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This is one of the most searched questions by small business owners, and it gets the vaguest answers. "It depends" is technically true but completely useless. So here's the actual breakdown — what real businesses pay, what they get, and where the value actually is.
Wix, Squarespace, GoDaddy Website Builder, and similar platforms let you build a site yourself for a low monthly fee. This sounds like a great deal, and for some use cases it is — a personal portfolio, a simple landing page, or a site for a very early-stage business.
The problems for established local businesses:
If your business depends on local search traffic to generate calls, a DIY builder site is usually not the right long-term foundation.
This range typically gets you a template with your logo and colors swapped in, sometimes with basic contact information added. The work is usually fast and the person doing it may be genuinely trying to help — but at this price point, you're not getting original design, SEO structure, performance optimization, or someone who will be around in six months when something breaks.
Think of it like hiring someone to build a fence for $500 — it might look fine on day one, but you'll be back to fixing it within a year.
This is the sweet spot for most local service businesses. At this level you should expect:
For most contractors, trades businesses, and local service companies in Sonoma County, $1,500–2,500 is the right budget for a properly built site. It's a one-time investment that should generate returns for 3–5 years before needing a significant update.
You're paying for the overhead of a full team — project managers, designers, developers, account managers. The quality of the work varies enormously at this price point. Some agencies at the lower end of this range are charging premium prices for template work. Some genuinely deliver sophisticated custom builds.
For most local small businesses, this range is more than you need. The money goes toward overhead, not toward better outcomes for your specific situation.
Enterprise budgets for enterprise clients. Not relevant for a local plumber, landscaper, or café owner.
A website isn't a one-time purchase — there are ongoing costs to plan for:
Total ongoing cost for a properly hosted small business site: roughly $200–400/year if you handle your own updates, $800–2,000/year if you pay for ongoing maintenance.
Here's the math most people skip: if a properly built website generates 2 additional calls per month, and you close 1 of them for an average job value of $800, that's $9,600 in new revenue per year from a $2,000 investment. Most trades businesses would take that deal every time — they just don't frame it that way when thinking about whether to spend money on a website.
The question isn't whether you can afford a properly built site. It's how much you're already losing by not having one.
Whatever budget you're working with, ask these questions before signing anything:
Any legitimate web designer should answer all five without hesitation.
I'm a local Sonoma County web designer. I'll look at your site, tell you exactly what's hurting you, and show you what a better one would do — free, no commitment.
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