How Much Does a Small Business Website Cost in 2026?
A small business website costs anywhere from $0/month (DIY builder) to $35,000+ (full-service agency), but most professionally built sites land between $3,000 and $10,000 upfront plus $50–$200/month in ongoing costs. The hidden expenses — hosting, maintenance, domain renewals, and security — catch most owners off guard. If you want a professional result without the complexity or the large upfront bill, fully managed monthly services now make it possible to get a complete, live website for as little as $10/month with zero technical work required.
Why Website Prices Vary So Much
Ask ten people how much a website costs and you’ll get ten completely different answers. Some will say free. Others will quote $15,000. Both are technically correct — and that’s exactly the problem.
The truth is that “a website” isn’t one product. It’s like asking how much a vehicle costs. Are you looking for a bicycle, a pickup truck, or an 18-wheeler? The price depends entirely on what the vehicle needs to do. Your website is no different. A five-page site for a local electrician is not the same product as a custom e-commerce platform with inventory management, memberships, and multi-currency checkout.
The other reason pricing feels murky is that the upfront build cost is only one part of what a website actually costs. Domain registration, hosting, security certificates, maintenance, content writing, SEO setup — these recurring expenses often exceed the original build cost over the first two years. Most quotes conveniently leave them out.
This article breaks down every number, every path, and every hidden fee so you can make a decision with full information. And if you’re still on the fence about whether your business needs a website at all, we covered that question in full here.
The Three Paths — and What Each Really Costs
Every small business website gets built one of three ways. The path you choose drives your cost more than almost anything else.
Path 1: DIY Website Builders
Platforms like Wix, Squarespace, and Shopify Starter let you build a site yourself using templates and drag-and-drop editors. There’s no developer required, and the advertised monthly price looks affordable. But the full picture is more complicated.
Squarespace runs roughly $16–$49/month depending on the plan. Wix is similar. But once you factor in a domain name ($15–$20/year), premium templates, apps and plugins, and the business email you’ll need separately — the real monthly cost climbs quickly. And that’s before accounting for your time. Building a site yourself that actually looks professional and performs well in search takes dozens of hours for someone without design or technical experience. For a business where every hour counts, that time cost is real money.
DIY also has a ceiling. Customization is limited, SEO performance tends to lag behind properly built WordPress sites, and scaling beyond a basic brochure site requires either upgrading to expensive plans or starting over entirely.
Path 2: Freelance Web Designer
Hiring an independent designer or developer gives you more flexibility and a more custom result than a DIY builder — at a fraction of the agency price. Expect to pay $1,500–$8,000 for a professional freelance-built website in 2026, depending on complexity and the designer’s experience level.
Freelancers typically charge $50–$100/hour, and a five-page site often takes four to six weeks to complete. The quality varies significantly depending on who you hire — a $1,500 freelancer and a $7,000 freelancer will deliver very different products. You’ll also need to factor in ongoing maintenance separately, which typically runs $50–$200/month if you continue working with that person.
The biggest risk with freelancers is continuity. If they become unavailable, are slow to respond, or move on, you can find yourself locked out of your own site or unable to get help when something breaks.
Path 3: Web Design Agency
Agencies are the full-service option. A professional team handles strategy, design, development, content, and often SEO. The result is typically the strongest — but so is the price. Most small business agency websites start at $6,000–$12,000 for a boutique agency and can exceed $35,000 for a larger firm with complex requirements.
Agencies are worth it when your website is a primary revenue driver, when you need custom integrations, or when the site’s performance is directly tied to business growth at scale. For a local contractor, a small retail shop, or a service provider just getting started online, agency pricing is usually more than the situation requires.
| Path | Upfront Cost | Monthly Cost | Timeline | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DIY Builder Your time = money |
$0 | $16–$49+ | Days | Hobby / very early stage |
| Freelancer Variable quality |
$1,500–$8,000 | $50–$200 | 4–8 weeks | Custom branding on a budget |
| Agency Premium result |
$6,000–$35,000+ | $150–$500+ | 8–16 weeks | Complex sites, high-revenue orgs |
| Managed Service Best value |
$0 | From $10 | 48 hours | Small businesses needing a pro result fast |
The Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About
This is where most business owners get blindsided. The quote from a freelancer or agency covers the build. What it usually doesn’t cover is everything required to keep that website alive, secure, and visible after launch.
Here’s what to budget for on top of any build cost:
- Domain renewal: $10–$20/year for a standard .com. Forget to renew and your site goes offline instantly.
- Web hosting: $5–$25/month for shared hosting; $25–$150/month for managed WordPress hosting that includes security and backups.
- SSL certificate: Often included with hosting today, but can run $50–$100/year if purchased separately.
- Ongoing maintenance: Updates, security patches, backups, and uptime monitoring. Freelancers charge $50–$200/month; agencies charge $150–$500/month. According to a 2026 analysis by OneLittleWeb, most business owners overlook $1,100–$5,000 per year in these recurring costs.
- Premium plugins: Contact forms, booking systems, SEO tools, and performance plugins typically run $100–$400/year combined on WordPress.
- Content writing: Professional copywriting for a 5-page site costs $500–$2,500. Most quotes don’t include it.
- Business email: A professional inbox (yourname@yourdomain.com) costs $6–$12/month per user if not included in your plan.
A hacked or unmaintained WordPress site typically requires 8–24 hours of emergency developer time to clean and restore — at $75–$200/hour. That’s a $600–$4,800 surprise bill, in addition to lost business while the site was down or compromised. Regular maintenance isn’t optional; it’s insurance.
The first step to any of this working is having a professional website.
Get yours live in 48 hours for $10/month.
Domain, hosting, business email, maintenance & backups all included. No contracts.
What You Actually Get at Each Price Point
Price is only meaningful when you understand what it buys. Here’s an honest breakdown of what different budgets realistically deliver in 2026:
- Under $500 (DIY): A functional template-based site. Limited customization, generic appearance, weaker SEO. Fine for testing an idea; not ideal for a business trying to convert customers.
- $1,500–$4,000 (entry freelancer): A custom-designed WordPress site with 5–8 pages, a contact form, basic SEO setup, and mobile optimization. Quality varies — you get what you pay for at this level.
- $4,000–$10,000 (mid-range freelancer or boutique agency): A well-structured, conversion-focused website with strong design, solid SEO foundations, speed optimization, and professional copywriting. This is where most serious small businesses should be aiming.
- $10,000–$35,000+ (full agency): Custom architecture, deep SEO strategy, integrations, advanced functionality, and an ongoing agency relationship. Necessary for businesses where the website is a primary sales channel at scale.
According to a 2026 pricing study by Flamingo Agency, most professionally built small business websites fall in the $4,000–$8,000 range — that’s the sweet spot between a template result and an enterprise build. But for many small businesses, even this is more than necessary if a simpler, fully managed solution would serve the same purpose.
The Option Most Small Businesses Miss: Managed Monthly Services
There’s a fourth option that’s grown significantly in 2026 — and it changes the math entirely. Fully managed website services handle everything: design, domain registration, hosting, business email, security, maintenance, and backups. You pay a flat monthly fee and focus on running your business. The website is taken care of.
This model works especially well for small businesses that need a professional online presence but don’t need custom functionality, complex integrations, or ongoing content marketing built into the contract. A plumber, a dentist, a personal trainer, a local retailer — all of these businesses need a clean, fast, credible website. They don’t need $10,000 of custom code. (Still weighing whether your business really needs one? Read our guide: Does My Small Business Need a Website in 2026?)
The advantage over DIY builders is the professional result and zero technical overhead. The advantage over freelancers and agencies is the elimination of large upfront costs, unpredictable maintenance bills, and the risk of being dependent on a single person’s availability.
As a reference point: the equivalent of one month’s coffee budget can now cover a complete, professionally managed business website — with everything included. NovixMagnet delivers exactly that: a professionally designed and built website, live in 48 hours, for $10/month — including domain, hosting, business email, ongoing maintenance, and backups. No contracts, no technical knowledge required.
The first step to any of this working is having a professional website.
Get yours live in 48 hours for $10/month.
Includes your domain name, business email, hosting, and ongoing maintenance. That’s it.
Red Flags to Watch For When Buying a Website
The website industry has no shortage of bad actors. Before you sign anything or pay a deposit, watch for these warning signs:
- “Free website, just pay hosting” — Usually means a proprietary platform with hidden upsells and no way out without starting over.
- No written scope of work — A proposal without a detailed list of deliverables is a guarantee of misaligned expectations and disputed invoices.
- $15,000 for a 5-page site with no custom functionality — Unless there’s extensive content strategy, SEO, or complex integrations, this is overpriced.
- Monthly fees with no clear breakdown of services — Always ask: what exactly am I paying for every month?
- They own your domain — Your domain is your property. Any arrangement where the vendor controls your domain is a red flag. Make sure the domain is registered in your name.
- Required 12-month contracts upfront with no exit clause — Reasonable for enterprise, not for a small business website service.
💡 One rule of thumb: Before agreeing to any website service, ask — “If I cancel, do I keep the website and the domain?” A good vendor will say yes. If the answer involves losing your site, your content, or your domain, reconsider.
The first step to any of this working is having a professional website.
Get yours live in 48 hours for $10/month.
We handle everything — design, domain, hosting, email, and maintenance. You just tell us about your business.