# White Label Auto Parts Stores Dashboard

- Tool: White Label Solutions
- Last updated: July 2026

## TL;DR

No dedicated white-label auto parts store dashboard exists. The real options are horizontal ops platforms — SuiteDash ($14–$69 per client/mo) or GoHighLevel ($297–$497/mo) — configured into a parts portal, with no fitment, interchange, or core-charge logic. The differentiator no competitor mentions: ACES/PIES catalog licensing is a separate paid feed. Custom ($13K–$25K) is the only path that models year/make/model lookup, interchange matching, and core deposits.

## Frequently asked questions

### How much does a white-label auto parts stores dashboard cost?

There is no dedicated white-label auto parts dashboard vendor — the closest options are horizontal platforms: SuiteDash at $14/$34/$69 per client account per month (wholesale, resell at $79–$97), GoHighLevel at $297/mo (white-label portal) or $497/mo (SaaS Mode), or Vendasta at $499/mo Professional with a 1-year lock-in. None include fitment or interchange capability. A custom-built auto parts dashboard with fitment, interchange, and core-charge tracking runs $13K–$25K one-time with ~$100/mo hosting.

### Does a dedicated white-label auto parts dashboard exist?

No. As of 2026, no vendor offers a purpose-built white-label auto parts dashboard you can license and rebrand. The niche is too specific for horizontal platform vendors and the domain requirements — fitment data, interchange matching, core-charge tracking — require specialized data integrations no generic CRM or ops portal provides. Industry auto parts SaaS (used un-rebranded by shops) handles the domain but is not licensable under your brand.

### What is ACES/PIES data and why does it matter?

ACES (Aftermarket Catalog Exchange Standard) is the industry-standard format for fitment data — the tables that map year/make/model/engine combinations to compatible parts. PIES (Product Information Exchange Standard) is the corresponding format for part attributes and descriptions. An auto parts dashboard without ACES/PIES integration cannot perform fitment lookup. This data is licensed separately from catalog providers (SEMA Data, EPICOR/Snap-on, AutoCare) — it is not bundled with any horizontal platform. Pricing should be verified directly with providers as it varies by catalog depth and update frequency.

### How fast can I launch an auto parts dashboard?

A horizontal platform portal (SuiteDash or GoHighLevel) configured for basic parts reporting can be live in 1–3 weeks. The stall point is the first request for fitment lookup, which the platform cannot fulfill. A custom build with fitment, interchange, and core-charge capability takes 6–10 weeks from scope to launch.

### Do I own my data with a horizontal platform portal?

You possess data you enter (contacts, inventory records, transactions) and can typically export it as CSV. What you do not own is the relational structure linking vehicles, parts, and transactions — the data model that makes the dashboard useful. At termination, a CSV export loses that structure. A custom build with your own database means you own the full parts-data model and can migrate freely.

### White-label platform vs custom build — what's the real cost difference?

GoHighLevel at $297/mo over 36 months totals approximately $10,692 for a generic branded portal with no fitment capability. A custom build at $13K–$25K one-time plus $100/mo hosting totals $16,600–$28,600 over the same period — more expensive, but delivering a purpose-built fitment dashboard. The decision is not purely financial: it is whether you need a branded reporting shell or a dashboard that can actually run a parts counter.

### Can RapidDev build a custom auto parts stores dashboard?

Yes. RapidDev builds custom auto parts dashboards in 6–10 weeks for $13K–$25K fixed. That includes fitment lookup (year/make/model/engine), interchange and OEM/aftermarket cross-reference matching, multi-supplier stock availability, core-charge deposit and return tracking, counter-sale and quote workflows, and inventory reorder alerting — all under your brand with full source code ownership. Book a free scoping call to get a fixed-price quote for your specific operation.

### What compliance requirements apply to an auto parts dashboard?

Compliance for auto parts dashboards is relatively light. Sales-tax nexus applies to parts sales if you are transacting through the platform. Hazardous materials handling records may be required for batteries, fluids, and refrigerants per EPA/state rules. Core-charge programs should comply with state-specific core deposit regulations. PCI-DSS compliance is offloaded to the payment gateway for any in-platform transactions. No heavy regulatory layer applies to the dashboard itself.

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Source: https://www.rapidevelopers.com/white-label/auto-parts-stores-dashboard
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