What Does a WordPress Website Actually Cost?
If you’ve searched for web design prices online, you’ve probably seen everything from €99 website builders to €50,000 agency quotes. Both are real. Neither tells you what a professional WordPress website for a small or medium business actually costs in 2026.
This guide breaks it down honestly — what you pay for, what drives the price up, and what to watch out for when hiring a web designer in Germany or Europe.
The Short Answer: WordPress Website Costs in 2026
| Type of Website | Typical Cost Range | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Simple 5-page brochure site | €800 – €2,500 | 1–2 weeks |
| Professional business site (8–15 pages) | €2,500 – €6,000 | 3–5 weeks |
| Custom business site with features | €5,000 – €12,000 | 5–10 weeks |
| WooCommerce webshop | €4,000 – €15,000 | 4–10 weeks |
| Enterprise / complex platform | €15,000+ | 3–6 months |
These are ranges for custom-built WordPress sites, not templates or website builders. Where you fall depends on what you need — and who you hire.
What’s Included in a Professional WordPress Website
A properly built WordPress website in 2026 isn’t just design. Here’s what a serious web designer should include in their quote:
Design & Development
- Custom design (not a pre-built theme with your logo on it)
- Mobile-first layout — designed for phones, not just scaled down
- WordPress + Elementor Pro or block-based build
- Contact forms, calls-to-action, and conversion elements
Technical SEO
- Page speed optimization (targeting 90+ on Google PageSpeed)
- Schema markup and structured data
- Meta titles, descriptions, and heading structure
- XML sitemap and robots.txt
- Google Search Console setup
Post-Launch
- Google Analytics 4 integration
- Training so you can manage the site yourself
- At least 30 days of post-launch support
If a quote doesn’t include SEO basics or post-launch support, ask why — or look elsewhere.
What Makes a WordPress Website More Expensive
Three things drive the price up more than anything else:
1. Number of Pages and Complexity
A 5-page site costs less than a 20-page site — obviously. But it’s not just about quantity. A page with a complex layout, animations, or custom functionality takes significantly longer to build than a standard text page. Service pages, case study templates, and landing pages all add time.
2. Custom Functionality
Booking systems, membership areas, multi-language setups, custom calculators, API integrations — each of these adds development time and cost. If you need something beyond standard WordPress functionality, expect the price to reflect that.
3. Content Creation
Many clients underestimate this. If you need your web designer to write the copy, source images, and structure the content strategy, that’s a significant additional scope. Some designers include basic copywriting; most don’t. Be clear on this upfront.
Ongoing Costs After Launch
The build cost is a one-time investment. But a live WordPress website has ongoing costs:
- Hosting: €5–€50/month depending on quality and traffic
- Domain: €10–€20/year
- SSL certificate: Usually included in hosting
- Elementor Pro license: ~€60/year (if used)
- Maintenance: €50–€200/month for updates, backups, security
- SEO / content: Optional but important for growth
Budget around €100–€300/month to keep a professional WordPress site running well after launch.
Cheap Website Builders vs. Custom WordPress: What’s the Real Difference?
Wix, Squarespace, and similar platforms cost €10–€40/month and you can build something in a weekend. So why would anyone pay €3,000+ for a custom WordPress site?
A few reasons:
- SEO performance: Custom WordPress sites consistently outperform website builders in organic search rankings. The code is cleaner, the structure is more flexible, and the content is more optimized.
- Speed: A properly optimized WordPress site loads significantly faster than a bloated website builder template.
- Flexibility: You’re not locked into one platform’s limitations. As your business grows, your site can grow with it.
- Ownership: You own your content and your site completely. With website builders, you’re renting.
For a business that relies on its website to generate leads and clients, the difference in performance — and therefore revenue — more than covers the higher upfront cost.
Red Flags When Hiring a Web Designer
Before you sign any contract, watch out for these:
- No fixed price: If they can’t give you a number before starting, scope creep is coming.
- No SEO included: A site that nobody can find is not a finished product.
- No post-launch support: You’ll need help in the first weeks. Make sure it’s included.
- Templates sold as custom: Ask to see previous work. If everything looks the same, it’s a template.
- No training or handover: You should be able to update your own site. If they make themselves indispensable, that’s a business model, not a service.
How to Get an Accurate Quote for Your Website
Before contacting a web designer, prepare the following:
- How many pages do you need?
- Do you have existing content (text and images) or do you need help creating it?
- What’s the primary goal of the site? (Lead generation, e-commerce, brand awareness)
- Do you have an existing site that needs to be redesigned, or is this from scratch?
- Any specific features you need? (Booking, multi-language, shop, etc.)
The more clearly you can answer these questions, the more accurate your quotes will be — and the faster the project will move once you hire someone.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to build a WordPress website?
A standard business site takes 2–4 weeks. More complex sites or those requiring a lot of content creation can take 5–10 weeks. Timeline depends heavily on how quickly you provide feedback and content.
Can I build a WordPress website myself?
Yes — if you’re willing to invest significant time learning the platform, design principles, and SEO basics. For a business that relies on its website for clients, the time cost usually outweighs the money saved. Most business owners are better off hiring someone and focusing on their business.
What’s the difference between WordPress.com and WordPress.org?
WordPress.com is a hosted service with limitations — similar to Wix or Squarespace. WordPress.org is the open-source software installed on your own hosting. Professional web designers use WordPress.org for full control and flexibility.
Do I need to pay for ongoing maintenance?
Not always — many business owners manage basic updates themselves. But if you want someone to handle plugin updates, security scans, backups, and performance monitoring, a monthly maintenance plan makes sense. Expect €80–€200/month for a proper service.
Is WordPress still the best platform in 2026?
For most business websites, yes. WordPress powers over 40% of all websites on the internet. It has the largest ecosystem of plugins and designers, the most flexibility, and the strongest SEO track record. Shopify is the better choice for pure e-commerce. Next.js and similar frameworks are better for highly custom web applications. But for a business website focused on generating leads, WordPress is still the default choice.
Need a WordPress website built properly? I’m Saman Pouryaghma — I build WordPress sites for businesses in Germany and Europe. Fixed price, no surprises, 30 days post-launch support. Learn more about my web design service or get in touch directly.