Some purchase decisions depend on more than product details alone.
A customer may want to know whether a product is available at a specific branch, where that branch is located, or when it is open. If that information sits too far away from the product page, the decision becomes less convenient than it should be.
That is where local availability starts creating friction instead of confidence.
The real problem is not that a shop has physical locations. It is that the product page often gives customers no clear place to connect the product with the right branch.
Why that becomes a product-page problem
Customers should not have to leave the product page just to understand where they can get the item.
If store location and opening-hours information are disconnected from the product itself, users have to search elsewhere for something that may directly affect the purchase decision. That is especially weak when availability differs by product or by branch.
That often leads to the same pattern:
- branch-related product information is harder to find than it should be
- customers leave the detail page too early
- local availability feels less clear than it should
- the page gives too little support for store-based decisions
This is not only a location issue. It is a usability issue on the product page.
Why standard Shopware often falls short here
A standard Shopware store can display product information clearly. But that does not automatically mean the detail page connects a product with one or more store locations in a structured way.
That is the gap.
The customer is already on the product page.
The store location matters for the decision.
But the page still keeps that information too far away.
For shops with branch-based availability or local store logic, that is often too limited.
How this Shopware 6 plugin solves that problem
This Shopware 6 plugin adds a separate tab on the product detail page for store-location information. The current page describes a Google Map iframe, display of business locations on all product detail pages, multiple locations on specific products, and business-hours visibility inside that tab. It also gives the example that one product can show one location while another product can show a different one.
That changes how location-dependent product information is handled.
Instead of leaving branch details outside the buying flow, the shop can place them directly where the product is already being evaluated. That makes it easier for customers to understand where the item is available and whether a relevant location fits their needs.
This is especially useful for shops with multiple branches, location-dependent product availability, or stronger in-store buying relevance. If your store-location logic needs to go beyond a standard extension, this can also be expanded through Shopware integration or custom Shopware plugin development.
Why location context matters before the customer leaves the page
Customers do not always decide based only on product specs or price. Sometimes the relevant question is where they can get the product and when.
If that answer is visible on the product page, the next step becomes easier. If the information sits outside the page, the product decision creates more effort than it should.
This will not matter equally for every shop. But where physical locations are part of the purchase journey, a clearer location tab can make the product page more useful and more practical.
Request the plugin
This plugin is not listed in the Shopware Store. If you want to use it for Shopware 6, contact BrandCrock directly. The current page also asks users to contact BrandCrock for support related to the plugin.
Why some Shopware 6 product pages need store-location context
If customers have to leave the detail page just to find the right branch or opening hours, the page creates more friction than it should.
That is the problem this Shopware 6 plugin solves. It adds store-location information in a dedicated product-page tab, so branch context stays closer to the buying decision.