Tell shoppers exactly when it will arrive

Show a clear “arrives Tue, 8 Jul” estimate on every product page — with an optional “order within 2h 14m” countdown that turns hesitation into checkout.

Works with any WooCommerce theme · Product pages · 30-day guarantee

“When will it get here?” decides the sale

Uncertainty about delivery is one of the most common reasons shoppers hesitate — especially for gifts, events, and anything time-sensitive. A clear arrival date answers the question before they have to ask it, and an order-by countdown gives them a reason to buy now instead of “later”.

Accurate estimates, effortless setup

A real date, not “3–5 days”

Shows an actual arrival date or range — “Tue, 8 Jul” — which is far more reassuring than an abstract number of days.

Processing + transit

Set how long you take to dispatch and how long the carrier takes, and the estimate reflects both.

Order-by cut-off

Orders before your daily cut-off ship the same day; later ones roll to the next — automatically reflected in the date.

Business days aware

Skip weekends when counting, so a Friday-afternoon order doesn’t promise a Sunday arrival.

Order-by countdown

An optional live “order within 2h 14m” timer adds urgency at the exact moment of decision.

Yours to word & place

Customise the message, date format, and whether it sits above or below the Add to Cart button. Loads only on product pages.

Where it earns its keep

  • Gifts & occasions — “will it arrive before the birthday?” is the whole decision. Answer it up front.
  • Time-sensitive goods — perishables, event supplies, anything with a deadline.
  • Building trust with new visitors — a concrete date signals a real, reliable store.
  • Driving same-day dispatch — the countdown nudges shoppers to beat today’s cut-off.

Live in three steps

1

Install & activate
Add the plugin alongside WooCommerce.

2

Set your times
Processing, transit, and a daily cut-off.

3

Done
The estimate appears on your product pages automatically.

What to look for in a delivery-date plugin

  • Shows a real date, not just “3–5 business days” — dates convert better than durations.
  • Respects a cut-off and business days, so the estimate is honest instead of optimistic.
  • Adds urgency with an order-by countdown, not just a static line.
  • Stays light — loads only on product pages and inherits your theme.

Simple pricing

$149 /year

One year of updates & support. 30-day money-back guarantee.

Frequently asked questions

How is the delivery date calculated?

From your processing time plus transit time, starting from today if the order beats your daily cut-off (otherwise the next day). If “business days only” is on, weekends are skipped in the count.

Does it change based on the time of day?

Yes. Before your cut-off, the estimate assumes same-day processing; after it, the date rolls forward. The optional countdown shows how long is left to beat the cut-off.

Can I show a single date instead of a range?

Yes — set the minimum and maximum transit time to the same value and the estimate shows one date.

Will it slow my site down?

No. It loads only on product pages and ships minimal CSS/JS; the date itself is calculated server-side.

Answer “when will it arrive?” before they ask

Set it up in minutes and give every product page a clear, honest delivery date.

Setup & settings

Getting started

  1. Install and activate the plugin alongside WooCommerce.
  2. Open Sproutient → Settings.
  3. Enter your processing time, transit range, and cut-off, then save.

Settings reference

  • Processing time — days to prepare and dispatch before shipping.
  • Transit time (min / max) — carrier delivery window after dispatch. Equal values show a single date.
  • Order-by cut-off — orders before this time (store timezone) process the same day.
  • Business days only — skip weekends in the count.
  • Message — product-page text; use {date} for the estimate.
  • Date format — a PHP date format, e.g. D, j M → “Tue, 8 Jul”.
  • Position — above or below the Add to Cart button.
  • Order-by countdown — show a live timer to the cut-off; use {countdown} and {date} in its message.

Requirements

  • WordPress 6.6+ · WooCommerce (active) · PHP 8.1+