Last Updated on June 18, 2026

What a Logo, a Brand Identity and a Full Rebrand Actually Cost a UK Small Business
Executive summary
Branding is the marketing purchase with the widest price range of all. A logo can cost £30 from an online marketplace or £30,000 from a London agency, and the gap is genuinely confusing for a small business owner trying to do the right thing without being fleeced.
This report sets out what each level of branding actually costs in the UK in 2026, from a standalone logo to a full strategic rebrand, and helps you work out which level your business actually needs rather than the one a studio would love to sell you.
Key takeaways
- A professional logo for a UK small business runs roughly £500 to £3,000. Freelancers sit at £500 to £1,000, small agencies £1,000 to £2,000, and mid-size agencies £2,000 to £3,500 with strategy and options.
- A brand starter pack, a logo plus guidelines, costs £1,500 to £5,000 and is the right level for most small businesses.
- A full brand identity with strategy costs £5,000 to £20,000. A complete rebrand with research and rollout runs £10,000 to £50,000 and beyond.
- Freelancers typically cost 30 to 50% less than agencies, trading strategic depth for price. For a young business that often is the right trade.
- Hourly rates run £20 to £35 for junior designers, £35 to £60 mid-level, £60 to £100 plus for seniors, and £75 to £150 plus at agencies.
- The cheapest logo is rarely the cheapest decision. Rebranding later, after signage, packaging and stationery are printed, costs far more than getting it right once.
Contents
The five levels of branding spend
Branding is not one purchase, it is a ladder. Each rung adds strategy and assets, and the price climbs accordingly. Knowing which rung you are buying is the difference between a fair price and an expensive misunderstanding.
| Level | Typical UK cost, 2026 | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Marketplace or DIY logo | £30 to £150 | A logo file, no strategy, often not unique |
| Freelance logo | £500 to £1,000 | A custom logo, usually one direction and basic files |
| Brand starter pack | £1,500 to £5,000 | Logo plus guidelines: colours, fonts, usage rules |
| Full brand identity | £5,000 to £20,000 | Strategy, identity system, full asset set |
| Complete rebrand with strategy | £10,000 to £50,000+ | Research, positioning, identity and rollout |
What each level costs
Bars show the starting price of each level. Each rises with agency seniority, number of concepts and the breadth of assets and rollout required.
Freelancer or agency
The honest split is this. A freelancer gives you craft at a lower price, typically 30 to 50% below agency rates, but usually one creative perspective and lighter strategy. An agency gives you a team, a research-backed process and a system designed to scale across every touchpoint, at a price that reflects all of that. Hourly, freelancers run £20 to £100 depending on seniority, while agencies sit at £75 to £150 and above.
For most early-stage small businesses, a strong freelancer producing a clean logo and simple guidelines is the right call. An agency earns its fee once the brand has to work hard across packaging, signage, a large website and paid advertising, where consistency and strategy pay for themselves.
Which level you actually need
- New or side business, tight budget: a freelance logo at £500 to £1,000 is enough to look professional and start trading.
- Established and growing: a brand starter pack at £1,500 to £5,000 gives you guidelines so everything you produce stays consistent.
- Scaling, raising money or entering a crowded market: a full brand identity at £5,000 plus buys the strategy that helps you stand out and command a price.
- Repositioning an established business: a complete rebrand is a major project. Be sure the business reason justifies it before spending five figures.
The real cost of a cheap logo
A £30 marketplace logo is not wrong for a brand-new venture testing an idea. The risk is buying cheap and committing hard: printing signage, vehicle livery, packaging and stationery around a logo you outgrow in a year. The rebrand then costs far more than the logo ever did, because you are not paying for a new design, you are paying to replace everything the old one touched. Spend at the level your commitment justifies, and step up the ladder as the business proves itself.
Methodology and sources
Compiled June 2026 from current UK logo and branding pricing guides, including Bob Design, MattDarm, Anchor Web Agency, DesignOrbits, This is Cold, Media Village, Inkbot Design, Osdire and Wise. Ranges reflect differences between freelancers and agencies, the number of concepts and revisions, and the breadth of brand assets and rollout. Figures describe typical UK small business pricing in 2026 and rise with agency seniority and project scope.
What to do next
Decide which rung of the ladder your business actually needs before you brief anyone, and match the spend to how permanent your decisions are. The foundations of a brand that converts are in our guide to branding for small businesses, what a website costs to pair with it is in our UK website costs guide, what every other marketing service costs sits in the UK Marketing Cost Index, and how much marketing should cost overall is in our guide to UK marketing costs.

