We are the most popular brand for Giveaways, WordPress Plugins & WordPress Themes.
Request Themes & Plugins or Get New Updates
Can’t find your favorite WordPress item? Submit a request above, and we’ll add it to our repository!
Important: Extract Before Uploading
After downloading a file from our website, unzip it first. The main zip file may contain additional folders like templates, documentation, or other resources. Ensure you upload the correct file to avoid errors.
How to Install Plugins
How to Install Themes
Request Themes & Plugins or Get New Updates
Can’t find your favorite WordPress item? Submit a request, and we’ll add it to our repository!
Buy Latest Version & Future updates
₹500.00
₹250.00
Join Our Membership to Access All Products
Download this and 12000+ Plugins & Themes as a premium member for only $7.99.
Fixed prices work until they don’t. The moment you sell anything measured, cut, mixed, or configured, the “simple product” price field stops being a price and becomes a placeholder that you keep overriding with notes, manual invoices, or custom quotes.
Price by Formula Calculator for WooCommerce is built for that gap. Instead of forcing every variant into a separate SKU, it lets the final price be calculated from inputs like length, width, height, area, volume, weight, or other numeric fields you define.
I first reached for it on a store where the product wasn’t “one item”. It was “this material, in your dimensions, with a minimum charge, plus an optional finishing fee”. We tried attributes and variations. We tried “name your price” style add-ons. The cart still needed a real formula, and it needed to be consistent across products.
The core win is repeatable pricing logic. You define a formula once, apply it to products, and WooCommerce calculates the price based on customer input.
In practice, this is what you can model cleanly:
Where people overestimate it is expecting it to replace a full product configurator. If your pricing depends on complex option trees, live inventory per component, or conditional compatibility rules, you may still need a dedicated configurator. This plugin is strongest when the “math” is the hard part, not the configuration UI.
Stores using manual quoting usually share the same friction: customers can’t self-serve, and staff spend time validating dimensions, re-keying numbers, and correcting inconsistent pricing. Formula pricing turns that into a repeatable workflow.
We saw the biggest time savings when we standardized three things:
Once those were consistent, support tickets dropped. Not to zero, but enough that the plugin paid for itself in fewer “can you quote this?” emails.
Most “the calculator is broken” reports are actually unit and rounding problems. I’ve broken totals myself by assuming the store’s unit settings would carry through to the input labels. They do not always. You need to treat units as part of the UI, not just part of the formula.
Common failure points I’ve seen on live sites:
The fix usually involves simplifying the formula first, validating it with test values, then reintroducing minimums and fees one at a time. When we did this, we also documented three “known good” test cases per product type so future edits could be verified quickly.
On a small catalog, you can afford to tweak formulas product by product. On a large catalog, the real question is whether you can keep pricing consistent across dozens or hundreds of products.
Price by Formula Calculator for WooCommerce scales best when you standardize around templates. We grouped products by pricing model (linear, area, volume) and reused the same structure. That reduced the chance of a single product drifting into a slightly different rounding rule and creating edge-case disputes at checkout.
On performance, the calculation itself is not usually the bottleneck. The heavier issues tend to come from front-end scripts, page builder layouts, and extra add-on plugins all competing to update totals. If you are running aggressive caching, test that dynamic price updates still behave correctly for logged-out users.
If you are handling a Price by Formula Calculator for WooCommerce download as a ZIP, the goal is a predictable install with minimal downtime. This is the process we use when the store is already taking orders.
Clone the site to a staging environment and run the install there. Formula pricing touches cart totals, so you want to test checkout end-to-end before customers see it.
In WordPress, go to Plugins, Add New, Upload Plugin. Upload the ZIP, install, then activate. If you are updating an existing version, keep a backup so you can roll back quickly.
Confirm the store currency, decimal settings, and tax display settings. Then test one product with a simple formula and known inputs. We always test both the product page and the cart, since some issues only show up after add-to-cart.
Pick one product type, configure the fields, constraints, rounding, and minimums. Validate with three test cases. Only then copy the approach across similar products.
Temporarily disable front-end optimization and minification if totals do not update live. If your theme replaces quantity inputs or uses custom AJAX add-to-cart, test those flows specifically.
WooCommerce variations are great when the price changes by discrete options. They are a poor fit when the price changes by continuous inputs like “1.37 m” or “2.6 m²”. You end up with hundreds of variations or a messy set of “closest match” options that customers don’t trust.
If your pricing can be expressed as a small set of fixed bundles, stick with variations. They are simpler, easier to report on, and less likely to confuse customers. Formula pricing is worth it when your production reality is measured, not chosen.
Yes, and you should. In real stores, this is the difference between a usable calculator and a support nightmare. Set minimums that match your production limits and maximums that match shipping or material constraints.
In most setups it can, but live updates depend on your theme and any optimization scripts. If the total only updates after add-to-cart, the first thing we check is minification, deferred scripts, and theme input handlers.
Make units explicit next to each field and avoid relying on “everyone knows it’s mm”. We also add example text like “Enter width in cm (e.g., 120)” and validate with min/max ranges that make sense for that unit.
It generally plays well because the end result is still a WooCommerce price. The important part is testing tax-inclusive and tax-exclusive display modes and confirming the calculated price is what gets taxed, not a base price.
It is designed to produce a purchasable price. If you want “calculate only” without checkout, you may need additional configuration or a separate quoting workflow. Many stores still prefer checkout because it reduces back-and-forth.
Test the same product with three input combinations: a minimum value case, a typical order, and a maximum edge case. Then test add-to-cart, cart quantity changes, checkout, and the order confirmation email to ensure the calculated price carries through.
Geotoko is a trusted GPL website for WordPress themes, plugins, Shopify templates, and free giveaways. Download original, secure GPL files with lifetime updates.
All products on Geotoko are fully licensed under the GNU General Public License (GPL) and are independently reviewed for safety and quality.