The most common question we get when a small business owner reaches out isn't "what do you build?" It's "how much does it cost?" Maybe a few thousand dollars, maybe just a weekend with a page builder. Either way—it's live, it looks decent, and people are finding it in Google. But the phone isn't ringing.

Online, the answers range from $200 to $50,000—which isn't helpful. Template builders, freelancers, and full-service agencies all use the word "website," but they're building genuinely different products. Here's a transparent breakdown of what a small business website costs in 2026, what you actually get at each price point, and where the real value is.

Why Website Costs Vary So Dramatically

The price spread isn't arbitrary—it reflects three genuinely different products. A $600 DIY template and a $4,000 custom build are not the same product. Think of it like a $60 oil change versus a $4,000 engine rebuild—same category, entirely different result. The word "website" covers everything from a digital business card to a fully engineered conversion machine. Understanding what you're buying at each price point is the only way to make a sound decision.

Tier 1: $300–$1,500—Template Builders

At this range, you're working with a page builder like Wix, Squarespace, or WordPress with a marketplace theme. The work is mostly design selection and content entry—no custom development. A 2025 Clutch survey found that 42% of small businesses that started with DIY builders later hired an agency to rebuild. The reason: they couldn't rank in search or convert visitors at the rate they needed.

What You Get—and What You Don't

A $800–$1,500 template site typically includes 3–5 pre-designed page layouts, a contact form, and hosting bundled in. What's missing: custom design tailored to your brand, SEO structure beyond the basics, performance optimization, and conversion-focused decisions about layout, CTAs, and mobile behavior.

This tier is right for: a brand-new business testing an idea, a sole practitioner who just needs a web address, or a business where nearly all clients come from referrals. It's a starting point, not a growth engine.

Analytics dashboard showing website performance data on a laptop screen
Performance data is what separates a template site from a purpose-built one. Source: Unsplash

Tier 2: $2,000–$6,000—Custom Build from a Local Agency

This is the sweet spot for established local service businesses. A local agency or experienced freelancer designs and builds a site specific to your brand, your market, and your business goals. 75% of consumers say they judge a business's credibility based on its website design (Stanford Web Credibility Research, 2024)—a custom build signals that you've invested in your business presentation.

What's Typically Included

A custom small business website in this range includes a unique design, 5–10 pages, and mobile-first layout optimized for load speed. SEO structure—title tags, meta descriptions, and schema markup—comes standard. So does a contact form, click-to-call button, and Google Analytics setup. Some agencies include basic copywriting; others price it separately.

This is CopperBuilds's primary tier. Pricing starts at $1,200 for straightforward service business sites and runs to $3,500–$5,000 for larger builds. The exact scope determines the final number—which is why we do a free discovery call before quoting.

Tier 3: $7,000–$25,000—Complex Custom Development

At this level, you're paying for custom functionality: online booking systems with real-time availability, e-commerce with inventory management, member portals, CRM integrations, or large content-heavy sites. The development hours required are substantial.

Most local service businesses don't need this. If your business is a plumbing company, landscaper, HVAC contractor, restaurant, or professional services firm, Tier 2 covers everything you need to compete online and generate leads. Tier 3 becomes relevant when customers need to create accounts, pay on your site before service, or access a portal of some kind.

The Hidden Costs to Budget For

The build cost is what agencies quote. The total cost of owning a website includes additional items that surprise first-time buyers:

Hosting: $10–$50/month. Basic shared hosting is cheap; managed hosting with performance guarantees costs more. Hosting quality directly affects site speed and uptime—and both affect your Google ranking.

Domain name: $15–$20/year. If your ideal domain is already registered, a premium domain can cost significantly more—sometimes thousands of dollars.

Maintenance: $50–$200/month, or pay-per-fix. Websites need security updates, plugin updates, and occasional fixes. Budget for this or you'll be scrambling when something breaks at a critical moment.

Copywriting: $500–$2,500 if not included in the build. Writing the words on your website is a separate skill from designing it. Quality copy drives conversions; generic copy doesn't.

Photography: $300–$1,500 for professional photos of your team, work, or space. Authentic photos of your actual business consistently outperform stock photography in conversion testing.

Is a Professional Website Actually Worth the Cost?

The math is straightforward. At a $3,500 total investment (build plus first-year costs), and an average job value of $500, you need seven new clients from your website to break even. Most local service businesses with a well-built, SEO-optimized website see that within three to six months of launch.

A website also works while you sleep. Your Google Ads stop when you stop paying. Your Facebook requires regular posting to stay visible. A properly built website with good local SEO continues attracting clients without additional spend. For any business planning to still operate in two years, the question isn't whether to have a website. It's which tier actually matches your needs. If you're still weighing website vs. social media, we laid out an honest comparison that covers when Facebook-only is defensible and when it isn't.

Once your site is live, the next question is conversion: why are people landing but not calling? This guide covers the five most common reasons and how to fix each one.

Get a transparent quote for your website

CopperBuilds builds conversion-focused websites for local service businesses. Flat-rate pricing starting at $1,200. No retainers, no surprises.

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Frequently Asked Questions

A simple 5-page website typically runs $800–$2,500 from a local agency or freelancer (Clutch, 2025). DIY builders like Wix or Squarespace cost $15–$50/month plus your own time. The price difference reflects custom design, SEO setup, and conversion optimization—not just the page count.
Use Wix if you're just getting online with a minimal budget and time to manage it yourself. Hire an agency if your website is a primary source of new business. Custom builds are designed for SEO and conversions from the start—template sites require significant rework to optimize later, often costing more in the end.
Budget $20–$60/month for hosting, $15–$20/year for your domain, and $50–$200/month for maintenance if you want updates, security, and backups handled for you. Total annual ongoing cost for a professionally hosted small business website typically runs $500–$1,500.
Template-based websites take 1–2 weeks. Custom small business sites from a local agency typically take 4–8 weeks. Timeline delays almost always come from waiting on content, photos, or client approvals. Having your content ready before the build starts cuts the timeline significantly.
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Luis Echarri
Founder, CopperBuilds

Luis builds conversion-focused websites for small businesses across the US. He's worked with local service businesses across a range of industries and budgets, and writes about what actually drives results at each price point.