Pricing snapshot
Webflow plans & pricing
Compare the core plans, included features, and starting price before you choose a plan.
| Plan | Price | What's included |
|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 / forever |
|
| Basic | $14 / month |
|
| CMS Most popular | $23 / month |
|
| Business | $39 / month |
|
How much does Webflow cost?
Webflow’s pricing is a little more involved than most website builders, so it’s worth being clear about what you’re actually paying for. The plans on this page are site plans, the monthly cost to host and publish a single website.
It starts free, on a webflow.io subdomain, which is fine for learning the tool or prototyping but not for a real launch. The Basic plan at $14/month lets you connect a custom domain and host a static site, no blog or dynamic content. The CMS plan at $23/month is the one most people actually want, because it unlocks Webflow’s content collections for blogs, portfolios, and anything that needs to be managed as data rather than hand-built pages. Business at $39/month exists for higher-traffic sites that need more bandwidth, CMS items, and form submissions.
Annual billing brings each of these down a few dollars a month. And separately from all this, Webflow sells workspace plans for teams and freelancers juggling multiple projects, if you build client sites, that’s a second cost to factor in. For a single personal or business site, though, the site plan is what matters.
Is there a free plan or trial?
There’s a genuine free plan, not just a trial, it doesn’t expire. You get the full visual designer and up to two pages on a Webflow subdomain. That’s enough to learn the tool properly, build a prototype, or decide whether Webflow’s way of working clicks for you before you spend anything.
What the free plan won’t do is launch a real site: no custom domain, no CMS, and the page limit rules out anything beyond a basic landing page. So treat it as a no-risk way to evaluate Webflow rather than a permanent home for a live website.
Is Webflow worth the price?
This is the honest crux of it. Webflow is more expensive and harder to learn than Squarespace or Wix, and if you only need a simple site you’ll get there faster and cheaper elsewhere. There’s no point paying for design power you won’t use.
But for the people Webflow is built for, designers, developers, and businesses that want pixel-level control and clean, fast output, nothing else in the no-code space comes close. You can build genuinely custom layouts and interactions, and the CMS is flexible enough to power a serious content site. For that audience, the $23/month CMS plan is easily justified by what it replaces: a developer, a separate CMS, or the compromises of a more rigid builder.
Pricing note: pricing and renewal rates change often, confirm current pricing on Webflow’s site.
For the full picture, see our complete Webflow review.
Pricing FAQ
How much does Webflow cost?
Webflow has a free plan for building on a webflow.io subdomain. Paid site plans start at $14/month for Basic (static sites), $23/month for CMS (the most popular plan, with dynamic content), and $39/month for Business. Annual billing lowers these rates. Always check Webflow's site for current figures.
Is there a free Webflow plan?
Yes. The free plan lets you use the full visual designer and build up to two pages on a webflow.io subdomain. It's genuinely useful for learning and prototyping, but you'll need a paid site plan to connect a custom domain and launch properly.
Why does Webflow have two types of plans?
Webflow splits pricing into site plans (what you pay to host one site) and workspace plans (for teams and freelancers managing multiple projects). The tiers on this page are site plans, the cost to publish a single site. If you manage many client sites, you'll also weigh workspace pricing.
Is Webflow worth the price?
For designers and businesses that want full control and clean output, yes, Webflow does things no drag-and-drop builder can. For a simple site you could build faster and cheaper on Squarespace or Wix. The value depends on whether you'll actually use the design power you're paying for.