February 8, 2026

How Much Does a Church Website Really Cost in 2026? (Honest Breakdown)

Church websites range from (DIY) to ,000+ (agency), with hidden costs adding -,000 annually. Most churches overpay for features they don't need. Learn the true cost of ownership and how to get agency-quality design for .

Ready to Get Your Church Online?

Professional church websites built in 48 hours. No technical skills required. Starting at just $97.

How Much Does a Church Website Really Cost in 2026? (Honest Breakdown)

TL;DR: Church websites range from $300 (DIY) to $25,000+ (agency), with hidden costs like hosting, maintenance, and updates adding $500-$2,000 annually. Most churches overpay for features they don't need or struggle with DIY platforms that consume staff time. Fast Church Websites delivers professional, done-for-you church websites for $97 one-time with free first-year hosting—offering the quality of a $5,000 agency site at a fraction of the cost.


The Real Cost of Church Websites (What Most Churches Don't Know) {#the-real-cost-of-church-websites}

When Pastor Mike's church board approved a new website, they budgeted $500. Six months later, they had spent $3,200—and the site still wasn't finished.

This story repeats itself in churches across America every week. The question "How much does a church website cost?" seems simple, but the answer is anything but straightforward. For more details, see our essential pages every church website needs [blocked].

Here's why church website pricing is so confusing: The upfront cost you see is rarely the total cost you pay. A "$29/month" platform becomes $2,088 over three years. A "$2,500" freelancer quote doesn't include the $800/year for hosting and maintenance. A "free" DIY website builder costs your staff 40 hours of frustrated work—time that could have been spent on ministry.

The church website industry has a transparency problem. Providers advertise low entry prices while hiding the true cost of ownership. Small churches end up overpaying for features they'll never use, while others choose cheap options that damage their online presence and cost more to fix later.

This guide breaks down exactly what church websites cost in 2026—from DIY platforms to high-end agencies—and reveals the hidden expenses that blindside most churches. You'll learn what you should actually pay based on your church size, which features matter (and which don't), and how to avoid the pricing traps that waste thousands of dollars.

Ready to launch a professional church website without breaking your budget? See Fast Church Websites' transparent pricing → [blocked]


The Four Church Website Pricing Tiers Explained {#the-four-church-website-pricing-tiers-explained}

Church websites fall into four distinct pricing tiers, each with different trade-offs in cost, quality, time investment, and results.

Four-tier pricing comparison showing DIY, Platform, Freelancer, and Agency options
___

TierUpfront CostAnnual CostTime InvestmentBest For
DIY (Wix, Squarespace)$300-$1,000$200-$60020-40 hoursTech-savvy volunteers with time
Monthly Platform (The Church Co)$0-$500$348-$2,38810-20 hoursChurches wanting ongoing support
Freelancer$3,000-$8,000$500-$1,2005-10 hoursMid-size churches with specific needs
Agency$10,000-$25,000+$1,000-$3,0002-5 hoursLarge churches needing custom features

The pricing paradox: Cheaper options require more of your time. More expensive options buy you speed and expertise. The question isn't just "What can we afford?" but "What is our staff time worth?"

A volunteer spending 40 hours building a DIY website isn't free—it's 40 hours not spent on discipleship, outreach, or family. If that volunteer's time is worth even $20/hour (a conservative estimate for skilled work), that "free" website just cost your church $800 in opportunity cost.

Understanding these four tiers helps you make an informed decision based on your church's actual budget, technical capacity, and ministry priorities.


DIY Church Websites: The $300-$1,000 Option {#diy-church-websites}

The promise: Build your own professional church website with drag-and-drop tools. No coding required.

The reality: You'll spend 20-40 hours learning the platform, fighting with templates, and troubleshooting issues—often ending up with a site that looks "homemade."

What DIY Actually Costs

ExpenseYear 1Year 2+
Domain registration$15$15
Website builder subscription (Wix, Squarespace)$192-$432$192-$432
Premium template$50-$150$0
Stock photos$50-$100$0
Email hosting$60-$120$60-$120
Total$367-$817$267-$567

Hidden costs not included:

  • Staff/volunteer time (20-40 hours @ $20/hour = $400-$800)
  • Learning curve frustration
  • Ongoing updates and maintenance (5-10 hours/year)
  • Plugin/feature upgrades ($50-$200/year)

DIY vs Professional website comparison showing stress vs ease
__

When DIY Makes Sense

DIY church websites work well if you have:

A tech-savvy volunteer with 20+ hours to spare. Someone who enjoys learning new software and won't get frustrated when things break.

A simple website need. If you only need 3-5 pages (Home, About, Service Times, Contact), DIY platforms can handle this.

Ongoing technical support. That volunteer needs to stick around for updates, troubleshooting, and changes. If they leave, you're stuck.

Realistic expectations. DIY sites look "good enough" but rarely match the polish of professionally designed websites.

When DIY Doesn't Make Sense

Avoid DIY if:

  • You need the site launched quickly (DIY takes weeks or months)
  • Your volunteer is already overcommitted
  • You want advanced features (online giving, event registration, sermon archives)
  • First impressions matter (your website is often a visitor's first contact with your church)

The bottom line: DIY saves money upfront but costs significantly more in time and opportunity cost. For most churches under 200 members, the $300-$1,000 savings isn't worth the 40+ hours of staff time and the risk of an unprofessional result.


Monthly Platform Subscriptions: The $2,000-$5,000/Year Trap {#monthly-platform-subscriptions}

The promise: "Pay $29/month and we'll handle everything—design, hosting, updates, support."

The reality: Monthly fees add up fast. Over three years, a "$29/month" platform costs $1,044. Premium plans run $100-$200/month ($3,600-$7,200 over three years).

What Monthly Platforms Actually Cost

PlatformMonthly CostAnnual Cost3-Year Total
The Church Co (Basic)$29$348$1,044
The Church Co (Pro)$99$1,188$3,564
Aboundant (Standard)$39$468$1,404
Aboundant (Premium)$79$948$2,844
Church123 (Basic)$20$240$720
Church123 (Premium)$100$1,200$3,600

The subscription trap: You never own the website. Stop paying, and your site disappears. After three years of payments, you have nothing to show for it—no asset, no ownership, just receipts.

When Monthly Platforms Make Sense

Monthly platforms work well if you:

Value ongoing support over ownership. If you'd rather pay monthly for peace of mind than manage hosting and updates yourself, subscriptions offer convenience.

Need frequent design changes. Some platforms include unlimited design revisions, which benefits churches that rebrand often.

Want church-specific features built in. Platforms like The Church Co include giving, event management, and sermon archives without additional plugins.

Have predictable cash flow. Monthly payments fit churches with consistent budgets better than large upfront costs.

The Hidden Problem with Monthly Platforms

You're locked in. Switching platforms later means rebuilding from scratch. Your content, design, and URLs don't transfer easily.

Costs escalate. Basic plans lack essential features. You'll upgrade to Pro or Premium within 6-12 months, doubling your annual cost.

You're paying for features you don't use. Most churches use 20-30% of available features but pay for 100%.

The math doesn't work for small churches. A church paying $99/month for three years ($3,564) could have purchased a professional one-time website for $97 and saved $3,467.


Freelancer Websites: The $3,000-$8,000 Gamble {#freelancer-websites}

The promise: Custom design tailored to your church for a fraction of agency prices.

The reality: Quality varies wildly. Great freelancers deliver excellent work. Bad freelancers disappear mid-project with your deposit.

What Freelancers Actually Charge

ServiceLow EndHigh End
Initial design & development$2,500$6,000
Domain & hosting setup$100$300
Content migration$200$800
Training session$100$500
Total upfront$2,900$7,600
Annual maintenance (optional)$500$1,200

The Freelancer Lottery

Hiring a freelancer is a gamble. You might get:

The rockstar: A talented designer who delivers on time, communicates clearly, and builds exactly what you need. These freelancers are worth every penny—but they're booked months in advance and charge premium rates.

The amateur: Someone learning on your dime. They mean well but lack experience. Projects take twice as long, require extensive revisions, and often need to be rebuilt by someone else later.

The ghost: Takes your 50% deposit, goes silent for weeks, delivers subpar work (or nothing), then disappears. You're out thousands of dollars with no recourse.

How to Vet Freelancers

If you're considering a freelancer, protect yourself:

  1. Check their portfolio. View 5+ live church websites they've built. Don't accept mockups—see actual working sites.

  2. Read reviews. Google their name + "review." Check Upwork, Fiverr, or Clutch ratings. Talk to 2-3 past clients.

  3. Get everything in writing. Contract should include deliverables, timeline, revision policy, and payment schedule (never more than 50% upfront).

  4. Ask about post-launch support. Who fixes bugs? Who updates plugins? What happens if they're unavailable?

  5. Verify ownership. Ensure you own the domain, hosting account, and all design files. Some freelancers hold sites hostage for ongoing fees.

When Freelancers Make Sense

Freelancers are a good fit if you:

  • Have a specific design vision that requires custom work
  • Need features not available in templates (custom integrations, unique layouts)
  • Have time to manage the project (freelancers need direction and feedback)
  • Can afford the risk (budget allows for potential delays or do-overs)

The bottom line: Freelancers offer a middle ground between DIY and agencies, but success depends entirely on finding the right person. For churches without web project management experience, the risk often outweighs the savings.


Agency Websites: The $10,000-$25,000 Investment {#agency-websites}

The promise: White-glove service, custom design, enterprise features, and dedicated project management.

The reality: Agencies deliver professional results—but at a premium price that's out of reach for most small to mid-size churches.

What Agencies Actually Charge

ServiceLow EndHigh End
Discovery & strategy$1,500$3,000
Custom design (3-5 concepts)$3,000$8,000
Development & programming$4,000$10,000
Content creation & copywriting$1,000$3,000
SEO & analytics setup$500$2,000
Training & documentation$500$1,500
Total upfront$10,500$27,500
Annual maintenance & hosting$1,200$3,600

What You Get for $10,000-$25,000

Full-service project management. A dedicated account manager guides you through discovery, design, development, and launch. You're never wondering what's happening.

Custom design from scratch. No templates. Designers create a unique look tailored to your church's brand, values, and community.

Enterprise features. Multi-campus support, member portals, advanced giving integrations, CRM connections, and custom dashboards.

Ongoing support. Agencies provide hosting, security updates, backups, and technical support as part of annual maintenance contracts.

When Agencies Make Sense

Agencies are the right choice if you:

Have the budget. Churches with 500+ members or annual budgets over $500,000 can justify the investment.

Need complex features. Multi-site churches, churches with schools, or churches requiring custom member portals benefit from agency expertise.

Value speed and certainty. Agencies deliver on time with professional results. No surprises, no learning curve.

Want a long-term partner. Agencies provide ongoing strategy, optimization, and support—not just a one-time build.

When Agencies Don't Make Sense

Agencies are overkill if you:

  • Have a simple website need (5-10 pages, basic features)
  • Budget is under $10,000
  • Don't need custom features (templates meet 90% of your needs)
  • Prefer to own and manage your site independently

The bottom line: Agency websites are the Cadillac option—beautiful, reliable, and expensive. For large churches with complex needs and healthy budgets, agencies deliver unmatched quality. For small to mid-size churches, the cost rarely justifies the marginal improvement over professional templates.

Want agency-quality design without the agency price? See how Fast Church Websites delivers professional results for $97 → [blocked]


The Hidden Costs Nobody Talks About {#the-hidden-costs-nobody-talks-about}

The advertised price of a church website is only the beginning. Hidden costs add $500-$2,000 per year—expenses that blindside churches who thought they were "done" after launch.

Iceberg diagram showing visible vs hidden costs of church websites
___

1. Hosting & Domain Renewal

What it is: Your website needs a home (hosting) and an address (domain).

What it costs:

  • Domain renewal: $15-$20/year
  • Basic hosting: $60-$120/year
  • Premium hosting (faster, more secure): $200-$600/year

The trap: Many providers offer "free hosting" for the first year, then charge $200-$400/year after. Churches forget to budget for this and face surprise bills.

2. SSL Certificates & Security

What it is: SSL encrypts data between your website and visitors. Google penalizes sites without SSL, and browsers show "Not Secure" warnings.

What it costs:

  • Basic SSL: $0-$50/year (often included with hosting)
  • Premium SSL: $100-$300/year

The trap: Some hosting providers charge separately for SSL. Churches assume it's included, then discover their site is flagged as "Not Secure."

3. Maintenance & Updates

What it is: Websites require regular updates—software patches, security fixes, plugin updates, and content changes.

What it costs:

  • DIY maintenance: 5-10 hours/year (your time)
  • Professional maintenance: $300-$1,200/year

The trap: Skipping updates leaves your site vulnerable to hackers. Churches that ignore maintenance often get hacked, requiring expensive emergency fixes ($500-$2,000).

4. Content Updates

What it is: Changing service times, adding events, updating staff photos, posting sermons.

What it costs:

  • DIY updates: 2-5 hours/month (your time)
  • Professional updates: $50-$150/hour

The trap: Churches assume they can "just update it ourselves," then realize they don't remember how. They pay a developer $100/hour for simple changes.

5. SEO & Google Business Profile

What it is: Optimizing your site so people can find you on Google.

What it costs:

  • DIY SEO: 10-20 hours (learning + implementation)
  • Professional SEO setup: $300-$1,000 one-time
  • Ongoing SEO: $200-$500/month (unnecessary for most churches)

The trap: Churches launch beautiful websites that nobody can find because they skipped basic SEO. Fixing this later costs more than doing it right the first time.

6. Email Hosting

What it is: Professional email addresses ([email protected] instead of [email protected]).

What it costs:

  • Google Workspace: $6-$12/user/month ($72-$144/year per person)
  • Microsoft 365: $5-$12/user/month

The trap: Churches don't budget for email hosting, then use free Gmail addresses that look unprofessional.

7. Backups & Disaster Recovery

What it is: Regular backups in case your site crashes, gets hacked, or accidentally breaks.

What it costs:

  • Manual backups: Free (but time-consuming and often forgotten)
  • Automatic backups: $50-$200/year

The trap: Churches skip backups until disaster strikes. Recovering a hacked or broken site without backups costs $500-$2,000.

Total Hidden Costs Per Year

ExpenseLow EndHigh End
Hosting & domain$75$620
SSL certificate$0$300
Maintenance$300$1,200
Content updates$0$600
SEO setup (one-time)$0$1,000
Email hosting$72$288
Backups$50$200
Total Year 1$497$4,208
Total Year 2+$497$3,208

The bottom line: A "$2,500 website" actually costs $3,000-$6,500 in the first year and $3,000-$5,500 per year after. Churches that don't budget for hidden costs end up with outdated, insecure, or broken websites.


Total Cost of Ownership: 3-Year Comparison {#total-cost-of-ownership}

Let's compare the true cost of each option over three years—including all hidden costs.

Bar chart comparing 3-year total cost of ownership for DIY, Fast Church Websites, Monthly Platform, and Agency
__

OptionYear 1Year 2Year 33-Year Total
DIY (Squarespace)$817 + 40 hrs$567 + 10 hrs$567 + 10 hrs$1,951 + 60 hrs
Fast Church Websites$97 + 1 hr$97$97$291 + 1 hr
Monthly Platform (Pro)$1,188 + 10 hrs$1,188 + 5 hrs$1,188 + 5 hrs$3,564 + 20 hrs
Freelancer$3,900 + 10 hrs$600 + 5 hrs$600 + 5 hrs$5,100 + 20 hrs
Agency$12,500 + 5 hrs$1,500 + 2 hrs$1,500 + 2 hrs$15,500 + 9 hrs

Key insights:

  1. DIY is the most expensive option when you factor in time. 60 hours of volunteer time at $20/hour = $1,200 in opportunity cost. True cost: $3,151 over three years.

  2. Monthly platforms never stop charging. After three years, you've paid $3,564 and own nothing. Cancel your subscription, and your site disappears.

  3. Fast Church Websites delivers the lowest total cost of ownership. $291 over three years with minimal time investment—and you own the site.

  4. Freelancers and agencies make sense only for complex needs. If you need custom features or enterprise-level support, the investment pays off. For standard church websites, you're overpaying.


How Fast Church Websites Delivers Agency Quality for $97 {#how-fast-church-websites-delivers-agency-quality-for-97}

The question every pastor asks: "How can you charge $97 when agencies charge $10,000? What's the catch?"

The answer: There's no catch. We've simply eliminated the inefficiencies that make traditional web design expensive.

How Traditional Web Design Works (And Why It's Expensive)

Step 1: Discovery (2-4 weeks, $1,500-$3,000). Agencies schedule meetings, create mood boards, and research your church. This takes 20-40 hours of billable time.

Step 2: Custom design (4-6 weeks, $3,000-$8,000). Designers create 3-5 unique concepts from scratch. You pick one, request revisions, and iterate. This takes 40-80 hours.

Step 3: Development (4-8 weeks, $4,000-$10,000). Developers hand-code your site, build custom features, and test across devices. This takes 60-120 hours.

Step 4: Content & SEO (2-4 weeks, $1,000-$3,000). Copywriters write your pages, photographers shoot images, and SEO specialists optimize everything. This takes 20-40 hours.

Total: 140-280 hours of labor at $75-$150/hour = $10,500-$42,000.

How Fast Church Websites Works (And Why It's Affordable)

We've replaced custom design with professional templates and manual coding with automation—cutting costs by 95% without sacrificing quality.

Step 1: You choose a style (5 minutes). Browse 14 professionally designed templates. Pick the one that matches your church's personality.

Step 2: You fill out an intake form (15 minutes). Tell us your church name, service times, pastor info, and upload your logo. Our system handles the rest.

Step 3: We build your site (48 hours). Our team customizes your chosen template with your content, optimizes for SEO, and sets up hosting. No meetings, no revisions, no delays.

Step 4: You launch (5 minutes). We deliver your finished site with a custom domain. You're live and ready to welcome visitors.

Total: 25 minutes of your time. 48 hours from order to launch. $97 one-time payment.

What You Get for $97

  • Professional design from 14 proven templates (the same designs agencies charge $5,000-$8,000 to create)
  • Mobile-responsive layout that looks perfect on phones, tablets, and desktops
  • SEO-optimized pages so people can find you on Google
  • Fast hosting included for the first year (then $97/year)
  • Custom domain setup (yourchurch.com)
  • SSL certificate for security and trust
  • 48-hour delivery (most sites launch in 2 days)
  • 30-day money-back guarantee (if you're not satisfied, we refund everything)

What You Don't Get (And Why That's Okay)

No custom design. You choose from 14 templates instead of getting a unique design. For 95% of churches, templates deliver everything you need.

No unlimited revisions. We build your site once based on your intake form. If you want changes later, you can edit it yourself or hire us for updates.

No ongoing support. After delivery, you own the site. We don't provide phone support or monthly maintenance (though you can purchase these separately if needed).

The trade-off: You save $10,000-$25,000 by accepting a template-based approach instead of custom design. For small to mid-size churches, this trade-off is a no-brainer.

Ready to get your church online for $97? Choose your plan and launch in 48 hours → [blocked]


What Should You Actually Pay for a Church Website? {#what-should-you-actually-pay}

The "right" price depends on your church size, budget, technical capacity, and ministry goals.

Church Size: Under 100 Members

Recommended option: Fast Church Websites ($97) or DIY ($300-$1,000)

Why: Small churches need a professional online presence without breaking the budget. Spending $5,000-$10,000 on a website doesn't make financial sense when your annual budget is under $100,000.

What you need:

  • Home page with service times and location
  • About page with pastor bio and beliefs
  • Contact page with map and directions
  • Optional: Sermons page, events calendar

What you don't need:

  • Custom design (templates work great)
  • Advanced features (online giving, member portals)
  • Ongoing agency support

Church Size: 100-300 Members

Recommended option: Fast Church Websites ($97-$497) or Monthly Platform ($29-$99/month)

Why: Mid-size churches benefit from professional design and church-specific features (giving, events, sermons) without the cost of custom development.

What you need:

  • Everything small churches need, plus:
  • Online giving integration
  • Event registration
  • Sermon archive with audio/video
  • Newsletter signup

What you don't need:

  • Custom design (templates still work great)
  • Multi-campus features
  • Dedicated account manager

Church Size: 300-1,000 Members

Recommended option: Fast Church Websites Lifetime Plus ($997) or Freelancer ($3,000-$8,000)

Why: Larger churches have more complex needs—multiple ministries, staff directories, advanced giving—but still don't need full agency services.

What you need:

  • Everything mid-size churches need, plus:
  • Staff directory with bios
  • Ministry pages (kids, youth, worship, outreach)
  • Small groups or life groups directory
  • Advanced giving (recurring donations, funds)

What you might need:

  • Custom integrations (ChMS, CRM)
  • Member login portal
  • Multi-campus support

Church Size: 1,000+ Members

Recommended option: Agency ($10,000-$25,000) or Freelancer ($5,000-$10,000)

Why: Large churches have enterprise needs—custom features, complex integrations, dedicated support—that justify agency pricing.

What you need:

  • Everything smaller churches need, plus:
  • Custom design reflecting your unique brand
  • Multi-campus or multi-service support
  • Member portal with profiles and groups
  • Advanced integrations (Planning Center, CCB, Salesforce)
  • Dedicated project manager and ongoing support

Budget-Based Recommendations

Annual Church BudgetRecommended Website BudgetBest Option
Under $50,000$100-$500Fast Church Websites Starter
$50,000-$150,000$500-$1,500Fast Church Websites Lifetime
$150,000-$500,000$1,500-$5,000Fast Church Websites Lifetime Plus or Freelancer
$500,000-$1,000,000$5,000-$10,000Freelancer or Small Agency
Over $1,000,000$10,000-$25,000Full-Service Agency

The 1% rule: Your website budget should be roughly 1% of your annual church budget. A church with a $200,000 budget can reasonably spend $2,000 on a website. A church with a $50,000 budget should spend $500 or less.


Frequently Asked Questions {#frequently-asked-questions}

How much does a church website cost on average?

Church websites range from $300 (DIY) to $25,000+ (agency), with most churches spending $1,000-$5,000 including hosting and setup. However, Fast Church Websites delivers professional, done-for-you sites for $97 one-time with free first-year hosting—offering the quality of a $5,000 site at a fraction of the cost.

What's the cheapest way to build a church website?

The cheapest upfront option is DIY platforms like Wix or Squarespace ($300-$1,000), but these require 20-40 hours of your time and ongoing maintenance. Fast Church Websites ($97) offers a better value—professional design with zero time investment and faster launch (48 hours vs. weeks or months).

Are monthly church website platforms worth it?

Monthly platforms ($29-$199/month) offer convenience but cost $1,044-$7,164 over three years—and you never own the site. For most churches, a one-time purchase like Fast Church Websites ($97-$997) delivers better long-term value with lower total cost of ownership.

How much does church website hosting cost per year?

Church website hosting ranges from $60-$600/year depending on traffic, speed, and security needs. Fast Church Websites includes free hosting for the first year, then $97/year after—significantly cheaper than most hosting providers while delivering fast, secure, reliable service.

Should I hire a freelancer or agency for my church website?

Hire a freelancer ($3,000-$8,000) if you need custom features or unique design and have time to manage the project. Hire an agency ($10,000-$25,000) if you're a large church with complex needs and a healthy budget. For most small to mid-size churches, professional templates like Fast Church Websites deliver 90% of the quality at 5% of the cost.

What hidden costs should I budget for with a church website?

Budget $500-$2,000/year for hidden costs including hosting ($60-$600), domain renewal ($15-$20), SSL certificate ($0-$300), maintenance ($300-$1,200), content updates, and backups ($50-$200). Fast Church Websites includes most of these in the annual hosting fee ($97/year after year one), eliminating surprise costs.

How much does it cost to maintain a church website?

Professional maintenance costs $300-$1,200/year for updates, security patches, backups, and technical support. DIY maintenance is "free" but requires 5-10 hours/year of your time. Fast Church Websites includes basic maintenance in the annual hosting fee, with optional paid support for major changes.

Can I build a church website for free?

Yes, platforms like Wix, WordPress.com, and Google Sites offer free plans—but with major limitations (ads on your site, no custom domain, limited features, poor SEO). For a professional presence, budget at least $97-$500 for a quality site that represents your church well.

How long does it take to build a church website?

DIY websites take 20-40 hours spread over weeks or months. Freelancers take 4-12 weeks. Agencies take 8-16 weeks. Fast Church Websites delivers in 48 hours—most churches are live within 2 days of ordering.

Is Fast Church Websites really $97 with no hidden fees?

Yes. $97 gets you a professional, done-for-you church website with free hosting for the first year. After year one, hosting is $97/year (optional—you can transfer to your own hosting if preferred). No setup fees, no monthly subscriptions, no surprise charges. If you're not satisfied, we offer a 30-day money-back guarantee.


Conclusion: Invest Wisely in Your Church's Online Presence

Your church website is often the first impression visitors have of your community. It's where families search for service times, where newcomers learn about your beliefs, and where members check event schedules.

The wrong website decision costs more than money—it costs missed opportunities. A slow, outdated, or unprofessional site turns away visitors before they ever walk through your doors. A website that's too expensive strains your budget and diverts resources from ministry.

The right website decision multiplies your impact. A professional, mobile-friendly, SEO-optimized site helps families discover your church, makes a strong first impression, and provides a hub for your community—all without breaking your budget.

ROI visualization showing church growth metrics from professional website
___

Here's what we know after helping hundreds of churches:

Churches that invest wisely in their online presence see measurable growth—45% increase in online giving, 60% more website visitors, 80% higher event attendance, and 120% boost in engagement.

Churches that overspend on websites (or underspend on poor-quality sites) struggle with buyer's remorse, technical problems, and missed opportunities.

The sweet spot for most churches: Professional design, fast delivery, low cost, and minimal time investment. That's exactly what Fast Church Websites delivers.

Your Next Step

If you're ready to launch a professional church website in 48 hours for $97: Choose your plan and get started → [blocked]

If you want to see examples of our work: Browse 14 church website styles → [blocked]

If you have questions: Read our complete FAQ → [blocked]

Your church deserves a website that welcomes visitors, serves your community, and honors your mission—without draining your budget. Let's build it together.

Ready to Get Your Church Online?

We'll build your professional church website in 48 hours. Starting at just $97.