Pricing, London

Fixed-fee pricing, no surprises.

One agreed price for an agreed scope, quoted before any work starts. You talk to the founder, not an account manager, and you know the cost up front.

Every project is a fixed fee, quoted up front after a short scoping call, so you know the exact price before anything starts. No hourly billing and no surprises. The price is tied to a written scope, not to how long the work takes, so the number you agree is the number you pay.

How fixed-fee pricing works

Three things are fixed before any work begins: the scope, the fee and the timeline. The process is short and there is nothing to chase.

  • Agreed scope. A short scoping call sets out the pages, features and integrations the project needs, written down so both sides see the same thing.
  • Fixed quote. One price for that scope, sent up front. It does not move unless you ask for more work, which is quoted and agreed first.
  • Fixed timeline. A clear delivery date agreed alongside the fee, with one founder accountable from first call to launch.

What an engagement can include

Each engagement is one of a few clear types, and your quote can combine them. Pick what you need and the scope is built around it.

E/01

New website

A bespoke, hand-coded site built from scratch on Astro or Next.js, designed to rank and load fast. See web design.

E/02

Rebuild or migration

Moving a dated, slow or hard-to-edit site to a clean hand-coded build without losing rankings. See web development.

E/03

SEO

On-page structure, technical fixes and content so the site earns Google rankings, done by the same person who builds it. See SEO.

E/04

AI search visibility

Schema and answer-shaped content so ChatGPT, Perplexity and AI Overviews cite you by name. See AI search visibility.

E/05

Care plan

Optional ongoing updates, monitoring and small improvements after launch, as a separate fixed monthly fee if you want it.

What affects the price

A handful of factors decide where your fixed fee lands, and the scoping call sizes each one. None of them are billed by the hour.

  • Page count. A focused marketing site is less work than a large site with many sections and templates.
  • Content readiness. Supplying finished copy and images costs less than having them written and sourced for you.
  • Integrations. Forms, booking, payments or a CMS add build work compared with a static brochure site.
  • Ongoing care. A one-off build and an ongoing care plan are priced separately, so you only pay for what you keep.

For a plain-English breakdown of what a site costs in the UK and what recurs, read the website cost guide.

Get a quote

Send your brief and you get an exact fixed fee, with a reply within one working day. The scoping call is free and there is no obligation to proceed. You will hear back with honest next steps and a clear price, not a sales pitch.

Start on the contact page, or read how the build itself works on the web design page.

Questions

Pricing questions.

What people ask before requesting a fixed-fee quote.

Why are no prices listed?
Because every project is different. A five-page marketing site and a full rebuild with integrations need different work, so a single price list would mislead more than it helps. You get an exact fixed fee after a short scoping call, before any work starts.
What is a fixed fee?
A fixed fee is one agreed price for an agreed scope. Once the scope and quote are signed off, the price does not move unless you ask for more work, in which case it is quoted and agreed first. You always know the cost before anything begins.
Do you charge hourly?
No. There is no hourly billing and no metered time. You pay one fixed fee for the work in scope, so a slow week or a fast week never changes your invoice.
Do you take a deposit?
Most fixed-fee projects start with an agreed deposit and settle the balance at launch, with the split written into the quote before work begins. The exact terms are confirmed in your scoping call.
Are there ongoing costs?
A one-off build has no compulsory ongoing fee from the studio, but you do pay third parties for hosting and your domain, which are usually modest. An optional care plan is a separate fixed monthly fee if you want ongoing updates and monitoring. The website cost guide breaks down what is one-off and what recurs.