In short: Shopware 6.7.9.0 (April 16, 2026) is a release with a clear priority list: the withdrawal button is mandatory homework with a deadline, JSON-LD behind a feature flag is the underrated SEO win, product bundles (Evolve and up) and Copilot chat history are useful for their respective audiences - and the Agentic Commerce sales channel was postponed to 6.7.10. Here is my relevance check instead of a plain feature list.
Mandatory: the withdrawal button
The most important feature first, because it is the only one with a legal deadline: from June 19, 2026, B2C shops selling to Germany must offer an electronic withdrawal path. 6.7.9 ships the native withdrawal form via Shopping Experiences - including a backport to 6.6. Why this is more work than "activate the form" is covered in detail in my withdrawal button article. If you take only one topic from this release: this one.
The underrated win: JSON-LD behind a feature flag
Almost under the radar: 6.7.9 adds support for structured data in JSON-LD format, activatable via feature flag. Until now the storefront delivered microdata - JSON-LD is the format Google prefers and AI systems parse far more reliably.
My take: for shops that depend on visibility (i.e., all of them), this is the actual insider tip of the release. Feature flags do mean "test at your own responsibility" - but that is exactly what staging environments are for. If you want to be positioned cleanly for search engines and AI search, evaluate the flag instead of waiting for default activation.
Useful, with a target audience: bundles, Copilot, CAD conversion
- Product bundles (Evolve plan and up): curated product sets natively instead of third-party plugins. If you run a bundle plugin with maintenance pains today, you have a migration candidate. CE users are left out - bundles remain plugin territory there.
- Copilot chat history (Shopware Intelligence): previous conversations are now accessible in the interface. Sounds small, but it is what makes the assistant actually usable day-to-day - context is everything with AI tools.
- CAD to 3D conversion: CAD files become web-ready .glb models (free once per month, unlimited with Intelligence+ or commercial plans). Niche - but a real differentiator for manufacturers with technical products.
- ZUGFeRD for cancellations and credit notes: compliant electronic documents now also for post-order scenarios. Unspectacular, but relevant for your customers' accounting - and it fits the e-invoicing trend.
Important for CE users: GMV collection gets automated
From 6.7.9 the GMV reporting tool is installed automatically for Community Edition shops (with GTC v3.2+ accepted). This is the technical consequence of the Fair Usage Policy: Shopware no longer relies on self-reporting. If you are anywhere near the 1 million € threshold, address the topic actively now - I described how the collection works in my fair usage article.
Future talk: Nexus beta and the postponed Agentic Commerce channel
Shopware Nexus starts as beta - a visual, event-driven layer for workflows and integrations between Shopware and external systems. The idea is good (integrations are the most expensive construction site in almost every project), but beta means beta: look at it, yes; plan production on it, no.
The announced Agentic Commerce sales channel for AI product feeds was postponed to 6.7.10, as was Open Graph data management. No drama - but a good reminder to move roadmap announcements into project plans only once they actually ship.
My conclusion
6.7.9 is a release with an unusually clear order of action: first, implement the withdrawal button (deadline!). Second, test JSON-LD on staging. Third, check whether bundles can replace an existing plugin. Everything else is a watch list. And as always: a release you never apply has zero features.