurring charges are processed automatically after the first payment.
Yes. Apple Pay uses device-level authentication and tokenized payment data. Actual card numbers are not shared with the store, which adds an extra layer of payment security.
Theme updates can reset or change:
– Dynamic checkout button settings
– Cart layouts or cart drawer behavior
– Custom code that controls wallet visibility
After a theme update, Apple Pay should always be re-tested on a real Apple device.
Yes. Apple Pay reduces checkout time by removing manual form-filling. Customers confirm payments using Face ID or Touch ID, which often leads to faster order completion, especially on mobile.
Yes. Refunds for Apple Pay orders are handled directly from Shopify admin, just like regular card payments. Customers receive refunds back to the original payment method.
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