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Web DesignJune 28, 20266 min read

What a Small Business Website Costs in Maine (2026)

What does a small business website actually cost in Maine in 2026? A plain breakdown of DIY, freelancer, and agency pricing — with real numbers and no hidden fees.

MFMax Friedlander · Founder, MotionTech LLC

A small business website in Maine costs anywhere from about $200 a year to do it yourself to $3,000–$10,000 for a custom build with a designer who handles everything. That's a wide range, and the gap is exactly where most owners get stuck. Below is what each tier actually buys you, what tends to cost extra, and how to tell which one your business needs.

I run a web and AI shop here in Maine, and price is the first question almost every owner asks before they'll get on a call. So here's the honest version, with numbers.

What most Maine business owners expect to pay

Most people walk in expecting a website to cost a few hundred dollars, because that's what the Wix and Squarespace ads imply. Then they get a $4,000 quote from an agency and assume someone's trying to fleece them. Neither number is wrong. They're answers to different questions.

A $300 website is something you build on weekends. A $4,000 website is something a professional builds, writes, and sets up to actually bring in calls. The price reflects who does the work and how much of it there is.

The three tiers of website investment

DIY tools (Wix, Squarespace, GoDaddy) — $0 to roughly $400 a year

You sign up, pick a template, and drag your text and photos into it. The monthly plans for a real business site (custom domain, no platform ads) run about $16 to $40 a month, so call it $200–$480 a year.

This works if you have time and a decent eye, and if your site only needs to say "here's who we are, here's our number." Squarespace is genuinely fine for a clean brochure site. It gets awkward the moment you need real online booking, a custom quote form, or anything that has to talk to your other tools.

The hidden cost here isn't money. It's the 20–40 hours you'll spend learning the editor instead of running your business, and a site that often looks like the template it came from.

Freelancer or local web designer — $1,500 to $5,000 one-time

A freelancer builds the site for you, usually on WordPress, Squarespace, or a custom setup. For a standard five-to-seven-page site for a service business, expect $1,500 to $5,000 depending on how much writing, design, and setup is involved.

This is the sweet spot for a lot of Maine service businesses. You get something built for your business instead of a generic template, and you're not paying agency overhead. The tradeoff is that a solo freelancer is one person with a queue, so timelines and ongoing support vary.

Custom agency build with ongoing support — $3,000 to $10,000+

An agency handles the whole thing: strategy, copywriting, design, build, SEO setup, and usually a maintenance plan after launch. For a small business, a custom build lands around $3,000 to $10,000, with most local-service sites in the $3,000–$6,000 range.

You're paying for a team and for the site being treated as a system that generates leads, not a digital business card. This makes sense when your website is a real sales channel and you want it handled rather than hovered over.

What's actually included, and what costs extra

The sticker price is rarely the whole story. Here's what to ask about before you sign anything.

  • Domain and hosting. A .com runs about $12–$20 a year. Hosting ranges from free (on platforms like Cloudflare Pages) to $20–$40 a month for managed WordPress. Ask whether it's bundled or billed separately.
  • Copywriting and photos. Words and images make or break a site. Some quotes assume you'll write everything and supply photos. Professional copywriting and a local photo shoot can each add a few hundred to a couple thousand dollars.
  • SEO setup. Getting found on Google isn't automatic. Basic on-page SEO (titles, descriptions, a sitemap, local schema) should be part of a professional build. Ongoing SEO is a separate, usually monthly, service.
  • Ongoing maintenance and updates. Software updates, security, content changes, and backups. Plans typically run $25–$150 a month, or you pay hourly when you need a change.

What a Maine service business actually needs (and what it doesn't)

A propane company in Waldoboro and a neuropsychology practice in Portland do not need the same website, but they need most of the same bones:

  • A fast, mobile-first site (most of your visitors are on a phone)
  • A phone number that's tappable on every screen
  • Clear service and service-area pages so Google knows where you work
  • Real photos and reviews
  • One obvious next step: call, book, or request a quote

What you usually don't need on day one: a blog with fifty posts, animations everywhere, a custom-coded booking platform, or anything that exists to impress other designers. Start with the parts that bring in calls. You can see a few examples on our portfolio.

Red flags when hiring a web designer in Maine

  • They won't give you any starting price, even a range, until you're on a sales call
  • They own your domain or hosting account instead of putting it in your name
  • "SEO included" with no specifics about what that means
  • No mention of who maintains the site after launch
  • A portfolio full of sites that all look identical

That last one matters more than it seems. If every site they've built uses the same template, yours will too.

What MotionTech charges, and why

We publish our starting prices because we'd rather you self-select than get talked into something on a call. A standard site for a Maine service business starts in the low thousands, hosting included, with your domain and accounts in your name. AI add-ons like online booking or missed-call follow-up are priced separately so you only pay for what you'll use.

The reason it isn't $300 is simple: we write the copy, set up the SEO, and build the site to convert, then we keep it running. About 75% of people judge a company's credibility on its website design alone, according to long-running research out of Stanford. For a local business competing for the same calls as everyone else, that first impression is the whole game.

For comparison, national surveys from Clutch and WebFX put custom small business websites in the $2,000–$9,000 range, so our pricing sits where you'd expect for honest work.

Ready to get a real number?

If your current site isn't bringing in calls, the price of a rebuild is only half the question. The other half is why it's quiet in the first place, which we cover in why your service website isn't getting calls.

When you want an actual quote for your business, book a free 20-minute call. You'll get a real number and a straight answer about whether you even need a rebuild, with no pressure either way.