Law firm website design
$3,500 flat, 21 days, custom WordPress you own. The done-for-you option in this comparison.
Before a solo lawyer ever talks to an agency, they weigh three cheaper paths: build the site themselves, pay a freelancer, or stand one up on GoDaddy. All three are real options, and for some firms one of them is the right answer. This page is the honest read on each, written by an agency, so take the bias as given and check the reasoning. The short version: the cheapest route is fine if you just need a presence and get clients by referral. It's a false economy if you actually need the website to bring in cases, because none of the three ships the search and AI groundwork that does that. Here's how they really stack up, and where a done-for-you build earns the extra money.
They're not the same trade-off wearing three hats. DIY costs you time, a freelancer is a gamble on one person, and a builder like GoDaddy hits a ceiling you can't raise. Read them as three separate decisions.
You build it, usually on a drag-and-drop builder. The price is low and the control is total. The catch is your time: every evening spent fighting a template is an evening not billing or not home. And the result is built by someone learning web design on the job, which is why so many DIY firm sites never plainly say the practice area or name the city they serve. If the page doesn't say "patent attorney in Houston," neither Google nor ChatGPT can repeat it.
One person, usually $1,500 to $5,000 for a small site, with direct communication and real cost savings over an agency. The catch is variance and staying power. Quality runs from excellent to rough, and a freelancer often moves on after launch, so the person who built it may be gone when something breaks. Many are strong designers who don't do legal SEO, so you get a site that looks good and doesn't rank. Vet the portfolio, get references, and make sure you keep the source files.
Fast, cheap, and beginner-friendly: a real site live in a weekend for roughly $10 to $20 a month. The catch is the ceiling. GoDaddy's Websites + Marketing is a proprietary, closed system with no export, so leaving means rebuilding from scratch. Its SEO stops at page titles and meta descriptions, with no schema markup, which is the exact groundwork AI engines and rich results lean on. Great for a placeholder. Limited the moment you need the site to compete.
Figures are typical 2026 ranges from third-party reviews and pricing pages, not fixed quotes, and they move, so confirm current numbers. GoDaddy is named because it's the most common builder solo firms land on (Squarespace and Wix sit in the same bucket with the same basic trade-offs). None of these is a scam. They're just built for a different job than a site that has to win competitive search.
That's the real fork, and it decides everything. If the website is a digital business card for a referral practice, go cheap with a clear conscience. If it has to find and convert strangers, the cheap routes leave the most important part out.
Ranges are typical, not quotes. FirmForte's column is what's on the pricing page. Scroll sideways on a phone to see all four.
| Feature | DIY | Freelancer | Builder (GoDaddy) | FirmForte |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who builds it | You | One hired person | You, in their editor | A team, done for you |
| Typical cost | ~$10–20/mo plus your hours | ~$1,500–$5,000 once | ~$10–20/mo | $3,500 once |
| Design | Template you fill in | Varies by the person | Templated, often generic | Custom, from scratch |
| Platform & ownership | Usually a locked builder | Often WordPress you own (ask) | Proprietary, no export | WordPress, fully yours |
| SEO depth | Whatever you know | Depends; often not their strength | Titles and meta only | Technical SEO built in |
| AEO / schema | Rare | Rare unless you ask | No schema support | FAQ + LegalService schema on every page |
| Built for law firms | No | Usually no | No | Yes, bar-aware copy |
| Support after launch | You | If they're still around | GoDaddy support, generic | Optional retainer, cancel after month 3 |
A few dollars a month or a one-time $2,000 looks like a clear win next to a $3,500 build. It usually is, on the invoice. The cost that doesn't show up on the invoice is the cases the site never brings in, and the rebuild you pay for later.
A DIY build is twenty to forty hours you could have billed or spent on cases. At even a modest hourly rate, the "free" site quietly costs more than the build did. The cheapest option on paper is rarely the cheapest in practice once your own time has a price on it.
A site that doesn't name its practice area or city, has no schema, and was never written answer-first won't show up in Google's AI Overview or get named by ChatGPT. You can't measure the client who picked the firm that did show up. That invisible loss is the real price of skipping the search and AEO layer.
A common path: a $2,000 freelancer site that doesn't convert, or a GoDaddy site you can't export, followed a year later by paying again to do it right. As one industry write-up put it, a cheap build you have to redo doesn't cost its sticker price, it costs that plus the proper build. Starting on something you own avoids the second invoice.
Full agencies often quote $5,000 to $50,000. FirmForte productizes the done-for-you build to a flat $3,500: custom design, WordPress you own, search and AEO baked in, live in 21 days. It sits on purpose between "too cheap to perform" and "too expensive for a small firm," which is the gap most of these routes leave open.
To be fair to the cheap routes: if your firm runs entirely on referrals and word of mouth, the website genuinely is a formality, and paying more for search performance you won't use would be its own kind of waste. The full FirmForte lineup is on the pricing page, and the build is detailed on web design.
We'd rather send you to the right option than sell you a build you don't need. Here's when each of the three beats hiring us.
If you genuinely enjoy this, have the hours, and only need a clean presence, modern builders can produce something perfectly respectable. A brand-new solo testing whether a practice even takes off is right to spend almost nothing on the website until there's revenue to reinvest. Start cheap, upgrade when it's earning.
A good freelancer with a real portfolio, references, and some law-firm or SEO experience can deliver excellent work for less than any agency, and if they build on WordPress you own the result. The win is real when you find the right person. Just protect yourself: check references, agree on scope in writing, and get the source files so you're not stranded if they move on.
If you need something live this week for almost nothing and have zero technical help, GoDaddy clears that bar better than anything. You keep your domain, since GoDaddy is a registrar, and the editor is genuinely easy. For a referral-driven firm that just needs to look real online, that's a sensible, honest choice.
If the website has to do marketing work, find strangers, answer their questions, and turn up in AI search, all three routes leave the engine out. That's the firm FirmForte is built for: one that wants the result without the time sink, the gamble, or the ceiling.
Most firms that hire us already have a cheap site. Moving up is straightforward, with one wrinkle depending on where you're starting.
Because builders are closed, there's no clean export, so we rebuild fresh on WordPress and carry your content across by hand. The good news: your domain is already yours (GoDaddy is a registrar), so it points at the new site with no drama, and we set redirects to keep any search equity you've built.
If a freelancer built you a real WordPress site, you may be in better shape than you think. We can often work with what's there, rebuild the parts that matter, and add the search and AEO structure that was missing, rather than starting from zero. We'll tell you honestly which is the better value.
The content you wrote is usually worth keeping. We take your words, your photos, and what you've learned about your clients, and build the proper site around them, so your time wasn't wasted, it was the first draft.
Not sure your current site is worth replacing? The free AEO audit looks at exactly that and tells you what's wrong and what's salvageable, whether or not you hire us. It's the lowest-stakes way to find out where you actually stand.
If your question isn't here, drop it in the audit form below. We answer everything within a business day.
The comparison above is the why. These are the what.
$3,500 flat, 21 days, custom WordPress you own. The done-for-you option in this comparison.
Get cited by ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews. The layer the cheap routes leave out.
How FirmForte stacks up against the agencies and platforms too, compared the same honest way.
How FirmForte stacks up against the other names solo and small firms end up shortlisting.
A site you own outright versus the directory-and-template model FindLaw is known for.
Custom, AEO-first builds against Justia's bundled directory-and-website package.
Published pricing and full code ownership set against a proprietary platform with quote-on-request contracts.
Two boutique options compared on price, code ownership, and how each handles AI search.
Send us the URL. Within 48 hours, we'll come back with a 6-page report covering what's converting, what's leaking, and where your firm shows up (or doesn't) in AI search.
Read by a human. 48-hour turnaround. No card required.