Guides · WebSage

How much does a website cost for a landscaping company?

Websage charges $990 for a single-page landscaping site, $2,500 for a multi-page site with booking, or $5,000 for a complex build. Managed plans run $99 to $299 a month plus setup. Here is how to think about which option fits.

The price tiers, translated to landscaping

DIY builders cost $16 to $40 a month and eat a winter's worth of evenings. Some landscapers genuinely enjoy building their own site in the off-season. Most get it 70 percent done and stop.

Template agencies charge $150 to $300 a month. For a landscaping company the tell is always the photos: a template site shows a stock photo of a lawn in Arizona while your Facebook page has two hundred photos of actual patios you built in Delaware. Customers notice, even if they cannot say why.

A custom local build runs $990 to $5,000 one time, depending on scope, or from $99 a month plus setup on a managed plan. Ours are built from your real work: your Facebook photo albums usually contain everything needed, including the before-and-afters that sell hardscape jobs.

What a landscaping site has to do

Landscaping is bought with the eyes and booked by season. That shapes everything:

The maintenance-contract angle: one-off cleanups come from anywhere, but recurring maintenance clients research before committing to someone for a whole season. They are exactly the customers who check for a website, and exactly the ones worth having. If you want more recurring work, a real web presence is not optional.

Website first, or Google Business Profile first?

Both, and they feed each other. A Google Business Profile with a linked website ranks better than either alone. If you have to sequence it: claim and complete the Google profile this week (it is free), then get the site built, then work reviews. That is the order that moves the phone. Our Local Growth Plan handles the profile and reviews side monthly, and Website in a Week covers the build.

Related: what asphalt companies pay for websites and whether a Facebook page is enough.

Common questions

What should a landscaping website include?

Real job galleries, services organized by season, an estimate form that reaches your phone, tap-to-call, your review count, and pages for the towns you serve. Skip stock photos entirely.

Is winter a good time to get a website built?

It is the best time. You have breathing room, and the site is ranked and ready before the spring rush when everyone searches for cleanups and mulch at once.

Can a website help me get more maintenance contracts?

Yes, more than almost anything else. Maintenance clients commit for a season, so they vet harder. A site with your work, your reviews and your service area is the vetting they are looking for.

Do you build sites for hardscape-only companies?

Yes. Hardscape sells even more visually than maintenance work, so those sites lean harder on project galleries and before-and-after photos.

Want a flat number for your business?

Tell us your trade and what you have today. You get a quote within 24 hours, and a working preview within 72 hours of a deposit.