What affects the cost of a website
Pricing a website is not a throw of the dice - although sometimes, looking at listings online, you may get a different impression.
Each amount has its justification, even if it looks "from the ceiling" at first glance.
The price depends not only on the number of subpages, but on this,What function you want your website to serve in the business.
A simple business card with contact information is a very different story than a site designed for PPC campaigns or lead generation.
Range of functions
Not every feature makes sense just because it "looks good on offer."
Forms, calculators, CRM integrations - these are great tools, as long as they support the company's real goals.
Sometimes an entrepreneur wants to have "everything" right away, but after a conversation it turns out that half of these items will never be used.
It is better to have a few refined features than ten unnecessary buttons that only slow down the site.
Content and materials
Do you have ready texts, photos, logos? Great - it shortens the project even by a few weeks.
If not, it's no problem, because we can help with that - just be aware of the following.content creation is a viable stage of work, not an "add-on."
In my experience, it is this element that most often surprises clients: it seems like a small thing, and can be the biggest hidden cost.
Well-prepared materials are half the battle - without them, even the most beautiful design loses its meaning.
Technology and optimization
Next.js, React, Payload CMS - these technologies sound modern, and indeed offer great possibilities.
They increase performance, improve SEO, and the site loads instantly even with heavy traffic.
But they are not always needed.
If your goal is a simple news site, it may be better to invest in a robust, lightweight CMS rather than a full suite of frameworks.
A good contractor will not sell you the "most expensive solution" - just help you find a reasonable balance between effect and cost.
Languages and SEO
Each language version is not just a translation of the text.
It's a separate link structure, metadata and often separate keywords, because phrases that work in Poland don't necessarily make sense in Switzerland or Germany.
It's worth thinking about multilingualism in stages - first the main market, then others.
Such a model not only facilitates development, but also allows better control of the budget.
In my experience: the best projects are those that grow with the company, not those that try to be everything at once.