"How much does a website cost?" — a question that can't be answered with a single number. It's like asking "how much does renovation cost?" — everything depends on the space, materials, your wishes, and the contractor.
Let's break down what actually shapes web project pricing.
Project Scale
The most obvious factor is the amount of work.
A single-page landing — that's a few days of work. One page, one goal, one call to action.
A corporate website with 10-15 pages — that's weeks. Each page needs its own design, copy, mobile adaptation.
An e-commerce store — that's months. Catalog, filters, cart, payment, user account, warehouse integrations... Each element multiplies complexity.
Design Uniqueness
This is where the biggest price range lies.
Template solution — fast and budget-friendly. We take a ready template, adapt it to your content. Looks acceptable, but you'll look like hundreds of other sites.
Custom design — when a designer creates a visual language from scratch specifically for your brand. Every element is thoughtful. Takes longer and costs more, but the result is a site that's memorable.
Technical Complexity
Not all technologies cost the same.
A business card site on a website builder and a high-load web application on Next.js — these are different universes. The more complex the architecture, the more integrations, the higher the speed requirements — the more developer hours.
Integrations especially affect the price. Connecting a payment system, syncing with CRM, setting up automated emails — each integration is a separate layer of work.
Content
People often forget that a website isn't just code and design.
Someone has to write the copy. Someone has to take the photos. Someone has to compose it all beautifully.
If you already have ready content — great. If not — that's a separate expense. Professional copywriting and photography can cost as much as half the development.
Timelines
Urgency always costs more.
If there's time — we can work at a normal pace. If it's "needed yesterday" — the team works overtime, postpones other projects, and that has its price.
Tip: plan your site launch in advance. At least 2-3 months before the desired date.
Team Experience
A junior developer costs less than a senior. But there are nuances.
An experienced specialist works faster, makes fewer mistakes, knows the pitfalls. As a result, the total cost might even be lower, and quality is guaranteed higher.
We believe in the principle: better to pay more, but only once.
Support and Development
A website isn't "build and forget." It needs:
- Hosting and domain (annual costs)
- Technical support (updates, security)
- Development (new features, changes)
Some companies offer low development prices but then "catch up" on support. Always ask about the total cost of ownership.
How to Get an Accurate Estimate?
The best way — talk to us.
We don't pull prices "from thin air." Every project is unique, and only after understanding your tasks can we give an honest estimate.
What we'll ask:
- What's the site's goal?
- Who's your audience?
- What features are needed?
- Do you have references (sites you like)?
- What are the timelines?
Based on this, we'll prepare a detailed proposal — free and without obligation.