For small businesses and startups that need a professional presence fast.
- Up to 5 pages, custom designed
- Mobile-first responsive build
- Basic on-page SEO setup
- Contact form and Google Analytics
- Hosting and launch configuration
Website design pricing
What a website actually costs, what sits behind the number, and the package that fits your business. Built in Pretoria since 2015, with real commercial development behind every project. No lock-in, and you own every file.
By Cobus van der Westhuizen, CEO and lead developer, Juicy Designs. Last updated June 2026.
Fixed scope, no surprises
Every Juicy Designs build starts with a short discovery call so the quote matches the work. Custom design, never an off-the-shelf template, mobile-first, and yours to keep. You own the finished site and every file we produce.
How much does a website cost in South Africa? Website prices in South Africa run from about R1,000 for a basic DIY or freelancer site to R150,000 or more for a large custom build. Most small businesses spend R5,000 to R15,000 for a professionally built site, while established companies that need strategy, SEO, and scalability typically pay R15,000 to R50,000. Juicy Designs builds from R12,000 for a starter site to R85,000 and up for custom development, with hosting, maintenance, and ecommerce options on top.
Market figures reflect published 2026 South African agency pricing across multiple providers.
Our packages
Fixed-scope builds with no hidden fees. Every package includes a custom design, a mobile-first responsive build, basic on-page SEO, and a contact form. You own the finished site and all files.
For small businesses and startups that need a professional presence fast.
For established businesses that need a site built to generate leads.
For online stores, web apps, and large or bespoke builds.
Prices exclude VAT and are starting points. Final quotes follow a short discovery call so the scope is accurate.
At a glance
A quick side by side to match a package to your stage and timeline.
| Package | From | Best for | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | R12,000 | Small business, first website | 2 to 3 weeks |
| Business | R28,000 | Lead generation, growing brands | 4 to 6 weeks |
| Custom and ecommerce | R85,000 | Online stores, web apps | 8 to 16 weeks |
Price factors
Two quotes for "a website" can differ by R40,000 and both be fair, because the work behind them is different. Five things move the number.
A one-page site is quick. A fifty-page corporate site with service and location pages takes far more design and build time, which raises the cost.
A template is faster and cheaper but limited. A bespoke design built around your brand and conversions costs more because it is made for you, not adapted from someone else.
Ecommerce, booking systems, member logins, payment gateways, and custom integrations each add development time. Every feature is real engineering, not a switch.
If you supply finished copy and images the build moves faster. If we write and source them, that is professional work that adds to the price but lifts the result.
A freelancer is often cheaper but works alone. An agency costs more and gives you a team: designer, developer, copywriter, and SEO, with cover when someone is away.
With most South Africans online through mobile, responsive design is essential, not optional. SA payment gateways and load-shedding-resilient hosting are local requirements worth budgeting for.
A word on very cheap websites. A R500 to R2,000 "website" is usually a locked template on a builder you do not own, with no SEO foundation, slow load times, and security gaps. It can cost more to fix or rebuild later than to do it properly once. Google's guidance on helpful, people-first content rewards fast, well-built sites, which a bargain template rarely delivers.
Price tiers
Asking what a website costs is like asking what a car costs. The answer depends on what you need. Here is the full market ladder and who each tier suits.
| Tier | Typical range | Who it is for |
|---|---|---|
| Basic / freelancer / DIY | R1,000 to R5,000 | Sole traders and hobby sites, bare minimum presence |
| Small business website | R5,000 to R15,000 | Startups and small businesses needing a clean, credible site |
| Professional business website | R15,000 to R40,000 | Growing companies needing strategy, SEO, and scalability |
| Ecommerce website | R20,000 to R80,000+ | Online stores with payments, products, and automation |
| Custom development | R40,000 to R150,000+ | Portals, integrations, and bespoke platforms |
Included: a template design with light branding, two to four pages, a basic contact form, and mobile responsiveness. Not included: meaningful SEO, custom design, Google Business Profile setup, custom functionality, or post-launch support. Best for a sole trader who just needs to exist online.
Included: three to six professionally designed pages on a CMS like WordPress, mobile-responsive design, basic on-page SEO, contact form and WhatsApp, Google Business Profile setup, and stock imagery. Not included: advanced SEO architecture, custom functionality, or API connections.
Included: six to twenty pages, advanced SEO with schema and page-speed work, custom enquiry and booking forms, newsletter and CRM integrations, and custom functionality. Not included: ecommerce, ongoing SEO campaigns, and sometimes copywriting and photography. The right tier for most established South African businesses.
Included: product and category pages, shopping cart and secure checkout, South African payment gateways, user accounts, shipping configuration, coupons, and cart-abandonment emails. Not included: product photography and descriptions, and complex ERP integrations. Budget R1,500 and up a month for proper management.
Included: bespoke functionality built to spec, complex integrations, custom user roles and dashboards, scalable architecture, and thorough testing. Be aware: scope creep is the main cause of overruns, so define requirements upfront and choose an agency with genuine in-house development.
Freelancers in South Africa typically charge R250 to R800 an hour. Established agencies charge R800 to R2,500 an hour, which buys project management, a full team, branding, and long-term scalability. Most professional projects are quoted as a fixed project fee rather than hourly.
Cost breakdown
A website is not a single line item. These are the parts that make up a build, with market ranges so you can sanity-check any quote you receive.
| Element | Typical cost | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Template site | R5,000 to R12,000 | Pre-built theme, light customisation, a handful of pages |
| Custom small business site | R12,000 to R40,000 | Bespoke 5 to 12 page design, mobile-first, basic SEO |
| Corporate or large site | R40,000 to R150,000+ | Many pages, custom features, advanced design and integrations |
| Ecommerce store | R25,000 to R120,000 | Product catalogue, payment gateways, checkout, order management |
| Custom web app | R100,000 to R500,000 | Bespoke functionality, databases, user accounts, APIs |
| Copywriting | R500 to R1,500 / page | Professional page copy written to convert and rank |
| Logo and graphics | R1,500 to R8,000 | Brand assets, icons, and custom graphics for the site |
Running costs
A build is once-off, but a website needs a few things to stay live, fast, and secure. Budget for these separately so the true cost of ownership is clear.
| Recurring cost | Typical price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hosting | R150 to R500 / month | Faster, local hosting matters for SA load times and load-shedding resilience |
| Domain renewal | R100 to R200 / year | Your .co.za or .com address |
| Maintenance | R500 to R5,000 / month | Security updates, backups, plugin updates, small changes |
| Business email | R80 to R200 / user / month | Professional address on your domain |
We hand over all files and access. There is no lock-in. Maintenance retainers are optional, not compulsory.
Build versus value
The cheapest mistake is focusing on the build price and ignoring what makes a website actually work. Two problems sink most South African business sites.
A beautiful site with no SEO is a billboard in the Karoo. If pages are not optimised so Google understands what you do and where you serve, you will not appear when people search. Most designers build and launch; they are not SEO specialists. Ongoing SEO is what fixes this.
Generic filler like "a dedicated team committed to excellence" tells a visitor nothing. Copy that speaks to the visitor's actual problem and ends with a clear, low-friction call to action is what turns a browser into an enquiry.
Ask what it will earn, not just what it costs. A R12,000 site that never ranks and never converts has cost R12,000 for nothing. A R15,000 site that is optimised, well written, and actively managed pays for itself if it brings in even one or two clients a month. Judge the spend on leads and sales, not the upfront number alone.
Before you hire
The right questions separate a designer who hands over a pretty brochure from one who builds a site that works. Ask these before you sign.
Not just "we set up the pages". Will keywords be researched and applied to each page? Ask to see clients who actually rank on page one for their industry.
A professional copywriter, an AI-assisted strategy, or you filling a blank template at 11pm? Self-written filler is the top reason sites fail to generate enquiries.
Who handles updates, security patches, and hosting issues? Get clarity on what post-launch support is included and what it costs when it is not.
Can they show a client who ranks on page one and generates leads, not just a portfolio of good-looking sites? If they cannot point to a concrete result, that is your answer.
Add hosting, domain, maintenance, email accounts, and any tools. A R6,000 quote quietly becomes R10,000 and up once the extras are counted. The headline price is rarely the final price.
Confirm you receive all files and full access on handover. On many cheap builds the site lives on a platform you cannot move, so you are renting, not owning.
SA vs global
By global standards, South African web design is strong value for the skill level. The same custom business site costs a fraction of UK or US agency pricing, which is why overseas brands increasingly build with SA teams.
| Market | Professional business site | In rand |
|---|---|---|
| South Africa | R15,000 to R55,000 | R15,000 to R55,000 |
| United States | $3,000 to $30,000 | roughly R57,000 to R570,000 |
| United Kingdom | £2,000 to £15,000 | roughly R48,000 to R360,000 |
Conversions are approximate and move with exchange rates.
FAQ
A professional website in South Africa costs from about R5,000 for a basic template build to R150,000 or more for a large custom site or web app. Most businesses pay between R15,000 and R50,000 for a custom design. The exact figure depends on the number of pages, features, and how much content and design work is involved.
A custom 5-page website in South Africa typically costs between R12,000 and R20,000 in 2026, depending on design complexity and how much copywriting is included. Template-based 5-page sites can be cheaper, but you trade away customisation, performance, and ownership.
Online stores in South Africa usually cost R25,000 to R120,000, depending on product volume and integrations. The price covers product and category pages, a checkout, and South African payment gateways such as PayFast, Yoco, or Peach Payments. Larger catalogues and custom features sit at the upper end.
Bespoke web applications start around R100,000 and can run to R500,000 or more. The cost reflects custom functionality, databases, user accounts, and API integrations. These are full software projects rather than standard websites, so they are quoted per project after a detailed scope.
Every package includes a custom design, mobile-first responsive build, basic on-page SEO, a contact form, and analytics setup. Business and Custom tiers add copywriting, a blog and CMS, conversion-focused layout, and for ecommerce, payment gateways and a full checkout. You own the finished site and all files.
Yes, but they are separate from the build. Budget for hosting (R150 to R500 a month), domain renewal (R100 to R200 a year), optional maintenance (R500 to R5,000 a month), and business email (R80 to R200 per user a month). We do not lock you into a maintenance contract.
Website builds are a once-off project fee. Ongoing items like hosting and maintenance are monthly or yearly. We do not bundle the build into a monthly subscription that never ends, and you keep your site and files regardless.
A Starter site takes around two to three weeks, a Business site four to six weeks, and a custom or ecommerce build eight to sixteen weeks. Timelines depend heavily on how quickly content and feedback come through from your side.
Because "a website" can mean a locked template or a bespoke build, and the work differs enormously. Always compare scope: number of pages, custom versus template, what features are included, whether copywriting and SEO are in, and whether hosting and maintenance are separate. Two equal-looking prices can buy very different things.
With us, yes. You receive all files, the CMS, and full access on handover. Be cautious of cheap builders where the site lives on a platform you do not control and cannot move, since you are effectively renting rather than owning.
Design is the look, layout, and user experience. Development is the code that makes it work: the build, functionality, integrations, and backend. A simple site is mostly design; an ecommerce store or web app development needs significant work, which is why those cost more.
DIY builders cost R100 to R500 a month and suit very small or temporary needs. The trade-offs are limited customisation, weaker SEO, slower performance, and a site you rent rather than own. For a business that wants to rank and convert, a custom build pays back over time.
Yes. As a registered South African business we add 15% VAT to quoted prices. Our package prices exclude VAT, so check whether any quote you compare includes it, as that alone can change the apparent price by a meaningful amount.
Yes. A redesign is often more cost-effective than starting over, especially if your content and structure are sound. We audit what you have, keep what works, and rebuild the rest on a faster, better-optimised foundation.
Every build includes a basic on-page SEO foundation: clean structure, fast load, correct headings, and schema. Ongoing SEO to actually rank and grow traffic is a separate monthly service, since it is continuing work rather than a once-off task.
Starter assumes you supply most content. Business and Custom packages include professional copywriting for key pages. Stock or custom images can be added. Supplying your own finished content lowers the cost and speeds up the build.
Most projects run on a deposit to start and the balance on completion, with larger builds split into milestone payments. We agree the structure up front in the quote so there are no surprises along the way.
South African agencies deliver strong design and development in native English at rand-denominated rates. The same custom site that costs R15,000 to R55,000 here would cost several times more in the UK or US, which is why some overseas brands build with SA teams.
Be wary of a quote with no discovery call, a single line that just says "Website" with no breakdown, prices that exclude hosting and maintenance to look cheaper, no mention of who owns the site, and "unlimited everything" for a few thousand rand. Each is a reason to ask for detail.
Work from what the site needs to do, not a round number. A lead-generating business site is an investment that should pay back through enquiries. Factor in the build plus the first year of running costs, then judge it against the value of the customers it brings in.