If you run a gym, clinic, salon, restaurant, coaching center, repair service, or local business, the better question is not just “How much does a website cost?” The better question is: “What kind of website will help customers trust me and contact me?”
Quick answer: typical small business website pricing
For many local businesses, a practical website budget often falls into three broad levels:
- Starter website: best for businesses that do not have a website yet and need a simple one-page presence.
- Local growth website: best for businesses that need multiple pages, clearer services, better trust signals, and stronger lead capture.
- Custom website: best for businesses that need booking systems, ecommerce, memberships, custom integrations, or advanced features.
What affects website cost?
Website cost changes because not every business needs the same thing. A one-page website for a small service provider is very different from a multi-page clinic website with treatment pages, FAQs, contact forms, analytics, and local SEO structure.
1. Number of pages
A one-page website costs less because it has fewer sections, fewer layouts, and less content. A five-page website usually takes more planning because each page needs its own purpose: homepage, services, about, contact, and FAQ.
2. Content and copywriting
A website is not only design. The words matter. Your homepage should explain what you offer, who you help, why customers should trust you, and what they should do next. Clear copy can make the difference between a visitor leaving and a visitor calling.
3. Mobile experience
Most local business customers check websites on mobile. If the phone number, WhatsApp button, service details, or booking form is hard to use on a phone, the website can lose leads even if it looks good on desktop.
4. Trust sections
Trust signals can include reviews, testimonials, photos, credentials, years of experience, before-and-after examples, service guarantees, or FAQs. These sections take planning, but they help customers feel safer before contacting you.
5. SEO basics
A small business website should have the basics in place: page title, meta description, clean headings, crawlable links, sitemap, robots file, fast loading, and useful content. These do not guarantee rankings, but they help Google understand the page.
What should a starter website include?
A starter website should be simple, but it should not feel incomplete. At minimum, it should include:
- A clear headline that says what the business does.
- Services or offers.
- Basic trust section.
- Contact details.
- Call, WhatsApp, email, or form CTA.
- Mobile-friendly layout.
- Basic SEO setup.
When should you choose a bigger website?
Choose a bigger website if customers need more information before they trust you. Dentists, gyms, clinics, real estate consultants, coaching centers, and service businesses often need separate sections or pages for services, pricing, FAQs, reviews, location, and contact.
A bigger website also makes sense if you want to rank for multiple services over time. For example, a gym may eventually need pages for personal training, group classes, weight loss programs, trial membership, and location-specific searches.
Our current website pricing
At Get More Customers, the current public pricing is designed for local businesses that want a practical, conversion-focused website without agency-level complexity.
- Free website audit: ₹0 for businesses that already have a website.
- Starter Website: ₹14,999 for a one-page first website.
- Local Growth Website: ₹29,999 for a stronger business website with up to 5 pages.
- Custom Website: starts at ₹79,999 for advanced needs like booking, ecommerce, memberships, or integrations.
You can see the latest package details in the pricing section.
Cheap website vs useful website
A cheap website can still be expensive if it does not help customers contact you. The website should not only exist. It should make the next step obvious.
Before choosing the lowest price, ask:
- Will customers understand my services quickly?
- Will the website work well on mobile?
- Will the contact path be easy?
- Will it make my business look trustworthy?
- Will Google be able to crawl and understand it?
FAQ
Can I start with a one-page website?
Yes. A one-page website is a good starting point if you need a professional online presence quickly and do not have many services yet.
Do I need SEO from day one?
You should at least have SEO basics from day one: title, description, headings, sitemap, mobile-friendly structure, and clear service content. Ongoing SEO can be added later.
How do I know which package is right?
If you already have a website, start with a free audit. If you have no website, start with a website plan. If your business has multiple services or needs more trust-building, a multi-page website is usually better.
Not sure what your business needs?
Request a free website audit if you already have a website, or ask for a first website plan if you are starting from zero.
View Website Packages