Honest takes on website builders, pricing, and what small businesses actually need online.
46% of US small businesses still don't have a website. Here's how to know if you need one, what kind to get, and how to launch for $5 — not $500.
Read article →Most "how to make a website" guides are 3,000 words of hosting, DNS, and CMS setup. Here's the real version: pick a template, add your info, pay $5. Done in 5 minutes.
Read article →Linktree Pro costs $60/year for a list of buttons on someone else's domain. Here are 7 alternatives compared with actual prices, features, and an honest take on which one you need.
Read article →Not every business needs a 10-page website. Here are 10 one-page website examples that prove a single page — done right — is all most people need. Plus how to build yours for $5/year.
Read article →Personal website builders charge $8–$16/month for a page with your bio and links. You need one page that says who you are — not a CMS. Here's how to get one for $5/year.
Read article →Wedding website platforms charge up to $210 for six months. You need a page with your date, venue, and registry link — not a CMS. Here's how to get one for $5/year.
Read article →You don't need a $200/year website builder. You need one page with your menu, location, and hours. Here's exactly how to get online for $5.
Read article →We compared the actual annual cost of Squarespace, Wix, Weebly, Carrd, Google Sites, and 5 Dollar Website. No monthly teaser pricing — just what actually hits your credit card.
Read article →Squarespace charges $192/year. Wix charges $204/year. We charge $5. Full price breakdown, feature comparison, and who each platform is actually for.
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