Minimal home office with white walls, blue hydrangeas, and vintage coastal paintings, styled for a creative business owner deciding between a custom website vs. template.

Custom Website vs. Template: How to Choose as a Creative Business Owner

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So you’re ready to create a website for your business, side-hustle, passion project, or hobby. But now you’re wondering…

Should you go with a custom website or start with a template?

The custom website vs. template debate is real. With more template choices than ever, it can feel equal parts overwhelming and exciting to scroll through them all and picture your brand at the center.

But here’s the thing.

What if you can’t find the one? What if nothing you come across makes you think, “Yes! This is it!”?

You might start thinking custom is the only way to go. But with a longer timeline, a bigger price tag, and a lot more involved in the process, how do you know that’s the right choice either?

This post is here to give you some clarity. Let’s dive in.

But first, hi! I’m Emily from Blue House Creative Company I design websites on my favorite website builder, Showit. From custom builds to template customizations, I know the ins and outs of this decision, and I’m here to help you make the right one for you.

1. Assess Your Needs

When there are too many choices, it’s easy to get lost in the options. So start simple: write down what you actually need.

Beyond the basics (home, about, services, contact), think about what other pages your site requires. And I mean what you need right now, not in 12 months or at some vague point in the future. (I see you, ambitious multi-passionates.)

Getting clear on your page needs will either help you find a template that fits, or it will confirm that a custom build is the right call based on how unique your requirements are.

2. Assess Your Timeline

Do you need a website like, yesterday? Or are you willing to wait for something perfectly perfect?

Timeline is a huge factor in the custom website vs. template decision.

Custom websites typically take 4 to 6 weeks or more. Template customization can often be completed in under two weeks. Here’s why: a custom website is built from the ground up, just for you. Even if some elements are pre-designed, the bulk of the work is created specifically for your brand. A template, on the other hand, already has the structure in place. Depending on how much you change, it can be as simple as swapping in your copy and photos, or it can be more involved if you’re adjusting colors, fonts, and layouts.

Something worth noting: if you’re just starting out, getting a website live quickly often matters more than getting it perfect. A live website means visibility, and visibility means potential sales. Once you have something up, a custom redesign can happen in the background while your existing site keeps working for you.

3. Assess Your Budget

This one might be the biggest deciding factor of all. How much do you have to invest in your new website?

Custom website pricing varies based on several factors: the total number of pages, the complexity of the design, and the rates of the designer you work with. Finding a fully custom, 5-page website for under $3,000 is genuinely difficult. Most quality custom builds start well above that.

Templates, on the other hand, can range from around $100 to $1,500 or more, depending on the number of pages and design complexity. If you’re not sure what to look for when shopping templates, check out this blog post for guidance.

4. Decide: DIY or Hire a Designer?

Choosing a template does not mean you have to figure it all out alone.

DIY-ing a template customization is absolutely a great option if your budget is tight. But plenty of designers, including me, offer template customization services that give you the best of both worlds: the speed and cost savings of a template, plus the expertise of a professional who knows how to make it look and feel custom.

It’s a great middle ground. You get a beautiful, on-brand website without the custom price tag or the DIY time commitment.

Not sure whether to DIY or hire? I wrote a whole post about that too, read the post here.

Ready to Decide? Here’s Your Quick Checklist

Before you choose between a custom website and a template, ask yourself these four questions:

  1. What pages do I actually need right now?
  2. How quickly do I need my website live?
  3. What is my budget?
  4. Do I want to DIY, or do I want professional help?

Your answers will point you in the right direction.

Conclusion – Custom Website vs. Template

There is no universally right answer in the custom website vs. template debate. The right choice depends on where you are in your business right now: your timeline, your budget, your needs, and how much support you want along the way.

What I can tell you is this: a well-executed template will always outperform a rushed custom build. And a professionally customized template can look and feel just as elevated and intentional as something built from scratch. The goal is a website that works for your business and reflects your brand, and there is more than one path to get there.

If you’re still not sure which direction is right for you, I’d love to help you think it through. Reach out here or explore my services to see which option fits where you are right now.

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