Last Updated on March 30, 2026
Most UK businesses ask:
“How much does a website cost?”
That is the wrong question.
The real question is:
What does the right website cost for our stage?
Because a £500 site and a £15,000 site can both be wrong.
The Core Truth
You are not paying for pages.
You are paying for:
- Structure
- Strategy
- Positioning
- Conversion clarity
- Technical setup
- Scalability
A website is an asset.
Not a design file.
The Real Cost Ranges (UK)
Here is what most UK businesses realistically pay.
£0 – £500
DIY Website Builder
Usually:
- Wix or Squarespace template
- Self-written content
- Minimal SEO setup
Best for:
- Early-stage businesses
- Testing an idea
- Low-budget launches
Risk:
- Weak positioning
- Poor structure
- Limited growth potential
Cheap upfront.
Often rebuilt later.
£500 – £2,500
Freelancer or Small Studio
Usually:
- Template-based WordPress or builder site
- Basic SEO setup
- Structured service pages
- Some guidance on messaging
Best for:
- Local services
- New professional firms
- Low complexity offers
Quality varies significantly.
Outcome depends on strategy, not just design.
£2,500 – £7,500
Strategic SME Website
Usually includes:
- Clear positioning work
- Conversion-focused page structure
- Proper service page build
- SEO foundations
- Technical optimisation
- Tracking setup
Best for:
- Established UK businesses
- Companies investing in growth
- Firms relying on inbound leads
This is where websites start working as revenue tools.
£7,500 – £20,000+
Growth-Focused Build
Usually includes:
- Deep brand positioning
- Conversion research
- Custom design
- Advanced SEO architecture
- Funnel integration
- CRM or automation setup
Best for:
- Scaling businesses
- Competitive industries
- High-value services
- Ecommerce brands
At this level, the site is built to compound.
What A Website Actually Costs Per Year
Do not forget ongoing costs.
Most UK businesses will pay:
- Hosting: £80 – £300 per year
- Maintenance (WordPress): £300 – £1,500 per year
- Software or plugins: £100 – £800 per year
- Updates and content improvements: variable
A cheap build with no maintenance often becomes expensive later.
What Drives Website Cost?
Five main factors:
1. Strategy Work
Clarity work costs more.
But saves money long term.
2. Content Creation
Professional copywriting increases cost.
It also increases conversion.
3. Design Depth
Custom design costs more than templates.
But does not automatically convert better.
4. Functionality
Booking systems.
Ecommerce.
Membership areas.
Integrations.
Complexity increases cost.
5. Scalability
Future-proofing costs more upfront.
But avoids rebuilds.
The Biggest Mistake
Choosing based on the lowest quote.
The cheapest option often:
- Skips positioning
- Skips conversion strategy
- Skips SEO foundations
It looks good.
It does not perform.
Budget Clarity Framework
Before setting your budget, answer:
- Is this site meant to generate leads?
- Is SEO central to growth?
- What is one new client worth?
- How competitive is our market?
- Are we building for 1 year or 5?
If one new client is worth £3,000,
a £5,000 website is not expensive.
It is leverage.
The Whito View
Your website should match your ambition.
Small ambition.
Small investment.
Growth ambition.
Growth investment.
But always:
Strategy first.
Structure second.
Design third.
A well-structured £3,000 site will outperform a poorly structured £10,000 one.
Every time.

