Cost Guide

How much does a WordPress website cost?

WordPress build costs by size, plus the ongoing costs people forget.

WordPress powers a huge share of the web because it's flexible, familiar, and easy for non-technical teams to update. For content-driven sites and blogs, it's often the most cost-effective professional choice.

Build cost depends on whether you use a proven theme or a custom design, and how many custom features and integrations you need. Remember to budget for ongoing hosting, plugins, and maintenance too.

Typical cost by project size

Professionally built, custom-designed, with a few integrations. Ranges are rough planning figures — not a quote.

Project sizeCost (USD)Cost (INR)Timeline
Small$4,600–$6,900₹150,000–₹230,0002–5 wks
Medium$6,200–$9,300₹200,000–₹310,0005–10 wks
Large$8,700–$13,000₹290,000–₹430,00010–20 wks

INR uses local market rates, not spot exchange rates. Your exact price depends on features and detail.

Cost by build approach

The same medium-sized project, priced across the common ways to build it.

Build approachCost (USD)Cost (INR)Timeline
WordPress$3,900–$5,900₹130,000–₹200,0005–10 wks
Webflow / no-code$3,900–$5,900₹130,000–₹200,0005–10 wks
Custom code$6,200–$9,300₹200,000–₹310,0005–10 wks

Cheaper up front isn't always cheaper long term — the right choice depends on your goals.

Cost Drivers

What affects the price.

Theme vs custom

A quality theme customised to your brand is affordable; a fully custom theme costs more.

Plugins vs custom code

Off-the-shelf plugins are cheap; bespoke functionality is where cost grows.

Content volume

Migrating or creating a lot of pages and posts adds time.

Ongoing costs

Hosting, premium plugins, and maintenance are recurring — factor them in.

Performance & security

Making WordPress fast and secure takes proper setup, not just install-and-go.

Save Money

How to keep costs down.

  • Start from a solid theme and customise rather than building a theme from scratch.
  • Prefer well-supported plugins over custom code where they fit.
  • Choose managed hosting to reduce maintenance headaches.
  • Budget a small monthly amount for updates, backups, and security.
FAQ

Common questions.

For content sites, usually yes up front — it reuses themes and plugins. For complex apps or very high performance needs, custom can be a better long-term investment. See the platform table.

Hosting, any premium themes/plugins, and maintenance (updates, backups, security). Budget a modest recurring amount to keep it healthy.

Yes — that's a key reason to choose it. With a good setup, non-technical staff can update pages, posts, and images without a developer.

The old rules don't apply here.

Your competitors are settling for ordinary. You don't have to.