Pavilion is one of the most comprehensive jewelry management platforms on the market.
Built on Salesforce, it combines point of sale (POS), inventory, CRM, e-commerce, marketing, and business intelligence into a single enterprise-grade system.
If you run a large, multilocation jewelry business, few platforms can match Pavilion. But there’s a tradeoff: the price. At $299–$999 per month — depending on the plan you choose — Pavilion is built for scale. It works well if you have a huge budget and organizational complexity.
But for independent jewelers running one or two locations, it’s overkill.
Here's when Pavilion makes sense, when it doesn't, and what to look for if you need jewelry-specific tools without the enterprise overhead.
We’re not saying Pavilion is too expensive — its pricing reflects genuine capabilities.
The Salesforce foundation provides customer relationship management (CRM) depth that most jewelry POS systems can’t match. Everything is enterprise-grade, from customer management and pipeline tracking to marketing automation and detailed analytics. If you’re a large retailer, you can’t go wrong.
Business intelligence is another strength. Pavilion's reporting and analytics suite is built for multilocation stores. If you manage millions in inventory across several locations, the insights you get help with buying decisions, staffing, and strategic planning.
The platform covers the full spectrum: POS, inventory with serialized tracking, repairs, appraisals, e-commerce, marketing, and accounting integrations. If your operation needs an ERP rather than a POS, Pavilion is one of the few jewelry-specific options in that category.
While Pavilion is great for enterprise businesses, it’s not the best fit for small, independent jewelry stores.
Pavilion's pricing starts at $299/month for the basic tier and reaches $999/month for the full platform. That's $3,588–$11,988/year in software costs alone, before hardware, processing, and implementation costs.
Let’s say you make $500,000–$1,000,000 in annual revenue. Spending $6,000–$12,000/year on software isn’t ideal — especially if you don’t need the feature depth. Ask yourself, “Does my business generate enough revenue and complexity to justify that investment?”
If you haven’t used Salesforce before, it’s a platform built for enterprise businesses. It has depth that single-location stores will never use. It also:
If you want to ring up a sale, check a repair status, and pull a Gemology Institute of America (GIA) certificate, enterprise software can feel like using a hydraulic press to set a half-carat solitaire.
Migrating to a new POS system is hard enough. Enterprise software takes even longer to set up because Salesforce-based platforms require more configuration, more data mapping, and more training than purpose-built POS systems.
If you’re a jeweler who needs to be up and running quickly, or wants to limit downtime between switching providers, a longer implementation timeline can be a sticking point.
Support for enterprise platforms tends to follow enterprise models: ticketing systems, tiered support levels, and scheduled calls.
For an independent jeweler who needs help at 4 p.m. on a Saturday, the difference between enterprise support and dedicated jewelry POS support is noticeable.
For stores doing under $2M in annual revenue from one or two locations, here's what Jewel360 delivers — without the enterprise price tag:
Don’t just take our word for it — you can see real stories from jewelry store owners who switched to Jewel360 here: Real Jewelry Store POS Customer Stories (2026)
Jewel360 isn't the only alternative to Pavilion. A few other systems serve different segments of the jewelry market.
The Edge is the on-premise legacy system that's been in jewelry retail since 2004. It offers deep inventory and reporting without the enterprise complexity or pricing of Pavilion. It doesn't have cloud access, but jewelers who want a proven local system find it reliable. See our full comparison →
CaratIQ is a newer cloud-based platform for jewelry retail that tracks serialized inventory and repairs. Pricing scales per user and per inventory count. If you're comparing cloud-native jewelry systems, it's worth evaluating alongside Jewel360. See our full comparison →
Lightspeed appears in jewelry store searches due to its strong omnichannel tools and Stuller integration via NuORDER. It's a general retail platform, not jewelry-specific, but if marketplace selling across Amazon, eBay, and social channels is a top priority, Lightspeed covers more ground there. See our full comparison →
Most independent jewelers don't need enterprise ERP. They need a POS that handles their specific workflows without making them pay for capabilities designed for operations 10 times their size.
Picture this: You run two locations with eight employees. You manage about 200 active repairs at any time, do appraisals twice a week, and buy estate pieces a few times a month. Your team uses Stuller daily and needs QuickBooks integration for your accountant.
That's a $199–$299/month problem, not a $599–$999/month problem. If you want to see how Jewel360 handles that problem, schedule a demo today.
Check out the full Pavilion vs. Jewel360 comparison here.
Pavilion's pricing ranges from $299 to $999/month. For a single-location store, that's $3,588–$11,988 in software costs per year. Whether that's justified depends on your revenue and the complexity of your business.
Most single-location independents find that purpose-built jewelry POS systems deliver the same core features at a fraction of the cost.
Pavilion's Salesforce-based CRM is more sophisticated than what jewelry-specific POS systems offer. Business intelligence, sales pipeline management, and marketing automation are enterprise-grade tools.
If your business needs ERP-level management across multiple locations with complex team structures, Pavilion excels in those areas.
Yes. Jewel360 includes serialized inventory with GIA integration, repair management, appraisals, trade-ins, consignment, vendor integrations (Stuller, Geller's Blue Book, Jewelers Mutual), and e-commerce.
Multilocation management is available on the Plus plan. For single-location stores, it covers the full workflow.
Pavilion's Salesforce-based implementation typically takes longer and requires more configuration and training.
Jewel360 provides dedicated onboarding with a Customer Success Manager who handles data migration, workflow setup, and team training. Most stores are operational within days.