Wix and Squarespace are best for simple brochure sites under 10 pages, with monthly fees of $16 to $40 and zero developer needed. Custom websites win for businesses that need real conversion optimization, integrations, or unique branding, starting around $1,500 setup plus optional maintenance. Below I run an honest comparison so you can stop overthinking it.
Wix vs Squarespace vs Custom, who wins for what?
Quick answer first, then the details.
- Wix wins for absolute beginners who want to click and drag with zero design taste.
- Squarespace wins for solopreneurs and creatives who want clean design and don't need much custom functionality.
- Custom wins for service businesses, agencies, and anyone whose website is a real lead source.
The mistake most small businesses make is picking based on cost without thinking about conversion. A $40 a month site that converts 1 percent of visitors is more expensive than a $200 a month site that converts 3 percent.
Honest pros and cons of Wix and Squarespace
Squarespace honest pros
Beautiful templates out of the box. Hosting, SSL, and domain are bundled. Good for creatives, photographers, and personal brands. Mobile-responsive by default. Stripe integration for selling products. Reasonable SEO basics.
Squarespace honest cons
Templates start to look the same once you've seen 50 of them. Page speed is mid-tier (loads in 3 to 5 seconds, not 1). Limited control over schema markup. App ecosystem is smaller than Wix. Migration out is painful because everything lives in their walled garden.
Wix honest pros
The most beginner-friendly editor on the market. Huge app store with thousands of add-ons. Free plan exists (with Wix branding). AI website builder (Wix ADI) can generate a starter site in minutes. Cheaper than Squarespace on the entry tier.
Wix honest cons
Templates often look dated. Sites are slow (especially on mobile). Once you pick a template, you can't switch without rebuilding. SEO is worse than Squarespace out of the box. Free plan adds Wix ads and a Wix subdomain, which kills credibility.
When does Wix/Squarespace stop being enough?
Five real signs you've outgrown a template builder:
- Your website is your main lead source. Every extra 0.5 percent of conversion is real money, and templates don't optimize for your specific business.
- You need integrations beyond the app store. If you use a niche CRM, scheduling tool, or AI assistant, you're going to hit walls.
- Page speed is hurting your SEO. Google ranks fast sites higher in 2026 than ever. Squarespace and Wix both struggle to hit sub-3-second loads.
- Edits are eating your time. If you're spending 2 hours a week fighting the editor, you're paying for the platform twice.
- Your brand needs to look serious. If you're trying to close $5,000+ deals, a template site signals "small operation" to buyers.
What does "custom" actually mean in 2026?
"Custom" used to mean handwritten HTML and CSS from scratch by a developer charging $150 an hour. In 2026, it usually means a site built on a modern framework (Next.js, Astro, plain HTML with a flexible stack) with design done in Figma and assembled with AI tooling.
What you actually get with a real custom build in 2026:
- A design built for your business, not a template adapted to it.
- Code that loads in under 2 seconds.
- Schema markup that helps you rank in local search.
- Real integrations with your CRM, scheduler, or AI receptionist.
- The ability to make any change you want without fighting a drag-and-drop editor.
It's not the slow, expensive process it was in 2018. That's the part most people don't realize.
AI-assisted custom builds, the new middle ground
This is the option most small businesses don't know about. AI-assisted custom builds use AI tooling for initial layouts, copy drafts, and design variations. A human designer then polishes and ships the site. The cost is way lower than a traditional agency build, and the timeline drops from 6 to 12 weeks down to 3 to 5 days.
How it stacks up:
- Traditional agency build: $5,000 to $15,000, 6 to 12 weeks.
- AI-assisted custom build: $1,000 to $3,000 setup plus $50 to $200 per month, 3 to 5 days.
- Squarespace: $200 to $500 per year, 1 to 7 days of your own time.
That middle option didn't really exist three years ago. It's what my service at Clampitt Automation runs on, and it's why I can ship a custom site for the price of two months of an agency retainer. See the custom website cost breakdown for full pricing.
Total cost of ownership comparison
Here's the 3-year math, all-in, for a small service business.
| Option | Year 1 | Year 3 Total | Conversion Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wix | $200 to $500 | $600 to $1,500 | 0.5 to 1.5% |
| Squarespace | $200 to $500 | $600 to $1,500 | 1 to 2% |
| Custom (one-time) | $3,000 to $5,500 | $3,500 to $7,500 | 2 to 4% |
| Custom (subscription) | $1,800 to $3,500 | $3,600 to $8,000 | 2 to 4% |
Custom looks 4 to 5 times more expensive on paper. The math flips when you factor in conversion. If you get 1,000 visitors a month and your customer is worth $500, a 1 percent conversion site makes $5,000 a month, and a 3 percent conversion site makes $15,000 a month. The extra $200 a month for custom isn't even close to the gap in revenue.
Real talk on platform lock-in
One thing nobody tells you: once your site is on Wix, getting off is painful. Your content lives inside their editor, your URLs are tied to their structure, and migration usually means rebuilding from scratch. Squarespace is slightly easier because they let you export some content. Custom code is portable, so you can move hosts or developers without losing anything.
Migration: switching from Wix or Squarespace to custom
If you've decided to move, here's the rough process. I've done this for clients dozens of times now.
- Export your content. Copy, photos, blog posts, contact form submissions if you can access them.
- Audit your URLs. Write down every URL that has traffic. You'll need to 301-redirect them so you don't lose SEO.
- Buy or transfer your domain. If your domain is locked inside Wix, you may need to wait 60 days from purchase before transferring out.
- Build the new site on a staging URL. Don't touch the live site until the new one is fully tested.
- Set up redirects. Map old URLs to new ones so search rankings carry over.
- Switch DNS. Point your domain to the new site. Plan for 1 to 2 hours of propagation time.
- Cancel the old subscription. Wait at least a week to make sure nothing is broken, then cancel.
If you don't want to deal with any of this, most custom website builders (including me) will handle the migration for you as part of the setup fee.
The bottom line
If you need a placeholder brochure site and your website isn't generating leads, stay on Squarespace. If you're brand new and broke, Wix is fine. If your website is your main lead source and you're losing potential customers to a clunky template, go custom. AI-assisted custom builds make this an easy decision because the cost gap is smaller than it's ever been.
If you want a free custom mockup to see what your site could look like, fill out the website intake form. I'll send something back within one business day, no commitment.