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Digital Product Business vs. Dropshipping: Which Is Better?

By Dan·August 26, 2026·9 min read
Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you sign up through my links, I may earn a commission — at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I personally use and believe in.

Two years ago I tried dropshipping. I spent about four months on it before moving to digital products.

That decision changed my income trajectory pretty dramatically. Here's the honest comparison from someone who has actually done both.

The Core Difference

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Dropshipping: you sell physical products made and shipped by someone else. You handle the storefront and marketing; they handle inventory and fulfillment.

Digital products: you create files (PDFs, templates, courses, software) that buyers download. No inventory, no shipping, no supplier relationships.

Both are legitimate business models. They're very different in economics and operational complexity.

Startup Costs

Dropshipping:

  • Shopify subscription: $39-$105/month
  • Product testing (buying samples or running ad tests): $200-$500+ for meaningful data
  • Paid traffic (Facebook or Google Ads): typically $500-$2,000/month to find winning products
  • Product photos, store design, apps: $100-$500

Realistic investment to validate a dropshipping product: $1,000-$3,000 before you know if it's working.

Digital products:

  • Platform subscription (MadeThis, Gumroad, etc.): $0-$50/month
  • Creating the product: your time (1-2 weekends for most formats)
  • Canva for design: free tier is sufficient
  • Traffic: SEO-driven (free, slow) or content marketing (free, time investment)

Realistic investment to validate a digital product: $0-$100 and one weekend.

Digital products win on startup cost by a wide margin.

Margins

Dropshipping: After supplier cost, Shopify fees, and transaction fees, margins typically run 15-30% on low-ticket products ($20-$50 price point). Paid ad costs erode this further — a profitable ROAS is hard to sustain, and any algorithm shift or increased competition can destroy margins overnight.

Digital products: After platform fee and payment processing (~3%), margins are typically 95-97%. A $37 PDF guide makes you $35.89 per sale. That's consistent regardless of volume.

Digital products win on margins, and it's not close.

Operations

Dropshipping:

  • Customer service for shipping delays, lost packages, returns
  • Supplier reliability issues — quality control varies, availability can disappear
  • Constant product research to find new winners as others saturate
  • Ad management is a full-time activity if done well

I spent about 2-3 hours per day on operations at my peak dropshipping volume, which wasn't even particularly high.

Digital products:

  • Automated delivery — buyer pays, file delivered automatically
  • No returns (or trivially easy refund process if you use one)
  • Customer service volume is extremely low
  • Operations overhead at scale is maybe 1-2 hours/week

Once a digital product is set up correctly on MadeThis, it sells without intervention. That's not an exaggeration — I have products that generated sales while I was on vacation with my phone off.

Scalability

Dropshipping: Scales primarily with ad spend. To double revenue, you roughly double your ad budget. This creates a cap: if your margins don't support scaled ad spend, your income plateaus.

Digital products: Scales with traffic. Organic traffic (SEO, Pinterest, email list) grows over time without proportional cost increases. A post ranking on Google sells products indefinitely without ongoing spend.

The compound nature of SEO traffic gives digital products a different scalability ceiling.

What I'd Choose Starting Today

Digital products. Clearly.

The startup cost is lower, the margins are dramatically better, the operations are simpler, and the income becomes genuinely passive once SEO traffic kicks in.

The tradeoff: you have to create the product (time investment upfront) and traffic is slower to build with organic methods.

But that upfront time investment is also a moat — once you've created something genuinely useful and it ranks for relevant searches, it's hard to compete away.

For the platform comparison specifically, see /compare/madethis-vs-shopify — I go deep on the fee structures and the operational differences between running a digital product store versus a traditional e-commerce setup.

Also worth reading: /madethis-alternatives if you want to see how MadeThis stacks up against other digital product platforms before picking one.

I sell everything on MadeThis now. No transaction fees, clean product pages, and the AI co-founder helps with copy when I'm stuck. It's the platform I'd choose if I were starting over.

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