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Shrigo Alternative for Nepali Stores: Saauzi's Online Store + POS in One Platform

Shrigo Alternative for Nepali Stores: Saauzi's Online Store + POS in One Platform

If you searched for a Shrigo alternative, you are probably running a shop in Nepal and weighing your options before you commit. Maybe you already sell on Instagram and Facebook, take orders on Viber, and ring up walk-in customers at the counter with a calculator and a khata. You want one system that handles all of it — an online store, a point of sale, and payments that Nepali customers actually use. This post compares Shrigo with Saauzi honestly, so you can pick the right fit for your store, your VAT obligations, and your Dashain rush.

What Shrigo does well

Let us be fair first. Shrigo is a known name for getting a Nepali online store live quickly. If your main goal is a clean web storefront with a product catalogue, a cart, and order management, it covers those basics and is familiar to many local merchants. For a seller whose business is purely online — no physical counter, no walk-in traffic — a focused e-commerce builder can be enough to get going.

So if you only ever sell online and never deal with in-person customers, you may not need anything more. But most Nepali SMBs are not in that situation. The boutique in New Road, the electronics shop in Pokhara, the momo restaurant in Lalitpur — they sell both online and over the counter. That is exactly where a single-channel tool starts to hurt.

Why a Shrigo alternative matters: online and in-store are not separate businesses

Here is the real problem with running your web store and your physical shop as two disconnected systems. When a customer buys the last pair of shoes online, your counter staff have no idea — until someone tries to sell that same pair in person. You end up overselling, cancelling orders, and refunding through eSewa or Khalti, which damages trust. At month-end, you are stitching together online sales, counter sales, and a notebook to file your VAT return with the IRD.

A true Shrigo alternative should not just be a different storefront. It should remove the gap between your website and your till. That is the core difference with Saauzi: your online store and your POS share one product list, one stock count, and one set of reports. Sell a unit anywhere, and stock drops everywhere, instantly.

One stock count across every channel

With Saauzi, a sale at the counter and a sale on your website draw from the same inventory. No double-entry, no end-of-day reconciliation between two apps, no embarrassing "sorry, it is actually out of stock" message after the customer has already paid through FonePay.

POS built for how Nepali shops and restaurants actually run

A storefront-only tool leaves your physical counter unsolved. Saauzi includes a real POS, so the same platform that takes your online orders also rings up walk-in sales. For a retail shop that means fast barcode-style checkout and on-the-spot receipts. For a restaurant or café it means table or token-based ordering and a kitchen-ready order flow — the in-person side of your business that a pure online builder simply does not touch.

Local payments: the part that decides whether you get paid

In Nepal, the checkout step is where stores lose customers. People want to pay the way they already pay everywhere else. Saauzi is built around the methods Nepali buyers trust:

Offering eSewa, Khalti, and FonePay alongside COD on the same order — whether it came from your website or your counter — means fewer abandoned carts and fewer "I will pay later" promises that never arrive. Everything lands in one NPR sales record.

Tax, delivery, and the Nepali calendar

Selling in Nepal is not just about taking money. A few local realities decide whether a platform actually saves you time:

An honest summary of the trade-off

If your business is online-only and you never plan to sell over a counter, a focused storefront builder like Shrigo can do the job, and there is nothing wrong with choosing the simpler tool for a simpler need. But if you sell in person and online — which describes most shops, boutiques, and eateries in Nepal — running two disconnected systems quietly costs you in oversells, manual reconciliation, and messy VAT filing. That is the gap Saauzi is designed to close: one no-code platform for your online store, your POS, and local payments, with a single stock count and one set of reports in NPR.

Your takeaway

Before you pick any platform, ask one question: do my online and in-store sales live in the same place? If the answer is no, every busy day — especially during Dashain and Tihar — is going to create work you should not have to do. Choose a system where a sale anywhere updates stock everywhere, accepts eSewa, Khalti, FonePay and COD out of the box, and produces VAT-ready records you can hand to your accountant without re-typing anything.

If that sounds like what your shop needs, you can build your store, set up your POS, and turn on local payments with Saauzi — no code required. Start your store on Saauzi at saauzi.com and run online and in-store selling from one platform.

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