Contractor Website Design That Gets Calls

Contractor website design has one job: make your phone ring. Not win a design award, not impress other contractors. We build your site from your Google Business Profile in minutes, host it, and hand you the leads for $75 a month.

TL;DR

  • Contractor website design runs $500 to $3,000 from a freelancer, $5,000 to $15,000 from a niche agency, or $75 a month done for you here, hosting and edits included.
  • The design that gets calls is structural, not decorative: tap-to-call header, one page per service and city, license and reviews above the fold, a three-field lead form, fast plain code.
  • We build all of it from your Google Business Profile in minutes. You review a draft, publish, and own every lead.

What contractor website design actually costs

Agencies that specialize in contractor websites quote $5,000 to $15,000 for a build. One of the firms ranking for this exact search lists a $15,000 base package, before hosting, before edits, before you change a phone number. At the other end, DIY builders charge $20 a month and leave you doing the work yourself, on a template that looks like every other contractor site in your county.

We sit in the gap on purpose. $75 a month covers the design, the build, hosting, a custom domain, lead capture, and edits. No setup fee. If you want the full picture of what contractors pay across all these options, we broke down what a contractor website costs with real numbers.

What a contractor site needs to get calls

Most contractor websites fail the same way: they describe the business instead of catching the customer. A homeowner with a leaking roof does not browse. They search, they skim, they call the first contractor who looks legitimate and answers their question. Your site converts that visit or loses it in seconds.

Every site we design ships with the parts that do the converting:

None of this is decoration. It is the difference between a site that ranks and dials, and a brochure that sits there.

Built from the profile you already have

Here is the part nobody else on this page offers. You do not fill out a questionnaire or sit through a discovery call. You paste your Google Business Profile link, and the site builds itself from what Google already knows about your business: your services, your service area, your hours, your reviews, your photos.

Every contractor already wrote their website. It is sitting in their Google Business Profile. Our job is to turn that into a fast, multi-page site that ranks, and to do it before their coffee gets cold.

Nick, founder of Sites That Get Calls

The result is not a template with your logo dropped in. Each site is generated as its own code, laid out for your trade, your town, and your services. Want changes? Tell the site what to change in plain English and review the draft before it goes live. If you would rather compare this to doing it yourself with a drag-and-drop tool, see the contractor website builder page, where we are honest about when DIY makes sense.

Design examples by trade

General contractors are only part of who we build for. The layout, photos, proof, and page structure change by trade, because a homeowner hires a roofer differently than they hire a landscaper. Pick your trade:

If you want to see finished work before reading about your trade, we collected the best contractor websites and noted what each one does right.

Why web design for contractors is different

A contractor site earns its keep in local search. That means the boring, structural work matters more than the visuals: correct headings, service and city pages, schema markup that tells Google you are a business with an address and reviews, and a site that loads fast on a job-site phone connection.

It also means your Google Business Profile and your website have to agree with each other. Google checks. BrightLocal's local consumer review survey has tracked for years how heavily homeowners lean on reviews and local search results when picking a service business, and Google itself now points profile owners to a real website since it shut down its free Business Profile websites in 2024. The contractors who win are the ones whose profile, reviews, and site reinforce each other.

That is the design philosophy: every page exists to catch a search and convert it. Anything that does not help a customer decide gets cut.

Who this is not for

If you want a hand-crafted brand experience with custom photography and a six-week design process, hire one of the agencies. They are good at that, and you will pay accordingly. If you enjoy building your own site and have the weekends for it, a DIY builder is cheaper than we are.

We are for the contractor who wants the site handled, wants it to get calls, and wants to get back to work.

FAQ

Does a contractor need a website?

Yes, and not because everyone says so. Your Google Business Profile alone caps out: it ranks for your name and a handful of map searches, and since Google shut down its free profile websites it sends visitors to whatever link you give it. A real site catches the searches your profile cannot. Longer answer: does a contractor need a website?

How much does it cost to have someone build a contractor website?

Freelancers typically charge $500 to $3,000, contractor-niche agencies $5,000 to $15,000, and subscription services like ours $75 a month with hosting and edits included. We put the full cost breakdown in plain numbers.

How fast can my site be live?

Minutes for the draft, same day for the live site. The build runs from your Google Business Profile, you review the draft, pick a domain, and publish. Edits after launch are just as fast and you approve every change before it ships.

Do I own my leads?

Yes. Every call and form submission goes straight to you and lives in your dashboard. We never resell your leads or make you bid for them.