Most Shopify brands set their post-purchase editing window to something short, maybe 30 minutes or a day. That is plenty for a customer who has spotted a wrong address or forgotten to add an item. For some retailers, a 24-hour window barely scratches the surface of what is needed.
If you are in a business where orders cannot be finalised straight after checkout, you will know exactly what I mean.
The reality for certain product categories
In some industries, customers simply cannot finalise an order the moment they pay. They need days or even weeks before the final product can be shipped. This is not because the brand is slow, it is because the product itself demands a different workflow.
Here are a few examples from real Shopify merchants we have worked with:
Smart ring sizing (14-day requirement)
One health-tech brand ships a sizing kit first, then holds the actual product until the customer chooses their correct ring size. Customers need time to try on the kit and confirm their choice. The brand needs a 14-day editing period, no cancellations during that time, and a few polite automated reminders nudging customers to confirm their size.
Custom printing and design approvals
A print business we work with sees 20 to 25 percent of orders changed after the initial sale. For simple jobs, changes come in a few days later. For bespoke artwork, the wait can be 90 days. Without an extended editing period, the workflow becomes messy very quickly.
Seasonal pre-orders
One food retailer takes a £5 deposit to book a Christmas delivery slot. Customers then have two weeks to add their full order. The key here is holding the original booking order open, attaching the added products to it, and ensuring the delivery date is preserved right through to fulfilment. We can also set a dynamic editing window that closes a set number of days before the delivery date, giving customers maximum flexibility while protecting fulfilment schedules.
Why delayed payment capture is popular, and where it has limits
Many retailers use delayed payment capture because it keeps orders in an editable state until the payment is taken, and it works seamlessly with a lot of warehouse management systems. For brands with quick turnaround times, it is a simple way to allow edits without changing existing workflows.
The main limitation is that Shopify’s default payment authorisation period is seven days. For merchants needing longer editing windows, we recommend using fulfilment holds instead. This allows payment to be captured right away, while keeping the order editable for as long as required.
The smarter approach: using fulfilment holds
Fulfilment holds remove the time limit imposed by delayed payment capture.
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Capture payment straight away so cash flow is not delayed.
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Keep the fulfilment status as “on hold” until the customer’s changes are finalised.
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Release the order when it is ready to ship.
This approach works whether you need an editing period of 14 days, 90 days, or anything in between. You just need to ensure your warehouse management system respects hold statuses and does not pull orders until you release them.
Making the process customer-friendly
Longer editing periods should not mean customers forget to act. Two things make a huge difference:
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Automated reminders – A simple Klaviyo flow can send prompts at key intervals.
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Clear scope of edits – Limit editing to what is relevant. If a customer is waiting on a size kit, they do not need the option to cancel everything.
Done well, it is a better experience for everyone. Customers get the time they need, and you avoid being buried under manual order changes.
Why it matters now
As more Shopify brands move into custom, made-to-order, and seasonal products, the need for longer editing windows will only grow. The brands who get this right will save themselves hundreds of hours in manual admin and create a buying experience that feels like it is built around the customer, not the checkout clock.
If you are hitting the limits of Shopify’s standard editing setup, there are ways to push past them without breaking your fulfilment process. We have seen it work for smart rings, printers, seasonal grocers, and more. The same principles can work for you too.