What Sky Pilot actually costs over time
Sky Pilot charges $9–99/mo. That sounds manageable month to month — until you run the math. Over a year that comes to $108–$1,188/year. Stretched over five years — a reasonable lifespan for a healthy Shopify store — the total reaches $540–$5,940. None of that money builds equity in your store. None of it makes the software yours. It buys access, and access ends the moment you stop paying.
After a customer buys a digital product, you send them a secure link. Sky Pilot charges $9–99/mo for that plus download limits. Build your own delivery system once and send unlimited files forever.
What a custom digital downloads app actually includes
The assumption most merchants make is that replacing Sky Pilot requires a developer, a long timeline, and a significant budget. That was accurate until AI builders trained on actual Shopify documentation changed the economics. A Shopivibe-generated digital downloads app ships as a complete, deployable application — not a prototype. OAuth, Shopify Billing API, webhook handlers, and App Bridge come built in before you describe a single feature specific to your store.
The comparison table above breaks down exactly what you get. Specifically: Monthly fee, Secure download links, Post-purchase email, Download count limits, License key delivery. These are not paid add-ons or plan upgrades — they're the baseline of every app built through Shopivibe.
When the math tips in favor of building
At $9–99/mo, the payback period on a custom build is typically three to six months — after which every month is margin recovered rather than rent paid. The rule most merchants use: if you've been paying for Sky Pilot for longer than six months and it costs more than $50/month, building your own version is almost always the cheaper option over a two-year window.
Beyond the cost math, there's a strategic case for ownership. Sky Pilot holds your digital downloads data — customer records, transaction history, any accumulated state — in their infrastructure. If a vendor raises prices, gets acquired, or shuts down, migrating that data is painful by design. Owning the code means owning the data, and the ability to extend or change the logic without asking permission or paying for a higher tier.
When to keep paying instead
Not every store should replace Sky Pilot. If you're in the first few months of trading and still validating your product, app costs are a minor variable compared to everything else on your plate. If the app costs under $30/month and works perfectly, the time investment isn't worth it. The decision becomes clear when Sky Pilot is a meaningful recurring line item, when you've hit a plan ceiling, or when you want the digital downloads experience to feel fully native to your brand rather than a vendor widget embedded in your store.
See how Shopivibe pricing works or browse all the apps you can replace to map out what your full replacement stack would look like, or explore all Shopify digital downloads apps.