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Kitgy is an operations back office for makers, finishers, and small manufacturers, especially teams selling across channels such as Shopify, Etsy, eBay, Wix, BigCommerce, WooCommerce, and Squarespace. It aims to replace the patchwork of “CRM + spreadsheets + ecommerce admin panels” by unifying products, orders, BOMs, work orders, inventory, and shipping.
Manufacturing is its main focus: it supports multi-step BOMs, material inputs/outputs at each step, workstation assignment, automatic work order creation from sales orders, material reservation, and a Buildability check that shows “how many more units can be produced with current materials.” After orders are imported, products can be matched by SKU, and fulfillment orchestration determines whether to ship from inventory or generate a work order. On the inventory side, it supports raw materials, components, sub-assemblies, batches, reorder points, purchase order drafts, and audit trails. For multichannel selling, the text explicitly lists native two-way integrations with Shopify, Etsy, eBay, BigCommerce, Wix, Squarespace, WooCommerce, and more, while Amazon SP-API is still in development. Shipping supports EasyPost and ShipStation, and merchants can also continue using each channel’s native shipping workflow.
Pricing is very straightforward: a 30-day free trial with no credit card required, including 1 user, 1GB storage, all features, all integrations, and email support. The paid base plan is $15/month and includes 1 user and 1GB storage; additional users cost $5/month per user, and additional storage costs $10/month per GB. The text emphasizes that there is no hidden enterprise tier, and that all features and integrations are available on every plan.
Its strengths are its clear vertical focus: it understands both ecommerce orders and manufacturing workflows, making it particularly suitable for small teams that need BOMs, raw material consumption tracking, workstation management, and replenishment. Pricing is low, and scaling rules are simple. The downsides are that key information such as permission roles, data security and compliance, backups, encryption, and service levels is not disclosed. API capabilities are only mentioned in passing, with limited detail on developer support. The Shipping module is also described by the company as workflow-dependent, meaning not every merchant will necessarily need it.
Kitgy is suitable for overseas ecommerce teams that sell across multiple channels and handle their own production or small-batch manufacturing. It is less suitable for large enterprises that only need simple inventory management, or that require complex ERP/MES, finance, and compliance systems. The text does not specify access conditions from China, nor does it disclose the payment channels used for subscriptions. Teams based in China should test network connectivity, access to external platforms such as Shopify/Etsy/eBay, and USD subscription payment in practice. Comparable alternatives include Katana, MRPeasy, Cin7, Odoo, and Zoho Inventory.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on kitgy.com official site.
kitgy.com is an Unknown SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach kitgy.com directly.