Custom Website vs Template: Which One Your Business Actually Needs
We build custom websites for a living, so you might expect us to say templates are always a mistake. We will not, because that is not true. A template is the right call for plenty of businesses, and pretending otherwise would just cost you money. The honest version is that the two options solve different problems, and the trick is knowing which problem you have. Here is how we would think it through if it were our own money.
What a template actually is
A template is a pre-made design that you pour your content into, usually on a platform like Squarespace, Wix, or Shopify. Someone designed the layout in advance for a generic business, and your job is to swap in your words and photos. The appeal is real: it is cheap, it is fast, and you can get something online in a weekend without hiring anyone. For a brand new idea you are still testing, that speed is genuinely valuable.
What a custom build actually is
A custom build is a site designed around your specific business: your structure, your message, your customer, and the one action you want people to take. Nothing is borrowed from a generic layout. It costs more and takes longer because every decision is made for you rather than inherited from a stranger. In return you get a site that fits the business exactly, loads fast, ranks better over time, and can grow in whatever direction the business does.
When a template is the smart choice
Be honest with yourself. A template is the right answer when:
- You are testing a brand new idea and need something online this week to see if anyone bites.
- Your budget is genuinely tight and a custom build would mean not paying for something more urgent.
- The site is a simple brochure: a few pages, no complex needs, no real ambition to rank on search for competitive terms.
- You are comfortable doing the setup yourself and have the time to fiddle with it.
There is no shame in this. Plenty of healthy businesses ran on a template for years before they needed anything more. Starting cheap and proving the idea is often the wise move.
When a template starts costing you
The trouble with templates is rarely visible on day one. It shows up later, as quiet costs:
- You blend in. Thousands of businesses use the same template. Visitors have seen your site before, even when they have not, and it reads as interchangeable.
- You hit walls. The moment you want something the template was not built for, you are stuck, paying for plugins and workarounds that slow the site down.
- You leak speed and search ranking. Many templates carry a lot of code you never use, which makes them slow, and slow sites lose visitors and rank lower.
- Your time gets expensive. The hours you spend wrestling the builder are hours not spent running the business. Cheap to buy is not the same as cheap to run.
The question that actually decides it
Forget the feature lists. The real question is this: is your website a placeholder, or is it doing a job you care about? If the site just needs to exist so people can find your phone number, a template is fine and a custom build is overkill. If the site is meant to win customers, carry your reputation, rank on search, and grow with you, then a template is a false economy. You will pay for it twice: once for the template, and again to rebuild it properly when it holds you back.
What we usually tell founders
Most of the people who come to us are at the second stage. They started on a template, it did its job, and now it is the thing standing between them and the next level. That is exactly the right time for a custom build, because by then you know what your business is and what the site needs to do. If you are not there yet, we will tell you honestly that a template will serve you fine for now, and to come back when the site has a bigger job to do. We would rather give you the right answer than the expensive one.
Not sure which side of the line you are on? Tell us about the business and we will give you a straight answer.
Ask us