Electrician Website Cost in 2026
What electricians actually pay for a website in 2026 — DIY vs freelancer vs agency vs productized — with real numbers, real deliverables, and real trade-offs for electrical businesses.
See Our Flat PricingIf you run a electrician business and you're staring down the "get a website" project, the first question is always the same: what does a website actually cost? The honest answer: it depends almost entirely on who you hire and what you need. Here's a breakdown of the four main options in 2026, with real price ranges and what each delivers.
Option 1 — DIY builders (Wix, Squarespace, GoDaddy)
Headline price: $12–$40/month ($144–$480/year), plus 10–40 hours of your time.
DIY builders feel cheap until you realize you're the one building the site. Most electricians who go this route spend a weekend (or three) fighting with drag-and-drop editors, then end up with a template that looks exactly like every other electrician's site. The time cost alone — at your billable rate — almost always exceeds what a real website costs. And mobile Core Web Vitals on DIY builder sites routinely score 40–60 on Lighthouse, which means Google won't rank you for "electrician near me" or any competitive term.
Who this works for: nobody running a real electrician business. It works for hobby sites, not trades.
Option 2 — Freelancers (Upwork, Fiverr, local)
Headline price: $500–$3,500 for a small business site. Timeline: 2–8 weeks (often longer).
Freelancers are a mixed bag. A good one will build you a real custom site. A bad one disappears mid-project with half your money. The variance is enormous — you're trusting reviews, portfolios, and gut feel. The #1 complaint from electricians who've used freelancers: scope creep. Initial quote of $800 turns into $1,400 by launch because every extra page, every revision, every small feature is another invoice.
The other killer: communication. Most freelancer projects involve 4–8 calls, dozens of emails, and long gaps where you have no idea what's happening. For a electrician who bills time in the field, that's time you can't get back.
Who this works for: electricians with time to vet, manage, and chase a freelancer — and who are willing to gamble on quality.
Option 3 — Agencies
Headline price: $3,500–$15,000+ for a small business site. Timeline: 6–16 weeks.
Agencies deliver great work — when they show up for small clients. But most agencies price electrician websites like they price enterprise: discovery calls, branding sprints, multiple stakeholder reviews. A typical agency engagement involves 6–10 meetings, a formal brand workshop, and a 60-page style guide you'll never read. And after launch, most agencies try to lock you into monthly retainers ($500–$2,500/mo) for "maintenance."
For a electrician with a $2200 average ticket, an agency engagement means you need to book at least 15–30 additional jobs from your new website just to break even. That's a real number, and it's why most electricians never go this route.
Who this works for: large contractor companies with marketing budgets and in-house coordinators who can manage an agency relationship.
Option 4 — Productized web design (what we do)
Headline price: $497–$2,497+ flat. Timeline: 5–14 business days. No meetings.
Productized web design is the answer to the "I just need a professional website, not a full agency engagement" problem. You pick a package, fill out a form, and we build your site. That's it. No calls, no meetings, no scope creep, no upsells. One flat fee, one finished website.
Starter — $497
Single conversion-focused page, domain + hosting + SSL included, electrician-specific conversion patterns (click-to-call, review widgets, service-area targeting).
Start with $497Business — $997
3–5 page site with dedicated service pages for your electrical offerings, service-area pages for every city you cover, Google reviews integration, schema markup for "electrician near me".
Start with $997Premium — $2,497+
Full multi-page site with photo galleries (before/after for portfolio-driven trades), advanced schema, city-by-city service area pages, blog-ready structure, and detailed conversion optimization.
Real math: what a electrician website pays back
Average electrician ticket: $2,200. A $997 Business package pays for itself on 1 additional job booked from the site. Most electricians who launch with us book that much within 30–90 days — often from their first month of Google search traffic.
The bottom line
- DIY builders cost your time, not your money — and deliver a template-tier site that won't rank.
- Freelancers range from great to disaster with no way to predict which you'll get.
- Agencies overshoot the need of a typical electrician business and require monthly retainers most contractors don't want.
- Productized web design (what we do) is designed specifically for electricians who want a professional site, a flat price, and zero meetings.
Electrician website pricing — service areas
Our flat pricing applies across every market we serve. Pick your city to see a electrician-specific landing page:
- Electricians in Los Angeles
- Electricians in Long Beach
- Electricians in Pasadena
- Electricians in Glendale
- Electricians in Burbank
- Electricians in Santa Monica
- Electricians in Torrance
- Electricians in Anaheim
- Electricians in Irvine
- Electricians in Santa Ana
- Electricians in Huntington Beach
- Electricians in Costa Mesa
- Electricians in Riverside
- Electricians in Corona
- Electricians in Moreno Valley
- Electricians in Fontana
- Electricians in Ontario
- Electricians in Rancho Cucamonga
- Electricians in San Bernardino
- Electricians in Temecula