The Edge has been one of the go-to jewelry point of sale (POS) systems since 2004. For two decades, independent jewelers have relied on it to have complete control over their businesses.
And you can see why — many store owners learned their business on The Edge. It earned that loyalty by understanding jewelry workflows that general POS systems never bothered with.
But the past decade has seen a shift towards the cloud, and The Edge hasn’t followed.
Credit where it’s due: The Edge built its reputation on understanding jewelry retail.
The Edge stepped in when jewelers needed more than a cash register. And it includes most of what you need from a feature standpoint, such as repair tracking, inventory management, and Geller's Blue Book integration for pricing repairs.
Layaway management is built in. Customer profiles track purchase history and preferences. The system was designed by people who understood what happens behind the counter at a jewelry store.
For many stores, it was a step up from pen and paper — and it served that role for years.
There’s no getting away from it. The Edge’s biggest limitation is the on-premise architecture.
You need a Windows computer and a server to run The Edge, with hardware costs running $3,000–$5,000 before software.
The one-time license ranges from $4,600 to $5,700 for a single store, with multilocation setups starting at $12,450+. Annual support renewals are required after the first year.
The real issue is that all your data lives on a computer in your store rather than in the cloud.
You can’t check inventory from home or on the go. It’s impossible to manage repairs from your phone. And if your server fails, your business stops until it’s fixed.
Cloud access is now the expectation, not the exception. As a modern jewelry store owner, you need to review reports at night, check repair status while traveling, and manage inventory across locations without being physically in the store.
On-premise software just can’t deliver that.
The Edge handles work order creation and Geller's Blue Book integration, but the tracking itself relies on paper-based processes.
Checking the status of a repair means physically looking it up.
You can’t track repairs stage by stage or automate customer updates. You also can’t tie photo documentation to digital work orders. This all adds up when you're managing 20 or 30 repairs at a time.
Cue delays and customer frustration!
The Edge doesn’t include native e-commerce.
You have to work with a third-party vendor, which requires a separate contract, separate setup, and manual inventory sync between your in-store system and your website.
In 2026, jewelers expect their POS and online store to share the same inventory in real time. On-premise systems struggle to deliver this without workarounds.
The Edge supports layaway but doesn't integrate with modern financing options like Affirm.
Customers increasingly expect flexible payment options at checkout, especially on engagement rings and high-ticket custom pieces.
Missing that option can mean missing the sale.
On-premise software updates require local installation. Support often involves remote access to your specific computer.
When hardware changes or operating systems update, compatibility issues crop up more often.
Cloud systems handle updates automatically and run on almost any modern browser.
As we mentioned earlier, The Edge has many of the jewelry-specific features you need. So, as you evaluate alternatives, look for cloud-based systems that deliver them without on-premise limitations.
Here’s what to look for:
If you’re looking for an alternative to The Edge, you’re in the right place.
Jewel360 was built as a cloud-native jewelry POS.
It’s not a general retail platform adapted for jewelry or an on-premise system with cloud features added later. It was designed for the cloud from day one.
With our jewelry POS system, you can:
We’re a little biased, but we built our POS system from the ground up, and we’re proud to serve jewelers.
Jewel360 isn't the only option if you're moving off The Edge. A few other systems are worth evaluating.
Lightspeed is a strong general retail POS with impressive omnichannel tools and a massive supplier network through NuORDER. If selling across Amazon, eBay, and social channels is your top priority, Lightspeed covers more ground there than most jewelry-specific systems.
The trade-off: There’s no native appraisals or consignment tracking, and you’ll incur a $400/month penalty if you use your own payment processor. See our full comparison →
Pavilion targets jewelers running both retail and wholesale operations. If you manage B2B sales pipelines alongside your storefront and need enterprise-level CRM, Pavilion is a solid choice.
Pricing starts at $299/month and scales to $999/month. See our full comparison →
CaratIQ is a newer cloud-based option with serialized inventory and repair tracking. Pricing scales per user and per inventory count, and independent reviews are still limited, but it's worth a look if you're comparing jewelry-specific platforms. See our full comparison →
The Edge earned its place in jewelry retail. It was one of the first systems that understood the specific workflows jewelers need.
But the jewelry industry has changed. Customers expect text updates on their repairs. Owners want to check sales from home. Online sales and in-store inventory need to share the same data. And financing options at checkout are becoming standard.
If your Edge system feels like it's holding you back rather than moving you forward, it might be time to look at what cloud-native jewelry POS can deliver.
See our full The Edge vs Jewel360 comparison.
Already seen enough? Schedule a demo today to see how Jewel360 helps manage your business.
The Edge has strong jewelry-specific foundations, but its on-premise architecture means no cloud access, no real-time e-commerce sync, and no remote repair management.
For jewelers who need to manage their business from anywhere, or sell online through the same inventory, cloud-based alternatives offer capabilities The Edge can't match.
Yes. Jewel360's onboarding team handles data migration from The Edge, including serialized inventory records, customer histories, and vendor data.
A dedicated Customer Success Manager manages the transition and configures the new system for your workflows.
The Edge includes work order creation and Geller's Blue Book integration, but repair tracking is paper-based.
Jewel360 uses fully digital work orders with stage-by-stage tracking, automated customer notifications via text and email, image uploads, and remote access from any device.
Yes. Jewel360 includes built-in layaway management with deposit tracking and payment schedules. It also integrates with Affirm for buy now, pay later financing at checkout, which The Edge does not offer.