If you're already using HubSpot Commerce Hub and you've just noticed it's called Revenue Hub now, you probably have one immediate question: what does this mean for the setup I already have?
The short answer, and the reassuring one: nothing breaks. Your quotes still work. Your invoices still work. Your payment links, subscriptions, and integrations all keep doing exactly what they did last week. HubSpot renamed and expanded Commerce Hub into Revenue Hub in June 2026 - and the key word there is expanded, not replaced.
But "nothing breaks" isn't the whole story, because the expansion did add things worth knowing about. Here's the complete picture for existing users.
Let's settle the nerves before anything else. Everything you were using in Commerce Hub is still there in Revenue Hub:
No migration required. No reconfiguration. No "you must move to the new system by X date." This was a rename and an expansion, handled on HubSpot's side. Your existing setup carried over.
If all you wanted was reassurance that your billing didn't just break - there it is. You can stop reading. But if you want to know what new capability you now have access to, keep going.
The rename reflects a genuine shift in scope, and understanding it helps you understand what's now available to you.
"Commerce" implied transactions - taking payments, sending invoices. "Revenue" reflects something broader: the full lifecycle from the first quote through billing, payments, and renewals, plus the revenue context that creates across the whole customer relationship.
This wasn't a marketing whim. HubSpot has been building toward it for years - native payments arrived in 2021, billing and subscriptions in 2023, AI-powered CPQ in 2025, and now in June 2026, contracts and a fully connected quote-to-cash flow under the Revenue Hub name. The rename is the point where all of that became one coherent system rather than a collection of commerce features.
For you as an existing user, that history matters because it tells you the direction: HubSpot is investing in this becoming the complete revenue layer of your CRM, not a bolt-on payments tool.
Here's what the expansion added - capabilities you may now have access to that weren't part of Commerce Hub before.
Contracts. This is the headline addition. Contract records, changes, and renewals now live in HubSpot alongside your quotes, invoices, and payments. If you've been managing contracts as PDFs in email or a separate system, you can now bring them into the same place as the rest of your revenue data - with terms and renewal dates visible on the record.
A more connected quote-to-cash flow. The individual pieces you already had - quotes, invoices, payments - are now more tightly linked into one continuous flow, with contracts filling the gap that used to sit between a signed quote and an invoice. The handoffs between stages are more automated than before.
Enhanced AI features through Breeze. Because your revenue data now lives in one connected system, Breeze (HubSpot's AI layer) can work from the complete picture - prioritising overdue invoices by payment risk, drafting collection follow-up emails, and helping reps move from quote to close faster. HubSpot has also signalled a Revenue Agent, currently in beta, designed to run invoice collections end to end.
None of these are things you're forced to adopt. They're capabilities now available in the system you're already using, to turn on if and when they're useful to you.
So if nothing breaks and the new features are optional, is there anything you need to do? A few things worth a look - not urgent, but worthwhile.
Take stock of contracts. This is the genuinely new capability. If you've been managing contracts outside HubSpot - in email, in a separate e-signature tool, in a folder somewhere - it's worth evaluating whether bringing them into Revenue Hub would close a gap in your current flow. Especially if you have recurring revenue where renewal dates currently live in someone's calendar rather than your CRM.
Review your quote-to-cash flow for gaps. Now that the flow is more connected, look at where your process still has manual handoffs. Is there a step where someone re-enters data, chases a signature manually, or moves information between systems by hand? The expanded Revenue Hub may now be able to close that gap.
Consider whether the AI features help. If chasing overdue invoices is a regular drain on someone's time, the Breeze collection features and the upcoming Revenue Agent are worth evaluating. They work from your existing revenue data, so there's no new setup to make them useful.
For ANZ users - nothing changes on payments. Your Stripe connection is unaffected. HubSpot's native Payments still isn't available in Australia or New Zealand, so Stripe remains your path, exactly as before. The rename didn't change regional availability.
If you're an existing Commerce Hub user, the rename to Revenue Hub is good news wearing a slightly confusing hat. Nothing you rely on broke or moved. Your setup carried over intact. And you've quietly gained access to contracts, a more connected flow, and enhanced AI features - all optional, all available when you want them.
The one genuinely worthwhile action: take a look at whether contracts and the more connected quote-to-cash flow can close gaps your current process still has. That's where the expansion turns from "a rename I noticed" into "a capability I'm actually using."
Want a hand working out what the Revenue Hub expansion means for your specific setup, and whether the new bits are worth turning on? Let's chat. We'll look at your current flow and show you where the new capabilities actually help.
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Happy HubSpotting!