A 4-way head-to-head on the returns platforms ecommerce brands actually shortlist. Real 2026 pricing, exchange-conversion features, drop-off network value, ownership history that matters for roadmap risk, and a decision framework built around return volume and category.
Exchange-first platforms (Loop) design the customer flow to push exchanges and store credit before refunds. Refund-first platforms make refunds the default and add exchange options. The architectural choice changes exchange conversion rates by 20–35 percentage points.
For apparel and shoes specifically, yes — drop-off cuts return friction enough to increase exchange rates by 10–20 points. For categories where customers expect to drop in a label and use a carrier pickup, the network is overkill and you're paying for infrastructure you don't need.
Yes, more than people admit. Returnly's product roadmap visibly slowed after Affirm acquired them in 2021. Happy Returns just moved from PayPal to UPS in 2024 — TBD on long-term integration direction. Ownership stability is a real roadmap-risk variable in this category.
Standalone works fine — Returns Center is sold as its own product. But the unit economics get attractive when you bundle Returns + Tracking + EDD (estimated delivery date) because Aftership shares the customer record across all three. Most brands using one Aftership product end up using two or three.
Brands switching from a generic returns app (or no platform) to Loop typically report exchange conversion going from 12–18% to 35–55%. That's the math: a 23-point increase on $500K of annual returns = ~$115K in retained revenue. Pays for the platform 30–50×.
Free returns are no longer table stakes — they cost too much. The 2026 winning model is free exchanges (which retain revenue), free returns within a small window (14–30 days), and paid returns outside that window. Loop and Returnly both support this gradient natively.
Returns are the single largest controllable cost in DTC ecommerce. Industry average return rates run 17–22% for general DTC and 25–35% for apparel — and the all-in cost per return (label + processing + restocking) lands at $8–$15. For a $5M apparel brand, that's roughly $300K–$500K/year in return costs alone, before counting refunded revenue.
The platform you run returns on doesn't reduce your return rate. What it does is determine how many of those returns convert to exchanges or store credit instead of refunds — which is the metric that actually moves the P&L. The four platforms in this comparison are the ones serious ecom brands shortlist when they decide returns deserve a dedicated tool.
This comparison is built around 2026 pricing, the architectural choices that drive exchange conversion (the metric that matters), the ownership-history risks that affect product roadmap, and the operational realities of running returns at $1M, $5M, and $20M+ scale.
The clearest way to position the four is by their core model. Three of them are returns platforms with different architectures. One (Aftership) is a tracking platform that added returns. That architectural difference shows up in feature depth and pricing.
| Platform | Core thesis | Optimizes for | Sacrifices |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loop Returns | Exchange-first returns for Shopify DTC | Exchange conversion, store credit, customer flow design | Higher pricing, less for low-volume brands |
| Returnly | Instant refund credit before return ships | Customer satisfaction, BNPL-adjacent integrations | Roadmap pace post-Affirm acquisition |
| Happy Returns | Physical drop-off network for box-free returns | Apparel/shoes, return friction reduction | Custom-quote pricing, overkill for non-physical categories |
| Aftership Returns | Returns inside a tracking/post-purchase suite | Bundled pricing, unified customer record | Returns-specific depth vs Loop |
Generic returns apps and no-platform brands convert 12–18% of returns to exchanges. Specialized platforms convert 35–55%. The 20–40 percentage point swing on a brand doing $500K of annual returns is $100K–$200K in retained revenue. Compared to that, $1,500/year platform fee differences are noise.
Loop Returns is the category-defining returns platform for Shopify ecommerce. Founded in 2017 specifically as a Shopify-native build, it's now installed on 3,500+ brands and processes billions in returns volume annually. The core thesis: refunds are a failure state, exchanges and store credit are the success state. Every UX decision in the platform reinforces that.
The architectural difference shows up in numbers. When a customer initiates a return on Loop, they see exchange options first (size swap, color swap, similar product) before they ever see a refund option. Store credit is presented with a bonus incentive (typically +10–15%). Refund is the last option, not the default. This single design choice is why Loop brands consistently report 35–55% exchange conversion — vs 12–18% for brands using generic returns apps.
Loop's pricing is mid-to-high for the category. The Essential tier starts at $155/month and the Plus tier (with more advanced features like bonus credit, instant exchanges, and workflow automation) runs $500–$800/month. For brands above $50K/month in return volume, the math is almost always positive. For brands below that, simpler/cheaper options often win on TCO.
Returnly was the first returns platform to ship Instant Refunds — the feature where customers get refund credit instantly, before they've shipped the return back. The customer is credited the refund amount (which they can spend on new product immediately), and Returnly takes on the float and chargeback risk until the physical return arrives. For high-CSAT, premium-positioned brands, the feature is genuinely differentiated.
Affirm acquired Returnly in 2021 for $300M, ostensibly to bolt returns into the Affirm BNPL flow. Five years later, the strategic logic still isn't entirely clear to the market, and Returnly's product roadmap has visibly slowed compared to Loop's pace. The platform remains solid and operationally stable, but it's not advancing the way Loop is. For most brands, that translates to "fine if you're on it, not the obvious choice for new brands."
The pricing is mid-range. Starter tier at $295/month is more expensive than Loop's entry but cheaper than Loop's mid-tier. For brands prioritizing Instant Refunds specifically, Returnly still has a real edge — Loop's instant exchange is similar in spirit but only works for exchanges, not for refunds.
Happy Returns is the only platform in this comparison with a physical infrastructure differentiator. Their Return Bar network — 12,000+ physical drop-off locations across the US (Staples, Ulta, and select retail partners) — lets customers walk in with a product, scan a QR code, and complete the return without a box, label, or shipping step. For categories with high return rates (apparel: 25–35%, shoes: 30–40%), removing that friction has a measurable impact on exchange conversion.
The ownership history matters more than usual. PayPal acquired Happy Returns in 2021 for ~$465M to bolt return management into the PayPal commerce stack. In November 2023, PayPal announced they were divesting it, and in early 2024 UPS acquired Happy Returns to integrate the Return Bar network with UPS's existing logistics network. Five months in, the strategic direction is clearer (logistics + returns) but the product-pace impact is TBD.
Pricing for Happy Returns is custom-quote, which generally means it's not the cheap option. The math typically works at $5M+ annual revenue where the network's friction-reduction value exceeds the platform premium. For sub-$5M brands, Loop with a strong exchange flow is usually more cost-efficient even without the physical network.
Aftership Returns is the returns product inside the larger Aftership post-purchase suite. The parent platform (Aftership Tracking) has been the dominant shipment-tracking product for ecommerce since 2014 — 17K+ brands installed, 8+ billion shipments tracked. They launched Returns Center in 2020 specifically to capture brands already on Aftership Tracking who wanted to consolidate.
The honest assessment: as a standalone returns platform, Aftership Returns is good-not-great. It does the basics well (return portal, exchange options, label generation, restock automation) but lacks the depth of Loop's exchange-conversion features (bonus credit, instant exchanges, advanced workflow rules). Where it wins is the bundle. If you're already running Aftership Tracking and want a unified customer record across "where's my order" tracking, post-purchase email automation, EDD, and returns — Aftership becomes the value play.
Pricing is the biggest advantage. Returns Center starts at $23/month for low volume — orders of magnitude cheaper than Loop, Returnly, or Happy Returns. For brands processing under 100 returns/month, Aftership is the obvious choice unless they specifically need Loop's exchange-conversion lift.
Returns platform pricing diverges sharply with volume. The table below shows realistic monthly cost at different return volumes — which is how to actually compare them.
| Returns / mo | Loop | Returnly | Happy Returns | Aftership |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 returns | $155 | $295 | ~$500 | $23 |
| 250 returns | $155 | $295 | ~$500 | $119 |
| 500 returns | $355 | $295 | ~$700 | $239 |
| 1,500 returns | $500+ | $595 | Custom | $399+ |
| 5,000 returns | $800+ | Custom | Custom | $899+ |
| 10,000+ returns | Custom | Custom | Custom | Custom |
At 200 returns/month with $80 average return value, you're processing $16K/month in returns. A 20-point exchange conversion improvement (from 15% to 35%) is $3,200/month retained as exchanges or store credit. Loop's $155 premium pays back 20×. Aftership wins below this threshold; Loop or Returnly wins above it.
The single most important question for a returns platform: how does each one actually convert returns to exchanges or store credit? Here's the feature-by-feature breakdown.
| Feature | Loop | Returnly | Happy Returns | Aftership |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exchange-first customer flow | Yes (default) | Optional | Yes | Optional |
| Bonus credit (extra % for store credit) | Yes (configurable) | Limited | Limited | No |
| Instant exchange (ship new before old) | Yes | Yes (refund) | Yes | No |
| Variant/size swap recommendations | Yes (AI) | Yes (basic) | Yes (basic) | Limited |
| Cross-sell during return flow | Yes | Yes | Yes | Limited |
| Workflow rules / advanced routing | Yes (Workflow Studio) | Yes | Limited | Limited |
| Refund-to-store-credit toggle | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Cancel/edit during return window | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Avg exchange conversion (industry data) | 35–55% | 25–40% | 30–45% | 15–30% |
The four platforms differ significantly in how customers can physically return items. This is more important than people realize — friction at this step kills exchange conversion.
| Return Method | Loop | Returnly | Happy Returns | Aftership |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prepaid label (mail-back) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| QR-code label (printerless) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Physical drop-off network | Limited (partner) | Limited (partner) | 12K+ Bars (best) | UPS Store partner |
| Box-free returns | Via partner | Via partner | Yes (native) | Via UPS partnership |
| Carrier coverage (US) | UPS, USPS, FedEx | UPS, USPS, FedEx | UPS (deep) | All major + intl |
| International returns | Yes (growing) | Yes (mature) | Limited | Best global coverage |
| Instant refund credit | Limited | Yes (flagship) | Limited | No |
| Custom return windows by category | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Highest exchange conversion in category (35–55%). Independent ownership means no roadmap risk. The pricing premium pays back many multiples through retained revenue. Most defensible single-platform choice for serious Shopify ecom in 2026.
12,000+ physical Return Bar network removes the biggest friction point in apparel returns (boxing and shipping). UPS ownership means deeper logistics integration ahead. For high-return-rate categories, the physical network ROI usually justifies the premium.
Cheapest entry point of the four. Unified customer record if you're already on Aftership Tracking. The exchange-conversion gap vs Loop only starts mattering above 200 returns/month — below that, the savings outweigh the lost conversion.
Instant Refunds (credit available before return ships) is still genuinely differentiated. Best for premium-positioned brands where the CSAT improvement is worth the float risk. Accept that roadmap pace has slowed post-Affirm acquisition.
Returns platform migrations are operationally easier than email or subscription migrations — but they're not trivial. Here's the realistic picture.
Active return windows. The biggest constraint: customers who initiated a return on the old platform may have 30+ days to actually ship it back. You can't decommission the old platform until those windows close. Plan for a 45–60 day parallel run where both platforms are active and active returns finish on the originating platform.
Carrier rate negotiations. If your old platform negotiated carrier rates for you, those don't transfer. New platform will negotiate their own. The blended return shipping cost can change by 10–20% during migration. Verify the new platform's rates before signing.
Email and SMS notifications. Customer-facing return emails (return initiated, label generated, refund processed) are managed by the returns platform. Migrate template copy + branding to the new platform before cutover. This is often where brands get caught — generic "thanks for your return" emails on the new platform feel jarring after months of brand-styled notifications.
The temporary conversion drop is normal — customers are confused by changed UX, agents are learning the new platform, and edge cases get fumbled. Recover by day 60 if you've done migration well. Plan for it; don't try to "switch overnight."
The ROI for a returns platform isn't measured in platform fee savings. It's measured in retained revenue from converting refunds into exchanges and store credit. The math runs like this for a $5M brand with 20% return rate and $80 average return value.
| Platform | Annual cost | Est. exchange conversion | Retained revenue/yr |
|---|---|---|---|
| Loop Returns | $4,260 | ~45% | $450,000 |
| Returnly | $7,140 | ~33% | $330,000 |
| Happy Returns | ~$8,400 | ~38% | $380,000 |
| Aftership Returns | $1,428 | ~22% | $220,000 |
| No platform (Shopify default) | $0 | ~12% | $120,000 |
The gap between Loop and Aftership is $230K/year in retained revenue. The gap between Loop and "no platform" is $330K/year. At those numbers, the platform-fee differences become a rounding error. Pick the platform that maximizes your exchange conversion for your category — not the cheapest one.
Brands using Shopify's default return flow (or a generic returns app) typically see 12–18% exchange conversion. Switching to Loop and configuring the exchange-first flow properly typically moves that to 35–55% over 60–90 days. The 20–40 percentage-point lift is the most replicated outcome in the returns platform category.
Some, but Returnly absorbs most of it. They underwrite the float risk and use machine learning to detect fraud signals (customer behavior, return patterns, account history). Brands typically see negligible fraud increase enabling Instant Refunds, though the platform reserves the right to disable it for individual customers or product categories with elevated risk.
Net positive long-term, ambiguous short-term. UPS has stronger strategic reasons to invest in Happy Returns than PayPal did — the Return Bar network materially benefits UPS's logistics economics. But the integration is still early, and any acquisition introduces 12–18 months of product-pace uncertainty.
Loop has the deepest Klaviyo integration: native events for "return initiated," "exchange completed," "refund issued," and "store credit issued," which power flow triggers. Returnly and Happy Returns have native Klaviyo integrations covering most events. Aftership integrates via the broader Aftership-Klaviyo connection. All four work — the difference is event granularity. For more, see our email platform comparison.
Free returns are no longer table stakes — they're too expensive. The 2026 winning model: free exchanges (always, because they retain revenue), free returns within a tight window (14–30 days), paid returns outside that window. Loop, Returnly, and Happy Returns all support this gradient natively. The model reduces return cost ~30–40% versus blanket free returns without measurable impact on customer satisfaction.
Loop is Shopify-only. Returnly and Aftership both support multiple platforms (BigCommerce, WooCommerce, custom). Happy Returns supports multiple platforms via API. For non-Shopify ecom, Returnly historically wins; Aftership is the cheaper alternative. Loop's Shopify-only positioning is a deliberate moat — they go deep on one platform rather than wide on many.
For products over $200 AOV, configure stricter return windows, require photo proof of condition, and route to manual review before approving the return. Loop's Workflow Studio handles this well. The categories where this matters most: jewelry, luxury goods, high-end electronics, custom products. Don't run blanket return policies across product types.
General DTC: 15–20% is healthy, above 25% suggests product/expectation issues. Apparel: 25–35% is normal, above 40% suggests sizing issues. Shoes: 30–40% is normal. Furniture: 5–10% is normal due to shipping cost. Electronics: 10–15%. Track returns as percentage of orders, not percentage of revenue — they distort each other.
Yes, materially. Loop's AI recommendations during the return flow (suggesting a different size or color based on customer behavior + similar customer patterns) increase exchange conversion by an additional 8–12 percentage points. The feature has matured significantly in 2024–2026 — early implementations were generic; current versions use customer-specific behavioral signals.
Aftership has the deepest international coverage (strong global carrier network from their tracking parent). Returnly is the next strongest internationally. Loop is growing international support but is still Shopify-Markets-dependent. Happy Returns is US-focused. For brands with 30%+ international order share, Aftership or Returnly is usually the better fit.
Healthy ratios run 1–3% of annual returns volume. For a brand processing $500K/year in returns: $5K–$15K/year platform spend is reasonable. Below 1%, you're probably under-investing. Above 4%, you're paying for features you don't use. Track this ratio annually as your volume scales.
For Shopify-first DTC brands above $1M revenue: Loop Returns. Highest exchange conversion in the category, independent ownership (no roadmap risk), deep Shopify integration. For apparel/shoe brands specifically: Happy Returns. The physical drop-off network is genuinely differentiated and the UPS ownership has clearer strategic logic than PayPal's did. Both are defensible bets on platforms actively investing in product.
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