How Much Does a WordPress Website Cost in 2026? (Real Pricing Guide)

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Salman Ahmed WordPress Developer in Pakistan
🟢 Avaliable for new projects

If you’re Googling this question, you’ve probably already seen answers ranging from “$0 with a free theme” to “$50,000+ with a top agency.” That’s not helpful.

You want a real answer. So here’s one from someone who’s actually built 120+ WordPress websites for businesses across the US, UK, Canada, Germany, Mexico, and Pakistan.
In this guide, I’ll break down what a WordPress website actually costs in 2026, what factors affect pricing, and how to make smart decisions about your budget — whether you’re a small business owner, a startup founder, or a growing brand.

The Short Answer: WordPress Website Pricing in 2026

Here’s a quick overview before we dive into the details:
Website Type
Price Range
Best For

Starter Business Website (5–7 pages)

$800 – $1,500

Small businesses, personal brands, service providers

eCommerce Store (WooCommerce or Shopify)

$2,000 – $5,000+

Online stores, product-based businesses

Custom/Complex Website

$5,000 – $15,000+

Membership sites, booking platforms, large-scale builds

US/UK Agency

$10,000 – $50,000+

Enterprise businesses with big budgets

These are the ranges I see across the industry. My own pricing falls in the freelancer range because you’re working directly with me — no agency overhead, no middlemen.

What Actually Affects the Cost of a WordPress Website?

There’s no one-size-fits-all price because every website is different. Here are the factors that move the number up or down:

1. Number of Pages

A simple 5-page website (Home, About, Services, Portfolio, Contact) is naturally cheaper than a 20-page site with dedicated landing pages, blog sections, and case study pages. More pages mean more design, more content, and more development time.

2. Design Complexity

Do you want a clean, professional layout based on proven conversion patterns? That’s straightforward. Do you want fully custom animations, interactive elements, and a design that’s never been done before? That takes more time and costs more.

3. eCommerce Features

Adding an online store (WooCommerce or Shopify) increases cost significantly. Product pages, payment gateway integration, shipping logic, inventory management, and checkout optimization all add complexity. A 10-product store is very different from a 500-product catalog.

4. Custom Functionality

Booking systems, membership areas, client portals, custom forms, third-party integrations (CRMs, email marketing, payment processors) — each adds development time. The more custom logic your site needs, the higher the cost.

5. SEO & Speed Optimization

A basic WordPress install won’t rank on Google by itself. Proper SEO setup — schema markup, meta structure, image optimization, page speed targeting 90+ scores — should be included in every build. Some developers charge extra for this. I include it as standard because a website that doesn’t rank is a website that doesn’t work.

6. Content Creation

Some developers build the site but expect you to provide all the copy, images, and content. Others (like me) handle content strategy and can guide you on what to write. If you need professional copywriting or photography, budget extra for that.

7. Ongoing Maintenance

Your website isn’t a one-time cost. WordPress needs regular updates, security patches, backups, and occasional fixes. Monthly maintenance typically runs $100–$400/month depending on the level of support you need.

Freelancer vs Agency: Where Should You Spend Your Budget?

This is the real question most business owners face. Here’s an honest comparison:
Freelance Developer
Agency

Typical Cost

$800 – $5,000
$10,000 – $50,000+
Communication
Direct with the developer
Through account managers
Turnaround
2–6 weeks typically
6–12 weeks typically
Customization
High — you’re their focus
Depends on agency size
Ongoing Support
Usually available
Often requires a retainer
Best For
Small businesses, startups, SMEs
Enterprise, complex projects
I’m biased here (obviously), but after building 120+ websites, I can tell you that most small businesses and startups don’t need an agency. They need a skilled developer who communicates well, delivers on time, and builds something that actually works.
The businesses I work with — from PixelPlan Webdesign in Germany to Ummah Financial Solutions in the UK, NexLife in Canada, and KimCare in Mexico — chose to work with me directly because they wanted agency-quality results without the agency price tag.

Hidden Costs to Watch Out For

When comparing quotes, make sure you’re comparing apples to apples. Here are costs that are sometimes excluded from a developer’s quote:

— Domain Name

$10–$20/year for a .com domain. You should own this yourself, not through your developer.

— Hosting

$5–$50/month depending on quality. I recommend managed WordPress hosting (like Cloudways, SiteGround, or Kinsta) for the best balance of speed and reliability. Avoid cheap shared hosting — it’ll cost you in page speed and uptime.

— Premium Plugins

Some functionality requires paid plugins. Elementor Pro ($59/year), WooCommerce extensions, booking plugins, or form plugins can add $50–$300/year to your costs. A good developer will tell you upfront which premium tools you’ll need.

— SSL Certificate

Most hosts include a free SSL certificate. If yours doesn’t, expect $10–$100/year. Your site needs HTTPS — non-negotiable for security and SEO.

— Content & Copywriting

If you don’t have website copy ready, professional copywriting can cost $200–$2,000 depending on the scope. Some developers include basic content guidance in their packages.

How to Get the Most Value From Your WordPress Budget

Whether your budget is $800 or $5,000, here’s how to make sure every dollar works hard:

— Start With What You Need, Not What You Want

Launch with a solid 5–10 page website that looks professional and converts visitors. You can always add features, pages, and complexity later. I’ve seen too many businesses delay their launch for months trying to build the “perfect” 30-page site when a clean 7-page site would have started generating leads immediately.

— Insist on SEO From Day One

Rebuilding a site for SEO later costs almost as much as building it right the first time. Make sure your developer includes proper heading structure, schema markup, meta titles, image optimization, and mobile responsiveness from the start. This isn’t optional — it’s foundational.

— Ask About Post-Launch Support

The cheapest quote isn’t the best deal if the developer disappears after launch. Ask upfront: “What happens if something breaks next month?” A good developer offers ongoing maintenance packages or at least ad-hoc support.

— Look at Their Real Portfolio

Don’t just look at mockups. Visit the live websites they’ve built. Check the speed, check the mobile experience, check if the sites are actually ranking on Google. A portfolio of live, performing websites tells you more than any sales pitch.

What I Charge for WordPress Website Development

I believe in transparent pricing, so here’s what working with me looks like:
Package
What’s Included
Starting Price
Starter Website
5–7 page WordPress site, mobile responsive, basic SEO, Elementor-built, 1 revision round
$800
Business Pro
10–15 page site, conversion-focused design, speed optimization, 2 revision rounds
$1,000
eCommerce Launch
Full WooCommerce or Shopify store, product setup, payment integration, checkout optimization
$2,000
Monthly Maintenance
Updates, backups, speed monitoring, 2 hours of changes per month
$200/mo
Every project starts with a free discovery call where I understand your goals, scope, and budget. I provide a custom quote within 48 hours — no surprises, no hidden fees.
I work with businesses internationally and accept payments in USD, GBP, EUR, CAD, and PKR through Payoneer and Wise.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is WordPress free?

WordPress.org (the self-hosted version) is free to download and install. But you’ll still need to pay for hosting, a domain, and likely premium themes or plugins. The “free” part is the software itself — building a professional website on top of it requires investment in design, development, and optimization.
Because “WordPress website” covers everything from a simple blog to a complex eCommerce platform with thousands of products. A 5-page business website and a 50-page membership site with custom integrations are fundamentally different projects. The price reflects the time, skill, and complexity involved.
If you’re selling physical products and want simplicity, Shopify is excellent. If you need more customization, content marketing integration, or already have a WordPress site, WooCommerce is the better choice. Both are great — the right pick depends on your specific needs and growth plans.
Technically, yes. But the question is whether that’s the best use of your time. If you’re spending 40+ hours learning WordPress, Elementor, SEO, and web design — that’s 40 hours you’re not spending on your actual business. A professional developer gets it done faster, better, and with SEO built in from day one.
A starter business website takes about 1–2 weeks. A professional multi-page site takes 2–4 weeks. A full eCommerce store can take 3–6 weeks depending on the number of products and complexity. Rush timelines are possible but may affect pricing.
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