How Much Does it Cost to Maintain an eCommerce Mobile App in Long-Term?

By Gaurav Parvadiya | Last Updated On September 8th, 2025

You’ve probably heard the old rule. App maintenance costs 15-20% of the original build price each year.

This is an outdated and useless metric. It’s a holdover from a world of clunky, custom-built software.

For a modern eCommerce brand, the real question isn’t what it costs to keep the lights on. The real question is what you must invest to win. Let’s break down the actual numbers. We will reframe this from an unavoidable expense to your most strategic growth investment.

Understanding Your Total Cost of Ownership: The Two Paths  

The cost of your app isn’t what you pay to build it. It’s what you pay to run it.

Every founder must choose a path for their app. Your choice here has massive downstream effects on your budget, your team’s focus, and your ability to adapt. Forget the technical jargon. At its core, this is a simple business decision.

Path A: The Custom Build (The Landlord Model)

This is the path of total control. Whether you hire developers or an agency to build your app from the ground up, you own everything. This sounds appealing. But you are also responsible for everything.

In this process, you become the landlord of a complex digital property. Imagine some instances-

  1. When an Apple iOS update breaks your checkout flow, you are the plumber.
  2. When a new security vulnerability is discovered, you are the security guard.
  3. When the server goes down on Black Friday, you are the emergency electrician.

This model comes with a host of unpredictable costs: 

  • Developer salaries
  • Agency retainers
  • Server fees
  • Security audits and 
  • The constant, draining tax of your own management overhead.

Path B: The No-code app builder (The Premium Retail Space Model)

This is the path of strategic focus. In this method, you partner with a platform that has already built the entire infrastructure. It’s like leasing a pristine, full-service space in a high-end mall.

The foundation, the security, and all the core maintenance are handled by the platform for you. Your cost to build a native app is a predictable, transparent fee. The best part is, your team is not bogged down managing servers or interviewing developers. They are focused on what they do best: marketing and selling your products. 

While the custom build offers infinite control in theory, the no-code model gives you the freedom to focus on growth in practice.

Read More: Shopify App Builder Vs. Custom Development

The Three Buckets of App Investment

Stop thinking about “maintenance costs.” Start funding your “growth budget.”

The term “maintenance” is misleading. It suggests you are simply preserving a static asset, keeping it from falling apart. But a winning mobile app is not an object; it is a dynamic, living sales channel. Treating it anything less than that is to leave money on the table!

Let’s categorize your ongoing spend not as a single, frustrating cost, but as three distinct types of investment. Each one serves a different business purpose.

1. The “Bulletproofing” Investment (Core Stability)

This is your non-negotiable foundation. This capital is allocated to keep your app functioning flawlessly for every user, on every device. It covers critical OS updates from Apple and Google, essential security patches, and fixes any show-stopping bugs that emerge. 

An app that crashes during checkout doesn’t just lose a sale; it erodes trust and loses a customer. But with Twinr no-code app builder, this core stability is the central value proposition baked into your subscription. On a custom build, this is where you face those unexpected, urgent five-figure bills.

2. The “Acceleration” Investment (Feature Evolution)

This is where you pull ahead of the pack. This outlay is for enhancing the user experience and adding new functionality that drives revenue. It could be integrating with a new loyalty provider, launching an augmented reality feature, or refining the checkout flow to reduce friction. 

Customer expectations are never static; your app cannot be either. This budget is what fuels directly. It increases your Average Order Value and Lifetime Value. It ensures your app doesn’t just work, it wins.

3. The “Intelligence” Investment (Data & Analytics)

This is how your organization gets smarter with every user session. This allocation covers the platforms that power your push notifications, user analytics, and A/B testing. 

You cannot grow what you do not measure. Investing in this stack ensures your decisions are driven by hard data, not just intuition. This is the capital that makes your “Acceleration” spend effective instead of speculative. It generates a clear return on every dollar.

A Founder’s Budget: Forecasting Your Real-World Costs

Here’s how to build a budget that your CFO will approve.

Forget vague percentages. A real budget requires understanding the specific cost models. Your choice between a no-code platform and a custom build will have a bigger impact on your long-term spend than any other factor. Let’s look at the numbers.

The No-Code App Builder Model

This path is defined by financial predictability. You are dealing with a simple operational expense that is easy to forecast and manage.

  • Core Platform Fee: Expect a range of a few hundred to a few thousand dollars per month. This single fee typically covers all your “Bulletproofing” investments: hosting, security, OS updates, and critical support. This is the bulk of your expenditure. 
  • Intelligence Stack: As you scale, you will add third-party tools for advanced analytics or messaging. Budget an additional $100 to $500+ per month for these services. This cost grows as your user base and sophistication grow.

The bottom line is a predictable, all-in monthly cost. There are no surprise invoices from developers or emergency server fees. This clarity allows you to budget effectively and tie your investment directly to your revenue growth.

The Custom Build Model

This path is defined by financial volatility. It requires you to manage multiple, unpredictable cost centers and significant human capital.

  • Developer Retainer or Salaries: This is your largest and most unpredictable line item. A part-time freelance developer or a small agency retainer can range from $5,000 to over $20,000 per month. This often just covers basic “Bulletproofing,” not the strategic “Acceleration” investments. 
  • Infrastructure & Hosting: You are now responsible for your own servers and content delivery networks. This can add another $200 to $2,000+ per month, depending on your traffic. 
  • The Emergency Fund: This is critical. You must budget for the unexpected. A single critical bug or a major OS update can require thousands of dollars in unplanned development work. Failing to budget for this is a catastrophic risk.

The bottom line here is a financial black box. You are managing a heavy payroll, variable infrastructure bills, and the constant threat of unforeseen expenses. This model makes accurate financial planning nearly impossible.

Maintenance Isn’t an Expense. It’s Momentum.

An app is not a project; it is a product. And products that are not consistently invested in die. They become slow, buggy, and irrelevant as customers flock to superior experiences.

Viewing ongoing app costs as a strategic investment-instead of a burdensome cost center, is the defining trait of brands that scale profitably. That budget is not an insurance policy against crashes. It is the fuel for your most powerful owned channel.

The difference between a liability and a weapon is clarity. Understanding your exact costs and the clear path to a positive return is the first step.

Ready to see what a predictable, high-ROI app investment looks like for your brand? Schedule a demo with Twinr today.

Gaurav Parvadiya

Gaurav is the founder and CEO of Twinr, a tech entrepreneur with a decade of experience and a passion for SaaS. With a Master's degree in Computer Science, he specializes in no-code development, driving innovation in the mobile app industry. When he's not busy growing the company, you'll find him writing about tech, growth, software development, e-commerce, and occasionally sneaking in a game of badminton.