Web Development · Pricing
How Much Is Website Development? A Quick 2026 Answer With Real Ranges
A short, direct answer to 'how much is website development' with bracket ranges by project type, the four levers that move the price, and where to read the deeper breakdown.
Anurag Verma
5 min read
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The honest one-line answer: somewhere between $800 and $500,000. The spread is the actual story, and you only need a real number once you can place your project in the right bracket.
This post is the quick-read version. If you want the full breakdown with timelines and stack-by-stack costs, the long-form is here: Web Development Costs in 2026.
The Five-Bracket Cheat Sheet
| Project type | Typical range | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Single landing page | $800 – $2,500 | 1–2 weeks |
| Multi-page marketing site | $3,000 – $30,000 | 2–8 weeks |
| Web app / SaaS MVP | $15,000 – $150,000 | 6–20 weeks |
| Ecommerce store | $10,000 – $200,000 | 4–24 weeks |
| Enterprise platform | $150,000+ | 4+ months |
Two notes on this table.
First, the bottom of each range usually means a templated build with limited customization. The top of each range means custom design, multiple integrations, content migration, and a real QA phase. The middle is where most of our actual work lives.
Second, the lower brackets often expand once a buyer sees the demo. A “single landing page” turns into a 5-page site with a blog and a contact funnel. Plan for that drift before you sign.
The Four Levers That Move The Price
Most price differences come down to these:
- Scope. Number of pages, number of unique templates, custom features, content volume.
- Design depth. Off-the-shelf theme vs. custom design system vs. brand-new visual identity.
- Integrations. Stripe, HubSpot, Salesforce, internal tools, custom auth, analytics pipelines.
- Compliance and accessibility. WCAG conformance, SOC 2 alignment, HIPAA, regional privacy law work.
If a quote is unusually low, one of these four is being skipped quietly.
Region Multiplier (Rough)
For the same scope, expect approximate cost ratios:
- US/Canada agency: 1.0× (baseline)
- Western Europe: 0.8 – 1.0×
- Eastern Europe: 0.5 – 0.7×
- LatAm: 0.5 – 0.75×
- India: 0.3 – 0.55×
A full breakdown of where the gap is real and where it isn’t sits in our MVP development cost comparison. Cheaper geographies aren’t automatically a worse deal, and they aren’t automatically a steal either. You’re paying for clarity of communication, design fluency, and post-launch ownership as much as raw build time.
When A Quote Is Suspiciously Low
When the price comes in 40-60% under everyone else’s, one or more of these is usually missing:
- No real QA phase, just dev-side smoke testing
- No accessibility work
- No performance budget (so the site ships at LCP > 4s)
- Stock-template design with light recoloring
- No staging environment
- No post-launch support window
That isn’t always a deal-breaker. For a small landing page used in a paid campaign, you may genuinely not need any of those. For a B2B site that handles enterprise buyer trust, every one of them matters.
What You Actually Get At Each Bracket
A quick walk through what the bottom and top of each bracket buys you in practice:
Landing pages ($800–$2,500). Bottom: templated, single section, contact form. Top: custom design, conversion-tuned copy, A/B testing scaffolding, analytics events wired up.
Marketing sites ($3,000–$30,000). Bottom: 5 pages on a headless template. Top: 20+ pages with custom blog, case studies, locale switching, CMS migration, full SEO baseline.
Web apps / SaaS MVPs ($15,000–$150,000). Bottom: auth, one core workflow, basic dashboard. Top: multi-tenant, role-based access, billing, integrations, observability stack.
Ecommerce ($10,000–$200,000). Bottom: Shopify with a clean theme. Top: headless storefront, custom checkout, ERP/PIM integration, internationalization.
Enterprise platforms ($150,000+). Always custom. Multiple stakeholders, compliance, internal SSO, migration from legacy stacks. Treat anything under $150k for this category with skepticism.
Where The Money Actually Goes
For a typical $50,000 marketing site at a US agency, the rough breakdown is:
- Strategy and discovery: 10-15%
- Design: 20-30%
- Development: 35-45%
- QA, accessibility, and SEO baseline: 10-15%
- Launch and post-launch fixes: 5-10%
If a quote shows 80% development and almost nothing on strategy or QA, that’s usually a sign the team will discover scope problems mid-build instead of before it.
In-House vs Agency: The Quick Test
If you already have an in-house product team, a designer, and a frontend lead with bandwidth, an agency is rarely cheaper. Where agencies usually win is when you need a fast cross-functional team, you don’t have a designer, or you need launch in a defined window with a single point of accountability.
Related Guides
- Web Development Costs in 2026 (full breakdown)
- MVP cost: India vs US vs Eastern Europe
- Ecommerce website development agency guide
- Website development agency USA buyer guide
FAQ
How much is website development for a small business?
A typical small-business marketing site lands in the $5,000–$20,000 range with a US-based agency, depending on page count, custom design, and CMS choice. With a strong in-region partner outside the US, $3,000–$8,000 is realistic for the same scope.
Is a $1,000 website worth it?
For a single landing page used in a paid campaign, yes. For a primary business site that handles trust, lead capture, and SEO, $1,000 usually means a templated build with no real strategy or QA. You’ll likely rebuild within a year.
Why do quotes vary so much for the same project?
Different agencies include different things by default. One quote includes design, dev, content, QA, accessibility, and 30 days of post-launch fixes. Another includes only design and dev. Same number on the invoice, very different scope. Always ask for a written deliverables list, not just a price.
Want a real number?
If you have a defined scope and want a written estimate within 48 hours, send us the brief. We’ll either give you a range we’re confident in or tell you what’s missing before we can. Either way you walk away with a clearer picture than you came in with.
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