Guide · Web Design
How Much Does a Website Cost in 2026? A South Florida Small-Business Guide
The honest answer to “how much does a website cost?” is “it depends” — but that's useless on its own. So here's what actually drives the number, and the realistic ranges for a South Florida small-business website in 2026.
Why there's no single price
A website's cost depends on what it needs to do. A clean one-page site for a solo contractor and a twenty-page site with online booking, a blog, and e-commerce are completely different projects. The price reflects how many pages you need, how custom the design is, what functionality is involved, and how much ongoing help you want afterward.
What actually drives the cost
- Pages & content — more pages, and whether you supply the copy and photos or need them created.
- Design — a polished template costs less than a fully custom, brand-built design.
- Functionality — contact forms are simple; booking, payments, logins, and integrations add real work.
- SEO & performance — a site built to load fast and rank is worth more than a pretty brochure.
- Ongoing care — hosting, updates, security, and support are a recurring cost, not a one-time one.
Realistic market ranges
These are broad industry generalizations for a small-business site in 2026 — not a Webcraft quote, which depends entirely on your goals:
- DIY builders (Wix, Squarespace): roughly $0–$50/month. Cheap up front, but it costs your time and usually caps your results.
- Freelancer: roughly $1,000–$5,000 one-time, varying widely with experience and scope.
- Agency / done-for-you: roughly $5,000–$15,000+ for a small-business site engineered to convert and rank.
- Ongoing hosting & maintenance: typically $20–$200/month depending on how hands-on the support is.
Cheap is often the most expensive option
A slow, dated, or hard-to-edit website quietly costs you customers every single month — in lost rankings, abandoned visits, and calls that go to a competitor instead. The right question isn't “what's the cheapest site I can get?” It's “what site will pay for itself in new customers?”
What we recommend
Start with clarity, not a price tag. Before you spend anything, get a free review of what your business actually needs — whether that's a fresh build, a redesign, or just fixing what's slowing your current site down. Then you can spend on what works instead of what sounds good.
Not sure what your business actually needs?
Get a free, no-obligation review of your current site — speed, mobile, and conversion — plus a clear recommendation. No pressure, no jargon.
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Quick answers
How much should a small business spend on a website?
Enough that the site earns its keep. For most local service businesses a professionally built, conversion-focused site pays for itself quickly through new customers — far faster than a cheap site that doesn't rank or convert. The right number depends on your goals, which is what a free consult sorts out.
Is it cheaper to redesign or rebuild?
It depends what's underneath. If the foundation is sound, a redesign can be faster and cheaper; if the site is slow, dated, or fights you on every edit, a clean rebuild usually pays for itself. An honest audit tells you which makes sense — we won't push a rebuild you don't need.
Do I pay monthly or one-time?
Usually both: a one-time build cost, plus ongoing hosting and maintenance. Some providers bundle everything into a monthly plan. Either way, make sure you understand what the recurring fee actually covers before you sign.
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