How Much Does a Website Cost in 2026? (Honest Breakdown)
Website quotes range from $100 to $50,000 for what sounds like the same thing. Here's what's actually driving the price — and how to know if you're getting a fair deal.

The most common price range we quote people when they call about a website: $100 to $3,500+. The most common response: "That's a huge range. What's the difference?"
Fair question. Here's the honest answer.
Why Prices Vary So Much
You can get a website for $5 on Fiverr. You can get one for $50,000 from an enterprise agency. Both are real numbers. Neither is dishonest — they're just solving fundamentally different problems.
The variation isn't really about design quality, or even hours worked. It's about what the site is supposed to do, what it's built on, and whether it's built to rank and convert or just to exist.
We've talked to business owners who got quotes from $800 to $18,000 for what they described as "a basic website with a few pages." Here's what I tell them every time: the question isn't "what does it cost?" The question is "what am I actually getting?"
What the Market Looks Like
What You're Actually Paying For
At the low end — a DIY builder or a $400 gig — you're paying for a template with your content dropped in. It looks fine. It probably doesn't load fast, has no real SEO foundation, and comes with zero ongoing support. Three years from now, you'll either pay someone to redo it or spend a weekend trying to update it yourself.
I'm not saying this to scare anyone. Some businesses genuinely just need a placeholder on the internet, and a DIY template does that for almost nothing. But if the goal is to rank in search, generate leads, and actually function as a sales tool — a template with your logo swapped in isn't going to do it.
At the other end, large agencies have full teams: account managers, strategists, designers, developers, copywriters. You're paying for all of them, whether you need all of them or not. For a 5-page service business site, most of that overhead isn't serving you.
The middle — small agencies and experienced builders working with a clear scope — is where most small businesses find the best value. You're paying for experience and results, not overhead.
The Cheap-Site Trap
Here's something we see constantly. A business owner pays $600 for a website. The site exists. It looks okay. Three months later, it ranks for nothing, the phone isn't ringing, and they come to us to figure out why.
The answer is almost always the same: the site was built to look good in a browser preview, not to perform in search. No semantic structure. No schema markup. Images uncompressed. Hosted on the cheapest shared server available. Mobile experience broken in subtle ways that are invisible on a desktop.
They end up paying twice — once for the site that didn't work, once for the site that does. A $600 website that costs you $3,000 in missed leads every quarter isn't actually cheap.
Our Pricing, Straight Up
Two options. Here's what they are.
- ✓ Up to 10 pages
- ✓ Mobile responsive
- ✓ Free domain + hosting (1 yr)
- ✓ SEO setup
- ✓ Contact forms
- ✓ 1 year free maintenance
- ✓ Fully custom build
- ✓ Lead capture integrations
- ✓ E-commerce capable
- ✓ Advanced functionality
- ✓ CRM integration
- ✓ Built to your process
The $100 Website surprises people. Sounds like a catch. There isn't one. We've built a streamlined process for small business sites that lets us offer a real, performant, SEO-ready website at a price point that makes sense when you don't need 40 pages of custom functionality.
Enterprise — multiple locations, complex CMS, custom requirements — gets a custom quote. We scope it and price it honestly.
What Actually Drives the Number
If you're getting quotes from multiple people, here are the variables that should be moving the price:
- Number of pages — A 3-page brochure site is not the same as a 15-page site with separate service landing pages.
- Custom design vs. adapted structure — A completely custom design takes significantly more time than working from a proven foundation.
- Functionality — A contact form is easy. A booking system with calendar sync and automated follow-ups is not.
- Copywriting — A lot of agencies quote design only. If someone needs to write the words on your site, that's separate scope — and it should be, because good copy is half the battle.
- Ongoing support — Some quotes include maintenance, some don't. Ask.
If a quote doesn't break any of these down, ask for a scope of work before you sign anything.
The Question That Actually Matters
Price and value aren't the same number. A site that generates consistent leads pays for itself. A cheap site that ranks for nothing doesn't.
The question worth asking isn't "can I find this cheaper?" It's "what is this supposed to do for my business, and is whoever built it actually able to make that happen?"
If you've been quoted prices that don't add up, or you just want a straight answer about what a site should cost for what you're trying to do — reach out and we'll tell you exactly what you'd get. No pitch. Just an honest breakdown.

Founder, Polygon Digital
Justin Crump is the founder of Polygon Digital, a web design and SEO agency based in Denison, TX. He works with contractors and service businesses across the Texoma area to build fast, conversion-focused websites and local SEO strategies that generate real leads.

