In 2026, most Australian small businesses pay somewhere between $1,500 and $20,000 for a website. DIY builders cost about $20–$50 a month, local freelancers typically charge $1,500–$5,000, small agencies $3,000–$9,000, and larger creative agencies $10,000 and up. The right number depends on who builds it, how complex the site is, and what's bundled in.
"How much should this cost?" is the first question every business owner asks, and the honest answer is: it depends enormously on who you hire. The same five-page site for a café can cost $500 or $15,000. This guide breaks down the real 2026 numbers so you can spot a fair price — and the hidden costs that turn a cheap quote into an expensive one.
What actually drives the price
Three things move the number more than anything else:
- Who builds it. A DIY platform, a solo freelancer and a full agency deliver very different results at very different prices.
- How complex it is. A simple "brochure" site (who you are, what you do, how to contact you) is a fraction of the cost of an online store with payments, logins and hundreds of products.
- How custom it is. A lightly-edited template is cheap. A design built specifically around your brand takes more time, and time is what you're paying for.
For most local businesses — a trade, a café, a clinic, a shop — you're in brochure-site territory. That's the cheapest and most important category to get right.
The three ways to get a website built
| Option | Typical 2026 cost | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| DIY builder (Wix, Squarespace, Shopify) | $20–$50 / month | Tiny budgets, owners with spare time |
| Local freelancer | $1,500–$5,000 once-off | A polished site without agency prices |
| Small agency | $3,000–$9,000+ once-off | More complex sites, a team behind it |
| Creative / large agency | $10,000–$50,000+ | Big brands, custom platforms, eCommerce |
1. DIY website builders
Platforms like Wix, Squarespace and Shopify let you build it yourself for roughly $20–$50 a month. There are no setup fees and the basic plans are genuinely capable. The catch is your time: you're the designer, copywriter and tech support. Results often look templated, and getting one to rank well on Google takes know-how most owners don't have. If your hours are worth more than the money saved, this is a false economy.
2. Local freelancers
An experienced Australian freelancer is the sweet spot for many small businesses. Expect $1,500–$5,000 for a clean, custom small-business site, with simple projects starting nearer $500–$2,000 and more involved builds climbing toward $10,000. Hourly rates usually sit around $50–$150. You get a direct relationship with the person doing the work and far more customisation than any DIY tool. The risk is that a one-person operator is a single point of failure — if they get sick, go quiet, or are strong in design but weak in development, you feel it.
3. Agencies
Agencies charge more — small agencies commonly $3,000–$9,000, and creative or large agencies $10,000 to $50,000 and beyond — because you're paying for a team and the overhead around it. Agency hourly rates run $80–$300 (Melbourne's design-led studios often $130–$280). That's the right call for a complex platform or a serious brand. For a local plumber or a corner café, it's usually far more than the job needs.
A small plumbing business doesn't need a $12,000 website with custom animations. It needs a clean site that shows up on Google and makes it easy for customers to call.
The hidden costs nobody quotes you
The build price is only part of the story. Before you compare quotes, ask what's not included:
On top of those, watch for charges that appear later: every content change billed by the hour, "maintenance" retainers, and ongoing SEO services that can run $1,500–$10,000 a month at the top end. None of these are scams — but a $2,000 quote with $90-per-change edits and a separate hosting bill can quietly cost more than a higher all-inclusive price.
Ownership: the cost that bites later
The most expensive surprise isn't a fee — it's being locked in. Before you sign, confirm in writing that you own your domain, your content and your site files. Some providers register the domain in their own name or keep the accounts, which makes moving on painful and pricey. Ownership clarity is non-negotiable.
What a small business website actually needs
Most agencies sell you a long feature list because that's where their margins are. In reality, a local business website needs to do three things well:
- Look trustworthy on a phone, because most of your visitors are on one.
- Show up on Google when someone searches your name or "[your trade] near me".
- Make it dead easy to act — call, message, book or find you.
Get those right and a simple site outperforms an expensive one that's slow, cluttered or invisible. Animations and clever extras are nice; they're rarely what wins the customer.
So what should you actually pay?
For a straightforward local-business site in 2026, a fair all-in price sits in the low thousands — not the $20,000 a big agency might quote, and not the slow grind of building it yourself. The best value usually comes from an experienced freelancer or small studio with transparent, fixed pricing and clear ownership.
For context, that's exactly where FISAL Studio sits: $1,900 once-off for a complete, custom-built site that's live and hosted with the first year of updates and support included, then $300 a year after that. The domain is registered in your name, and you can take everything and walk at any time. We even build you a free working mockup first, so you see the real thing before paying.
See your site before you pay for it
I'll build a free, working mockup of your actual business website — not a sketch — so you can judge it for yourself. If you like it, it's $1,900 to go live. If not, you've lost nothing.
Get a free mockup →