How Much Does a Squarespace Website Cost in Australia? (2026)
Squarespace Cost by City
Squarespace is the platform everyone thinks they can build themselves — and for the simplest sites, they're right, which is exactly why this page starts honestly. Professional Squarespace work isn't about doing what the platform makes easy; it's the design, structure and content strategy the templates don't give you, at $2,000–$12,000 depending on ambition. Here are the real bands, the subscription that replaces every maintenance cost, and a straight answer on when Squarespace is genuinely the right call and when you've outgrown it.
Detailed Pricing — Australia 2026
| Tier | Typical cost (AUD) | What it funds |
|---|---|---|
| Professional setup | $2,000–$6,000 | Template chosen and shaped properly, content structured, brand applied, launch-ready |
| Custom design build | $4,000–$12,000 | Design pushed past the template, custom CSS, bespoke layouts and interaction |
| Migration to Squarespace | $2,000–$8,000 | Content moved from WordPress or a builder, redirects mapped, rebuilt to fit |
| DIY rescue | $500–$2,500 | Finishing or fixing a stalled self-build — structure, design and launch |
| Ongoing support | $75–$150/hour | Occasional changes and content help — most businesses need little, by design |
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Four things set a professional Squarespace quote: how far the design pushes past the template — the platform makes competent easy and distinctive hard, and distinctive is where the hours live; content readiness and volume, the quiet variable in every quote; migration weight when a site is moving in; and custom code, the CSS and development that stretches Squarespace beyond its defaults. What's absent is the maintenance line — the subscription bundles hosting, security and updates, so there's no care plan to price, ever.
Project setup, custom build — and the all-in subscription
Professional work is quoted fixed against a written scope, most projects landing in one to three weeks. Ongoing help runs hourly ($75–$150) and most businesses need very little of it — the platform is genuinely low-touch by design. The subscription — roughly $25–$70 a month depending on tier and whether commerce is included — is the whole running cost, bundling everything a self-hosted site would maintain separately. One build number, one monthly number, and no third column for care.
Is Squarespace actually right for you? An honest test
Squarespace earns its popularity honestly — for a business that needs a clean, credible, low-maintenance site it can mostly run itself, it's often the correct answer, and a good provider will tell you so rather than upsell you off it. The boundaries are just as honest. Serious selling outgrows it: once inventory, shipping rules or volume get real, a commerce platform fits better — see what Shopify costs in Australia. And genuinely custom design or complex functionality hits the template ceiling, where bespoke web design earns its cost — see what web design costs. The test is simple: if your site is credibility, content and light commerce, Squarespace is likely right and this page's professional tiers make it excellent; if you're fighting the platform to do something it resists, you've found its edge.
Red flags at any price
Charging custom-build prices for a light template setup — ask exactly what design work the quote covers beyond choosing a theme. Builds delivered on the designer's account instead of yours — the subscription and domain belong in your name from day one. Padding simple Squarespace work with unnecessary custom code that complicates a platform whose whole value is simplicity. Migration quotes with no redirect-mapping line. And anyone selling you a "maintenance plan" for Squarespace — the subscription already includes it, and the extra fee is for nothing.
When the maths works
Squarespace's maths is the friendliest in web design for the businesses it fits: a $3,000 professional setup plus $30 a month all-in gets a credible, self-manageable site for under $3,400 in year one, with no care plan draining the following years. The value case is speed and simplicity — a professional who structures the content, applies the brand and launches it properly saves the weeks a DIY build burns and the rebuild a bad one triggers. Where the maths breaks is buying Squarespace for a job it can't do; the fit test above is the cheapest analysis on this page.
A clean site still needs to be found
Squarespace ships tidy, mobile-first pages with sound SEO foundations — a genuine head start, and a starting line, not a finish. Visibility is its own budget: see what SEO costs in Australia for the engine that earns the traffic, and what AI SEO costs now that AI assistants cite and recommend the businesses they can read. A clean Squarespace site with no visibility spend is a well-kept shop on a street with no signposts.
What a Squarespace site costs to run
The subscription is the whole story — it bundles what other platforms bill separately. These are the standard ongoing items on Australian Squarespace invoices in 2026.
| Item | Typical cost (AUD) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Squarespace subscription | ~$25–$70/month | All-in: hosting, security, updates and support — commerce tiers cost more |
| Hosting, security & updates | $0 | Bundled into the subscription — the separate columns other platforms carry |
| Maintenance / care plan | $0 | Nothing to patch or update independently — a care plan here is a fee for nothing |
| Occasional design help | $0–$150/hour | Only when you want changes — most businesses need little, by design |
How to keep Squarespace costs down without buying junk
Squarespace vs Wix vs WordPress
Three ways to run a small-business site, three honest trades. Squarespace leads on design polish and simplicity — the most professional-looking output of the easy platforms, all-in subscription, genuinely low-touch, with a template ceiling you'll eventually feel if your ambitions grow. Wix trades some design refinement for flexibility and a cheaper entry, at the cost of a busier interface and heavier upsell. WordPress buys open-ended power and pays for it in perpetual maintenance — the right call when you genuinely publish or need plugins, overkill when you don't. The honest sort: design-conscious businesses wanting simple and credible lean Squarespace; flexibility-first budget builds lean Wix; publishing operations and plugin-dependent sites belong on WordPress — and the professional work on this page is what makes any of them look deliberate instead of default.
Frequently Asked Questions
Our Methodology
Prices on this page are compiled from publicly available cost guides, leading tradie marketplaces, peak industry body data, and individual tradesperson websites across Australia. We cross-reference ranges from multiple sources and adjust for city-specific cost differences based on advertised rates, salary data, and cost-of-living indicators. Our price guides are produced independently. Pricing is compiled from public quotes, industry rate guides, and marketplace data, and no tradesperson can influence a published figure. All prices are estimates and will vary based on your specific job. Always get multiple quotes. Last reviewed July 2026. Read our full methodology →