Pricing guide
How much does a website cost in Portugal?
A website can start at €250 when it's simple and focused. The price grows as complexity increases: more pages, content management, languages, integrations, or Google search preparation.
Starting points, not final quotes.
Reference prices for creating a website.
Landing page (single-page website)
Good for presenting one service, campaign, or simple offer with a clear enquiry goal.
Website with multiple pages
Useful for companies that need to present services, team, process, contact paths, FAQs, and proof of work.
Website with content management
Makes sense when the team needs to update pages, services, images, news, or other content without depending on technical support every time.
What the price should cover.
A professional website quote should not only cover visual design. The value is in message clarity, page structure, mobile experience, Google preparation, and a proper launch.
- Understanding the website goal and the type of client it should attract.
- Organizing pages, content, and priorities so information is easy to find.
- Creating a simple experience on desktop, tablet, and mobile.
- Preparing forms, calls to action, and clear paths for enquiries.
- Supporting domain, hosting, launch, and initial configuration.
- Following the launch to fix details and leave everything usable.
What influences a website quote.
Two websites can have the same number of pages and require very different work.
Number of pages?
More pages mean more structure, writing, and design.
A landing page concentrates the message on one page. A website with several pages needs to organize services, company information, contact paths, FAQs, proof of work, and conversion paths without making navigation confusing.
The more pages are needed, the more work goes into structure, writing, design, review, and Google search preparation.
Unorganized content?
An unclear message takes more work to shape.
The price increases when the company does not yet have a clear message: undefined services, old copy, scattered images, unclear priorities, or information that is hard to explain.
In these cases, the work is not just building pages. It is turning confusing information into a website that visitors can understand before getting in touch.
Content management area?
Gives the team autonomy to update the site.
A content management area makes sense when the team needs to update services, images, news, projects, pages, or FAQs without requesting technical changes for every detail.
It increases the initial price because it requires structure, fields, permissions, and testing, but it reduces dependence after launch and helps the website stay updated.
Languages?
Each language adds pages, review, and URLs.
A bilingual or multilingual website is not just duplicated text. Each language needs organized pages, clear navigation, reviewed content, and URLs prepared for visitors and Google search.
This matters when the company wants to communicate with international clients, tourists, partners, or audiences with different needs.
Forms and integrations?
Requests, bookings, and integrations add development.
Simple contact forms are quick to prepare. The price changes when the website needs to receive more complete quote requests, bookings, payments, registrations, newsletters, or information that moves into other tools.
The more the website needs to reduce manual work and organize data before it reaches the team, the more specific the development becomes.
Google search preparation?
Getting the site ready to be found on Google.
A website prepared for Google search needs more than a good visual design. Pages need clear titles, useful descriptions, simple URLs, contextual images, speed, and enough text to explain the service.
This work helps Google understand the website and helps visitors find answers without effort.
Before moving forward
Simple answers before choosing the right website.
It depends on the goal.
Choose a landing page when the problem is focus: you need one page to explain a specific offer, campaign, service, or contact path without distracting visitors with the whole company story.
Choose a website when the problem is trust and context. If clients need to understand several services, compare options, see proof of work, know the team, and answer common doubts before getting in touch, a website gives them the structure to decide.