Number of pages
A single focused homepage costs less than a site with several service, proof, and FAQ pages.
Pricing guide
The short answer is that it depends on scope, number of pages, content needs, and how custom the site needs to be. Most pricing confusion comes from comparing very different projects.
What changes price
A simple site for one service and one audience is different from a multi-page site that needs stronger SEO structure, custom features, and more content planning.
A single focused homepage costs less than a site with several service, proof, and FAQ pages.
Pricing changes when the project needs messaging support, page strategy, or heavier rewrite work.
Booking flows, dashboards, CMS setup, and integrations add build time and testing requirements.
A one-time build has different pricing than a plan that includes updates or longer-term maintenance.
Practical ranges
A focused one-page launch site is different from a stronger multi-page lead-generation website. Pricing moves with structure, proof, writing support, and feature depth.
What to ask
A good quote should tell you what pages are included, what content help is part of the job, and whether updates or support are included after launch.
Ask what pages are included, who is responsible for writing or editing content, whether local SEO setup is part of the project, and how revisions are handled. Ask what happens after launch too. A cheaper site can get expensive later if every small change becomes a new project.
If you are comparing options in Las Cruces, it helps to compare deliverables rather than only the headline number. A one-page starter build and a stronger multi-page website are not the same thing.
Need an estimate?
Send your business type, rough page needs, and whether you need a new site, redesign, or feature work. I can help narrow the realistic pricing range.