[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":1146},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-custom-web-app-vs-website":3,"related-custom-web-app-vs-website":384},{"id":4,"title":5,"body":6,"category":372,"date":373,"description":374,"extension":375,"image":376,"meta":377,"navigation":378,"path":379,"readingTime":380,"seo":381,"stem":382,"__hash__":383},"blog/blog/custom-web-app-vs-website.md","Custom Web App vs. Website: Which Does Your Business Need?",{"type":7,"value":8,"toc":350},"minimark",[9,13,16,21,28,34,42,45,49,52,55,74,80,86,92,95,99,102,105,122,127,130,135,140,145,148,152,156,159,162,166,169,172,175,181,185,191,194,198,201,216,219,222,226,229,260,263,267,270,273,277,303,306,310,322,333,336,340,343],[10,11,12],"p",{},"One of the most common questions we get from business owners and startup founders: \"Do I need a website or a web app?\"",[10,14,15],{},"The answer is usually simpler than people expect. But getting it wrong is expensive — and I have seen businesses burn $20,000 to $60,000 building the wrong thing because nobody walked them through the decision properly.",[17,18,20],"h2",{"id":19},"the-simple-difference","The Simple Difference",[10,22,23,27],{},[24,25,26],"strong",{},"A website"," displays information. It tells people who you are, what you do, and how to contact you. Think of it as your digital storefront — people find you, learn what you offer, and hopefully reach out.",[10,29,30,33],{},[24,31,32],{},"A web application"," does something. Users log in, interact with data, and complete tasks. Gmail, Trello, Shopify, your bank's online portal — those are all web applications.",[10,35,36,37,41],{},"Here is the quickest test: if your users need to log in and ",[38,39,40],"em",{},"do"," something, you probably need a web app. If they just need to learn about you and contact you, you need a website.",[10,43,44],{},"A developer on Hacker News put it well: \"My local hair salon really just needs a brochure, and maybe a scheduling widget. A doctor's office would need to add a payment system. Both can be achieved by pulling in a third-party solution while the core website can remain plain, static HTML.\" That is true for most local businesses. You do not need custom software. You need a well-built website that integrates the right tools.",[17,46,48],{"id":47},"most-businesses-just-need-a-website","Most Businesses Just Need a Website",[10,50,51],{},"I say this even though we build both, and web apps are more profitable for us. The truth is that most of the people who come to us thinking they need a web app actually need a website with a couple of smart integrations.",[10,53,54],{},"A website is the right choice when:",[56,57,58,62,65,68,71],"ul",{},[59,60,61],"li",{},"You want to establish an online presence for your business",[59,63,64],{},"Your main goal is to generate leads — calls, form submissions, bookings",[59,66,67],{},"You need to show up in Google search results",[59,69,70],{},"Your customers need to find your services, location, menu, or portfolio",[59,72,73],{},"You are a local business serving a geographic area",[10,75,76,79],{},[24,77,78],{},"Examples:"," A restaurant showing their menu, a plumber showcasing their services, a law firm listing their practice areas, a real estate agent displaying listings.",[10,81,82,85],{},[24,83,84],{},"Cost range:"," $3,000 to $8,000 for a custom business website.",[10,87,88,91],{},[24,89,90],{},"Timeline:"," 2-4 weeks.",[10,93,94],{},"One thing that is worth noting: a former Google PM named Gabor Cselle argued that even startups should build websites before apps. It costs about $4 to acquire an app user through paid channels, but only $1 to get someone to a website. Content on the web is searchable and discoverable. Apps are buried in app stores behind a download barrier. For most businesses, the math strongly favors websites.",[17,96,98],{"id":97},"when-you-actually-need-a-web-application","When You Actually Need a Web Application",[10,100,101],{},"A custom web application makes sense when your business has operational pain that software can fix. Not when you have an idea that sounds cool — when you have a real, measurable problem.",[10,103,104],{},"Here are the honest signals:",[56,106,107,110,113,116,119],{},[59,108,109],{},"Your team spends 10+ hours a week on manual data entry or double-entry between systems",[59,111,112],{},"Your spreadsheets crash, have version conflicts, or cannot be used by multiple people at once",[59,114,115],{},"You are paying for 2-3 SaaS tools that do not talk to each other and still leave gaps",[59,117,118],{},"You are running a process on paper or email that clearly should be digital",[59,120,121],{},"You are building a product or service that is itself a software platform",[10,123,124,126],{},[24,125,78],{}," A logistics company tracking shipments in real time, a salon managing appointments and client records across multiple locations, a startup building an MVP, a wholesale bakery that takes orders via email and manually types them into accounting software.",[10,128,129],{},"That bakery example is real — they were throwing away thousands of dollars a month on labor that a simple ordering app would eliminate. That is the kind of pain that justifies a custom build.",[10,131,132,134],{},[24,133,84],{}," $8,000 to $50,000+ depending on complexity.",[10,136,137,139],{},[24,138,90],{}," 4-12 weeks depending on scope.",[141,142,144],"h3",{"id":143},"the-math-that-makes-custom-builds-worth-it","The Math That Makes Custom Builds Worth It",[10,146,147],{},"When a business is paying $2,000 per month for SaaS tools that sort of work, that is $120,000 over five years. A custom app that costs $20,000 upfront and replaces those tools is a clear win — but only after you know exactly what you need. Custom solutions can cut operating costs by up to 47%. The key word is \"can.\" You need clarity on the problem before the solution makes sense.",[17,149,151],{"id":150},"the-expensive-mistakes-people-make","The Expensive Mistakes People Make",[141,153,155],{"id":154},"building-a-web-app-when-a-landing-page-would-do","Building a Web App When a Landing Page Would Do",[10,157,158],{},"The startup graveyard is full of overbuilt products that nobody wanted. Dropbox validated their entire concept with a landing page and a video before writing a single line of product code. Robinhood did the same thing. The Indie Hackers community has a saying that keeps coming up: \"If you can't get 50 people interested in a landing page, you won't get 50 people to use your product.\"",[10,160,161],{},"One of the most common mistakes startup founders make is allocating more than 80% of their budget to MVP development — forgetting that they still need money for marketing, promotion, support, and iteration. The smartest approach is to validate demand with the simplest possible thing (often just a website with a waitlist form) before investing in a full build.",[141,163,165],{"id":164},"going-with-the-cheapest-developer","Going With the Cheapest Developer",[10,167,168],{},"The horror stories are real and they follow the same pattern every time.",[10,170,171],{},"One business owner wanted an online tuition matching platform. Most agencies quoted over $100,000, but one offered to do it for $60,000 with an offshore team. A year later, they had zero communication, a buggy app that never launched, and were $60,000 poorer with nothing to show for it.",[10,173,174],{},"A US-based nonprofit hired a development agency that was founded by a film producer with no software background. He saw profit potential, hired a remote team abroad, and could not assess or oversee their work. The result: the app and website did not work together, the codebase was unscalable, and features were improperly coded.",[10,176,177,180],{},[24,178,179],{},"44% of software project failures"," are attributed to unclear requirements and miscommunication. The cheapest quote almost always leads to more revisions, unexpected bugs, delayed timelines, and sometimes a complete rebuild.",[141,182,184],{"id":183},"overengineering-everything","Overengineering Everything",[10,186,187,188],{},"Simon Munoz, formerly of Voicemod, said something I think about constantly: ",[24,189,190],{},"\"The graveyard is filled with exquisitely designed startups scaled to millions of users who never got the slightest bit of traction.\"",[10,192,193],{},"Overengineering is code or design that solves problems you do not have. Microservices architecture when a single server handles your load. Preparing for a million users when you have twelve. Building \"just in case\" features that nine times out of ten never materialize. Every unnecessary feature is time and money taken away from the features that actually matter.",[17,195,197],{"id":196},"when-you-need-both","When You Need Both",[10,199,200],{},"This is more common than you might think. Many businesses need:",[202,203,204,210],"ol",{},[59,205,206,209],{},[24,207,208],{},"A public-facing website"," that markets their business and generates leads",[59,211,212,215],{},[24,213,214],{},"A private web application"," that runs their operations",[10,217,218],{},"A fitness studio might need a website that shows their class schedule and attracts new members, plus a member portal where people can book classes, track progress, and manage their membership. A contractor might need a marketing website for lead generation plus an internal job management system for scheduling and invoicing.",[10,220,221],{},"With the stack we use, both can be built together — same code, same design, one project instead of two.",[17,223,225],{"id":224},"how-to-decide","How to Decide",[10,227,228],{},"Ask yourself these questions honestly:",[202,230,231,237,243,249,254],{},[59,232,233,236],{},[24,234,235],{},"Do users need to log in and interact with data?"," If yes, that part is a web app",[59,238,239,242],{},[24,240,241],{},"Am I replacing manual processes, spreadsheets, or multiple SaaS tools?"," If yes, web app",[59,244,245,248],{},[24,246,247],{},"Do I mainly need to be found on Google and generate leads?"," If yes, website",[59,250,251,242],{},[24,252,253],{},"Am I building a software product people will use daily?",[59,255,256,259],{},[24,257,258],{},"Do I need leads, calls, or bookings?"," If yes, website — possibly with booking integration",[10,261,262],{},"If you answered yes to questions from both sides, you probably need both. And it is most cost-effective to build them together with a shared technology stack.",[141,264,266],{"id":265},"a-note-on-scope-creep","A Note on Scope Creep",[10,268,269],{},"The thing that turns a $5,000 website project into a $30,000 web app is scope creep. What starts as \"I need a simple website\" grows into \"well, what if we added user accounts\" and \"could we also build a dashboard\" and \"what about an admin panel.\"",[10,271,272],{},"Each addition sounds small. Together, they transform the entire project. The best way to avoid this is to define the scope precisely before anyone writes a line of code. \"5-page responsive website with contact form and booking integration\" is a clear scope. \"Build a website\" is an invitation for the project to balloon.",[17,274,276],{"id":275},"the-technology-we-use-and-why-it-matters","The Technology We Use (and Why It Matters)",[56,278,279,285,291,297],{},[59,280,281,284],{},[24,282,283],{},"Vue.js + Nuxt"," — Handles both websites and web applications in the same framework. Fast, SEO-friendly for marketing pages, and capable of handling complex app logic",[59,286,287,290],{},[24,288,289],{},"Supabase"," — Database and authentication for web apps. Handles user accounts, real-time data, and file storage without us building that infrastructure from scratch",[59,292,293,296],{},[24,294,295],{},"Tailwind CSS"," — Consistent design across your website and application",[59,298,299,302],{},[24,300,301],{},"Netlify/Vercel"," — Hosting optimized for performance and reliability",[10,304,305],{},"The practical result: your website is fast enough to rank well on Google, your app can handle live data and user accounts, and both look like they belong to the same business.",[17,307,309],{"id":308},"real-examples-from-our-work","Real Examples From Our Work",[10,311,312,315,316,321],{},[24,313,314],{},"Ritehaul Logistics"," came to us using three different paid tools to manage their shipments. We ",[317,318,320],"a",{"href":319},"/case-studies/ritehaul-logistics","built a custom platform"," that replaced all three, saving them 4+ hours of daily manual work. That is a web application solving real operational pain.",[10,323,324,327,328,332],{},[24,325,326],{},"American Hauler Trucking"," needed a professional online presence to generate leads. We ",[317,329,331],{"href":330},"/case-studies/american-hauler-trucking","built their website"," with a focus on SEO and conversion, resulting in 40% more quote requests. That is a website doing what a website should do.",[10,334,335],{},"Both projects used the same core technology, but the end products serve very different purposes.",[17,337,339],{"id":338},"not-sure-which-one-you-need","Not Sure Which One You Need?",[10,341,342],{},"Most people are not — and that is fine. It is not always obvious until we talk through what your business actually needs day-to-day.",[10,344,345,349],{},[317,346,348],{"href":347},"/contact","Schedule a free consultation"," and we will walk through your specific situation. I will tell you straight what I think makes sense — and if all you need is a basic site, I will say so. There is no point overbuilding something when a simpler solution gets you there faster and cheaper.",{"title":351,"searchDepth":352,"depth":352,"links":353},"",2,[354,355,356,360,365,366,369,370,371],{"id":19,"depth":352,"text":20},{"id":47,"depth":352,"text":48},{"id":97,"depth":352,"text":98,"children":357},[358],{"id":143,"depth":359,"text":144},3,{"id":150,"depth":352,"text":151,"children":361},[362,363,364],{"id":154,"depth":359,"text":155},{"id":164,"depth":359,"text":165},{"id":183,"depth":359,"text":184},{"id":196,"depth":352,"text":197},{"id":224,"depth":352,"text":225,"children":367},[368],{"id":265,"depth":359,"text":266},{"id":275,"depth":352,"text":276},{"id":308,"depth":352,"text":309},{"id":338,"depth":352,"text":339},"development","2026-03-03","A website shows information. A web app runs your business. Here's how to know which one you need — and the expensive mistakes to avoid if you pick wrong.","md","/images/blog/webapp-vs-website.jpg",{},true,"/blog/custom-web-app-vs-website","8 min read",{"title":5,"description":374},"blog/custom-web-app-vs-website","EkuDJx7psZiu5DuGHvBQU4dr9K3rcMmsRYuOp5J1gQ8",[385,821],{"id":386,"title":387,"body":388,"category":811,"date":812,"description":813,"extension":375,"image":814,"meta":815,"navigation":378,"path":816,"readingTime":817,"seo":818,"stem":819,"__hash__":820},"blog/blog/how-much-does-a-website-cost-in-miami.md","How Much Does a Website Cost in Miami in 2026?",{"type":7,"value":389,"toc":791},[390,393,400,403,407,418,421,424,428,432,435,441,445,448,453,457,460,465,469,472,477,481,484,490,496,502,508,514,518,556,560,580,584,587,590,596,602,608,614,618,621,624,627,631,634,678,682,685,688,726,732,736,739,762,770,774,777,780,784],[10,391,392],{},"If you are a business owner in Miami looking for a new website, you have probably gotten wildly different quotes. One agency says $500. Another says $25,000. A freelancer on Fiverr offers to do it for $150.",[10,394,395,396,399],{},"So what does a website ",[38,397,398],{},"actually"," cost?",[10,401,402],{},"After 15 years of building websites for Miami businesses — restaurants, contractors, law firms, startups — I am going to break it down honestly. Not \"it depends\" followed by vague ranges. Actual numbers, what drives them, and the traps to avoid.",[17,404,406],{"id":405},"the-short-answer","The Short Answer",[10,408,409,410,413,414,417],{},"For a professional, custom-built business website in Miami, expect to pay ",[24,411,412],{},"$3,000 to $8,000",". For a custom web application (dashboards, portals, booking systems), expect ",[24,415,416],{},"$8,000 to $50,000+"," depending on complexity.",[10,419,420],{},"Those numbers are higher than they were two years ago. Design prices climbed 8-12% from 2025 to 2026, driven by demand, inflation, and the reality that building something genuinely good takes experienced people who do not work for cheap.",[10,422,423],{},"Here is the full breakdown.",[17,425,427],{"id":426},"website-types-and-what-they-cost","Website Types and What They Cost",[141,429,431],{"id":430},"simple-landing-page-1500-to-3000","Simple Landing Page — $1,500 to $3,000",[10,433,434],{},"A single-page or 3-5 page website. Good for new businesses that need a professional online presence fast. Includes responsive design, basic SEO, and a contact form.",[10,436,437,440],{},[24,438,439],{},"Best for:"," New businesses, personal brands, event pages, anyone who needs something up quickly while they figure out their longer-term needs.",[141,442,444],{"id":443},"business-website-3000-to-8000","Business Website — $3,000 to $8,000",[10,446,447],{},"A full multi-page website with service pages, about section, testimonials, and contact forms. Built with SEO in mind so you actually show up on Google. This is what most Miami small businesses need.",[10,449,450,452],{},[24,451,439],{}," Restaurants, contractors, law firms, medical practices, real estate agents.",[141,454,456],{"id":455},"e-commerce-website-5000-to-15000","E-Commerce Website — $5,000 to $15,000",[10,458,459],{},"A website with a full shopping experience — product pages, cart, checkout, payment processing, and inventory management.",[10,461,462,464],{},[24,463,439],{}," Retail businesses, boutiques, specialty food shops, anyone selling physical or digital products directly.",[141,466,468],{"id":467},"custom-web-application-8000-to-50000","Custom Web Application — $8,000 to $50,000+",[10,470,471],{},"A software platform built specifically for your business. Client portals, booking systems, dashboards, internal tools. This is custom software development, not template customization.",[10,473,474,476],{},[24,475,439],{}," Startups building an MVP, companies with unique workflows, businesses replacing multiple SaaS tools with one unified system.",[17,478,480],{"id":479},"what-you-are-actually-paying-for","What You Are Actually Paying For",[10,482,483],{},"A lot of business owners look at a quote and think \"that is just for a few web pages?\" Here is what actually goes into a professional build:",[10,485,486,489],{},[24,487,488],{},"Discovery and strategy."," Understanding your business, your customers, and what the site needs to accomplish. This is the part most cheap providers skip entirely — and it is the part that determines whether the site actually generates leads or just sits there looking pretty. Only about 15% of web designers charge separately for discovery, but the ones who do are twice as likely to deliver projects worth $5,000 or more.",[10,491,492,495],{},[24,493,494],{},"Custom design."," Not a template with your logo dropped in. Actual design work tailored to your brand, your industry, and your target audience. Custom sites average 2-5x higher conversion rates than template sites. That is the gap between a site that brings in customers and a site that exists.",[10,497,498,501],{},[24,499,500],{},"Development and optimization."," Clean code, fast load times, mobile-first responsive design. A one-second delay in loading time reduces conversions by 16%. The performance gap between a well-built custom site (PageSpeed scores above 90) and a typical template site (scores of 70-80) directly affects how many visitors become customers.",[10,503,504,507],{},[24,505,506],{},"SEO foundation."," Page titles, meta descriptions, heading structure, local schema markup, sitemap, and Google Analytics integration. Without this, the best-looking site in the world will not show up when someone searches for your services.",[10,509,510,513],{},[24,511,512],{},"Post-launch support."," Bug fixes, content updates, and questions during the first 30 days after launch. The relationship should not end the moment the site goes live.",[17,515,517],{"id":516},"what-drives-the-price-up","What Drives the Price Up",[56,519,520,526,532,538,544,550],{},[59,521,522,525],{},[24,523,524],{},"Number of pages"," — More content means more design and development time",[59,527,528,531],{},[24,529,530],{},"Custom integrations"," — Payment processing, booking systems, CRM connections, and third-party APIs add complexity",[59,533,534,537],{},[24,535,536],{},"Bilingual content"," — English and Spanish, which is common for Miami businesses, roughly doubles content-related work",[59,539,540,543],{},[24,541,542],{},"Content creation"," — Professional copywriting and photography are separate costs, but bad photos and weak copy will tank an otherwise solid site",[59,545,546,549],{},[24,547,548],{},"E-commerce features"," — Product management, inventory, cart logic, and payment security add significant scope",[59,551,552,555],{},[24,553,554],{},"Ongoing maintenance"," — Security updates, backups, and content changes (we offer plans starting at $299/mo)",[17,557,559],{"id":558},"what-drives-the-price-down","What Drives the Price Down",[56,561,562,568,574],{},[59,563,564,567],{},[24,565,566],{},"Clear requirements"," — The more you know what you want before the project starts, the fewer revisions and the faster we build",[59,569,570,573],{},[24,571,572],{},"Existing content"," — If you already have good photos, copy, and branding, that saves significant time",[59,575,576,579],{},[24,577,578],{},"Phased approach"," — Launch with core features first, add more later. This is almost always smarter than trying to build everything at once",[17,581,583],{"id":582},"the-cheap-website-trap","The Cheap Website Trap",[10,585,586],{},"If someone quotes you under $1,000 for a business website, you need to ask hard questions. Because the $500 site that does not show up on Google, does not convert visitors, and breaks on mobile is not cheaper — it is more expensive. You just pay the cost in lost customers instead of dollars.",[10,588,589],{},"Here is what typically goes wrong at the low end:",[10,591,592,595],{},[24,593,594],{},"You get a template with your logo swapped in."," The average business rebuilds their template site 2.5 times over five years because it keeps falling short. A custom site needs only incremental updates. Over three years, custom sites deliver 150%+ ROI while templates plateau at 60-80%.",[10,597,598,601],{},[24,599,600],{},"You get locked into a proprietary system."," An estimated 80% of marketing directors have found themselves in situations where their web agency built on a proprietary CMS specifically so the client faces steep exit costs. The entire site has to be rebuilt from scratch if they leave. Some contracts even state that the developer owns the website code, layout, and theme — when the relationship ends, the business owner walks away with nothing.",[10,603,604,607],{},[24,605,606],{},"Your domain gets held hostage."," Cheap agencies sometimes purchase domains \"on behalf of\" clients and then hold them hostage for large sums when the relationship sours. I have seen this happen multiple times in Miami.",[10,609,610,613],{},[24,611,612],{},"You get hooked on recurring fees for basic updates."," The initial price is low to get you in the door, then every text change costs $50-100, every image swap is another charge, and suddenly you are paying more annually in maintenance fees than a professional site would have cost upfront.",[141,615,617],{"id":616},"the-46000-cautionary-tale","The $46,000 Cautionary Tale",[10,619,620],{},"On the opposite end, there is the story of Michael Lynch and TinyPilot. He hired an agency for what was supposed to be a four-week, $5,000-$7,000 rebranding. It turned into an eight-month, $46,000 full redesign. A single task — replacing a Bootstrap theme — was estimated at one week, took five weeks, and cost $6,100 alone. The agency reported billable hours on a two-week delay, making it impossible to course-correct in real time.",[10,622,623],{},"The twist: the redesigned site increased sales by about 40%, hitting an all-time high of $72,500 in monthly revenue. The ROI was there. But the process was brutal, and it never should have cost that much.",[10,625,626],{},"The lesson: a redesign can absolutely pay off, but scope creep is the enemy. Clear requirements, milestone-based payments, and frequent check-ins are not negotiable.",[17,628,630],{"id":629},"red-flags-to-watch-for","Red Flags to Watch For",[10,632,633],{},"After 15 years, I have a pretty reliable list of warning signs. If you see any of these when talking to a web designer or agency, proceed with caution:",[56,635,636,642,648,654,660,666,672],{},[59,637,638,641],{},[24,639,640],{},"Slow communication during the sales process."," This is the best communication you will ever get from them. If they are unresponsive before you sign, it only gets worse after.",[59,643,644,647],{},[24,645,646],{},"\"Guaranteed first page Google ranking.\""," No one can guarantee this. Anyone who says they can is either lying or does not understand how Google works.",[59,649,650,653],{},[24,651,652],{},"A quote dramatically lower than everyone else."," If three agencies quote $5,000-$8,000 and one quotes $800, the $800 option is not a deal. It is a warning.",[59,655,656,659],{},[24,657,658],{},"Full payment required upfront."," A healthy structure is 25-50% upfront, with the rest tied to milestones. If they want 100% before starting, you have zero leverage if things go wrong.",[59,661,662,665],{},[24,663,664],{},"Vague answers about what you own when the project is done."," You should own your domain registration, hosting access, CMS admin credentials, and source code. Get this in writing before you sign anything.",[59,667,668,671],{},[24,669,670],{},"Pressure to sign immediately."," \"This price is only good today\" is a sales tactic, not a serious business practice.",[59,673,674,677],{},[24,675,676],{},"No portfolio or unwillingness to share references."," Everyone has to start somewhere, but if they cannot show you work they have done for real businesses, that is a risk you are accepting with your money.",[17,679,681],{"id":680},"the-ongoing-costs-nobody-warns-you-about","The Ongoing Costs Nobody Warns You About",[10,683,684],{},"The initial build is not the whole picture. Think of it like buying a car — there is the sticker price, and then there is fuel, insurance, and maintenance.",[10,686,687],{},"Here is what a website costs annually after launch:",[56,689,690,696,702,708,714,720],{},[59,691,692,695],{},[24,693,694],{},"Domain renewal:"," $10-25/year",[59,697,698,701],{},[24,699,700],{},"Hosting:"," $60-180/year for basic shared hosting, $300-900/year for managed hosting",[59,703,704,707],{},[24,705,706],{},"SSL certificate:"," Usually free with modern hosting (Let's Encrypt)",[59,709,710,713],{},[24,711,712],{},"Plugin/tool licenses:"," $100-500/year if you use premium tools",[59,715,716,719],{},[24,717,718],{},"Professional maintenance:"," $600-6,000/year depending on scope",[59,721,722,725],{},[24,723,724],{},"Content updates:"," $500-2,000+/year if you need someone else to manage content",[10,727,728,731],{},[24,729,730],{},"Total reality for most small businesses:"," $1,100-5,000 per year. This catches a lot of first-time website owners off guard. Factor it into your budget from the start.",[17,733,735],{"id":734},"what-you-get-when-you-work-with-us","What You Get When You Work With Us",[10,737,738],{},"Every website we build at Kega Software includes:",[56,740,741,744,747,750,753,756,759],{},[59,742,743],{},"Custom design tailored to your brand and industry — not a modified template",[59,745,746],{},"Mobile-first responsive development",[59,748,749],{},"On-page SEO setup so Google can find you from day one",[59,751,752],{},"Performance optimization (fast load times that directly affect your rankings and conversion rate)",[59,754,755],{},"Google Analytics integration",[59,757,758],{},"30 days of post-launch support",[59,760,761],{},"Full ownership of your code, domain, and hosting credentials — no lock-in, no hostage situations",[10,763,764,765,769],{},"We also handle ",[317,766,768],{"href":767},"/services/google-business","Google Business Profile optimization"," to make sure you show up in local searches. The best website in the world will not help if nobody can find it on Google.",[17,771,773],{"id":772},"is-it-worth-the-investment","Is It Worth the Investment?",[10,775,776],{},"The data says yes — overwhelmingly. Over 70% of small businesses report increased revenue after launching a professional website. Custom websites deliver 400%+ ROI according to 2025 small business data. Businesses that have both a website and active social media generate twice the revenue of those with social media alone.",[10,778,779],{},"But here is the thing: those numbers only hold if the site is built right. A pretty site with no SEO, no conversion strategy, and no clear calls to action is just an expensive brochure. The investment pays off when the site is treated as a business tool, not a checkbox.",[17,781,783],{"id":782},"ready-to-talk-numbers","Ready to Talk Numbers?",[10,785,786,787,790],{},"Every project is different. The best way to get an accurate quote is to ",[317,788,789],{"href":347},"tell us about your project",". We will give you a transparent estimate within 24 hours — no pressure, no hidden fees, and a clear breakdown of what is included so there are no surprises.",{"title":351,"searchDepth":352,"depth":352,"links":792},[793,794,800,801,802,803,806,807,808,809,810],{"id":405,"depth":352,"text":406},{"id":426,"depth":352,"text":427,"children":795},[796,797,798,799],{"id":430,"depth":359,"text":431},{"id":443,"depth":359,"text":444},{"id":455,"depth":359,"text":456},{"id":467,"depth":359,"text":468},{"id":479,"depth":352,"text":480},{"id":516,"depth":352,"text":517},{"id":558,"depth":352,"text":559},{"id":582,"depth":352,"text":583,"children":804},[805],{"id":616,"depth":359,"text":617},{"id":629,"depth":352,"text":630},{"id":680,"depth":352,"text":681},{"id":734,"depth":352,"text":735},{"id":772,"depth":352,"text":773},{"id":782,"depth":352,"text":783},"web-design","2026-04-01","A transparent breakdown of website costs for Miami businesses — from simple landing pages to custom web applications. Real numbers, real horror stories, and what to watch out for.","/images/blog/website-cost.jpg",{},"/blog/how-much-does-a-website-cost-in-miami","9 min read",{"title":387,"description":813},"blog/how-much-does-a-website-cost-in-miami","vXMZeIvv3d-89Qp2-WsXiZ0B9ZpKyIX4ccNOHo0rplg",{"id":822,"title":823,"body":824,"category":1137,"date":1138,"description":1139,"extension":375,"image":1140,"meta":1141,"navigation":378,"path":1142,"readingTime":380,"seo":1143,"stem":1144,"__hash__":1145},"blog/blog/why-every-miami-restaurant-needs-a-website.md","Why Every Miami Restaurant Needs a Professional Website",{"type":7,"value":825,"toc":1120},[826,829,832,835,839,842,852,859,866,869,873,876,899,902,906,909,915,918,944,947,950,954,957,964,967,973,976,980,983,993,996,1000,1007,1010,1016,1020,1023,1027,1030,1033,1037,1048,1052,1055,1066,1069,1073,1081,1084,1088,1095,1098,1101,1105,1113],[10,827,828],{},"I hear this from restaurant owners in Miami all the time: \"We have Instagram and we are on DoorDash — why do we need a website?\"",[10,830,831],{},"Because DoorDash is taking 15-30% of every order. Instagram only shows your posts to 5-7% of your followers. And when someone searches \"best Cuban restaurant in Brickell,\" the restaurants with their own optimized websites are the ones that show up.",[10,833,834],{},"Let me break down why this matters more than most restaurant owners realize — and the real dollars at stake.",[17,836,838],{"id":837},"third-party-delivery-is-eating-your-margins","Third-Party Delivery Is Eating Your Margins",[10,840,841],{},"Let me just lay out the current commission rates so you can see what you are actually paying.",[10,843,844,847,848,851],{},[24,845,846],{},"DoorDash"," charges restaurants in three tiers: 15%, 25%, or 30% per delivery order, plus 6% on pickup orders. ",[24,849,850],{},"Uber Eats"," runs 20%, 25%, or 30% depending on your plan — and as of March 2026, they raised rates by 5% for small and mid-size restaurants in two of their three tiers.",[10,853,854,855,858],{},"But the posted rate is not the real cost. When you factor in marketing fees, premium placement charges, paid visibility tools, and processing fees, the actual effective cost often exceeds 40% of revenue. ",[24,856,857],{},"72% of restaurant operators"," say high commission fees are their most significant challenge with delivery platforms.",[10,860,861,862,865],{},"To put this in real numbers: if your average delivery order is $35 and DoorDash takes 30%, that is $10.50 per order going to a tech company in San Francisco. If you do 20 delivery orders a day, that is $210 per day. ",[24,863,864],{},"$76,650 per year."," For the privilege of being listed on someone else's app.",[10,867,868],{},"And it is getting worse. In April 2025, New York City lifted its delivery fee cap, allowing platforms to charge restaurants up to 43% per order. The Independent Restaurant Coalition is now fighting for a federal 15% cap, but until that happens, the platforms control the pricing.",[141,870,872],{"id":871},"restaurants-that-made-the-switch","Restaurants That Made the Switch",[10,874,875],{},"These are not hypothetical scenarios. Real operators have done the math:",[56,877,878,884,890,893],{},[59,879,880,883],{},[24,881,882],{},"Mannino's Pizzeria"," switched to their own ordering system and saved $15,000 in their first six months",[59,885,886,889],{},[24,887,888],{},"Kenji's Ramen"," increased online sales by 10% and saves 35% per order using their own direct ordering",[59,891,892],{},"One restaurant owner described the impact bluntly: \"We were paying out $8,000 a month in fees. That money is coming back into our company now.\"",[59,894,895,898],{},[24,896,897],{},"Big Red F Restaurant Group"," in Colorado dropped third-party delivery entirely. Total revenue went down, but margins went up — a trade-off the owner said makes sense because \"the amount of money that the guest is paying, the amount that the restaurant is paying, it's not doable\"",[10,900,901],{},"The strategy that is working for most restaurants in 2026 is not to abandon delivery apps completely. It is to use them for discovery — getting new customers in the door — and then funnel repeat business to your own website where you keep the full margin and own the customer relationship.",[17,903,905],{"id":904},"instagram-is-not-a-replacement-for-a-website","Instagram Is Not a Replacement for a Website",[10,907,908],{},"Instagram's organic reach dropped 12% from 2024 to 2025. The average brand now reaches only 4% of its followers with any given post. Even with 10,000 followers, the algorithm only shows your content to the people who already engaged with you before — and it is getting more restrictive every year.",[10,910,911,914],{},[24,912,913],{},"99% of full-service restaurants"," have a social media presence, but only 69% maintain a website. That means 30% of restaurants are completely invisible outside of social media. If someone searches for you on Google — which 80% of diners do before deciding where to eat — they are finding your competitors instead.",[10,916,917],{},"Social media has real limitations that a website does not:",[56,919,920,926,932,938],{},[59,921,922,925],{},[24,923,924],{},"You do not own your audience."," Instagram could change its algorithm tomorrow and your reach drops to zero. It has happened before. It will happen again.",[59,927,928,931],{},[24,929,930],{},"It is not searchable on Google."," Nobody types \"restaurants near me\" and lands on an Instagram page. Google prioritizes dedicated domains because they signal a permanent, professional business.",[59,933,934,937],{},[24,935,936],{},"It is not structured."," A customer looking for your hours, full menu, and address cannot find them easily in your feed. They have to scroll, tap around, and hope you posted it recently.",[59,939,940,943],{},[24,941,942],{},"It does not build SEO authority."," A website accumulates search value over time. An Instagram post is visible for about 48 hours.",[10,945,946],{},"Think of Instagram as your megaphone and your website as your storefront. You need both, but one of them you actually own.",[10,948,949],{},"One development worth noting: in 2025, Meta announced that public professional Instagram accounts would become indexable by Google search. That helps discoverability a bit, but it does not replace the ordering, data ownership, and structured content that a website gives you.",[17,951,953],{"id":952},"the-customer-data-problem-nobody-talks-about","The Customer Data Problem Nobody Talks About",[10,955,956],{},"This might be the most underappreciated issue in the restaurant business right now.",[10,958,959,960,963],{},"When customers order through DoorDash or Uber Eats, ",[24,961,962],{},"the platform owns the customer data."," Not you. You cannot see their email addresses. You cannot text them about a new menu item. You cannot build a loyalty program. You cannot send them a birthday offer. You cannot re-engage past customers at all.",[10,965,966],{},"You are essentially a supplier inside someone else's marketplace, and they control the visibility, the pricing dynamics, and the relationship with your customer. If your listing becomes less prominent on the app — because a competitor paid for a higher placement — your repeat orders vanish with no way to reach those customers independently.",[10,968,969,972],{},[24,970,971],{},"Nearly two-thirds of restaurant delivery decisions are driven by loyalty programs."," But you cannot run a loyalty program without customer data. Every order that goes through a third-party app is a customer relationship you are paying to give away.",[10,974,975],{},"With your own website and direct ordering, every customer becomes part of your database. You can email them. You can text them. You can track what they order and when. That is how you turn a one-time delivery into a regular.",[17,977,979],{"id":978},"what-customers-actually-want-from-your-website","What Customers Actually Want From Your Website",[10,981,982],{},"This is where a lot of restaurants overthink it. You do not need something complex. You need something that works.",[10,984,985,988,989,992],{},[24,986,987],{},"70% of consumers"," prefer to order directly from a restaurant rather than through a third-party app. ",[24,990,991],{},"71%"," now prefer restaurant-specific websites or apps over delivery platforms. The demand is there — you just need to give them the option.",[10,994,995],{},"Here is what customers are actually looking for:",[141,997,999],{"id":998},"a-real-menu-not-a-pdf","A Real Menu, Not a PDF",[10,1001,1002,1003,1006],{},"This one is non-negotiable. ",[24,1004,1005],{},"30% of guests"," say they will immediately leave a site if they see a PDF menu. PDFs cannot be indexed by search engines, so your best dishes will never show up in \"near me\" searches. They are hostile on mobile — pinch, zoom, rotate, scroll. And they are a pain to update, which means outdated prices and removed items stay live for months.",[10,1008,1009],{},"73% of diners place online orders from their phones. A responsive web menu that loads instantly, looks good on any screen, and can be updated in minutes is not a luxury. It is the baseline.",[10,1011,1012,1015],{},[24,1013,1014],{},"82% of people decide what to order based on how it looks."," A web-based menu lets you pair every dish with a photo that actually does it justice. A PDF does not.",[141,1017,1019],{"id":1018},"hours-location-and-contact-info-on-every-page","Hours, Location, and Contact Info — On Every Page",[10,1021,1022],{},"Sounds obvious. You would be surprised how many restaurant websites bury this information three clicks deep. Put it in the header or footer of every single page. Make the phone number clickable. Embed a Google Map. If someone has to search for your address, they are going to a competitor.",[141,1024,1026],{"id":1025},"online-ordering","Online Ordering",[10,1028,1029],{},"Every order that comes through your own website instead of DoorDash saves you 15-30% in commission fees. Even a simple \"Call to Order\" button is better than nothing, but direct online ordering is the goal.",[10,1031,1032],{},"Solutions like Owner.com, ChowNow, and Popmenu offer commission-free or low-fee ordering that integrates directly into your site. The setup is not complicated, and the math works immediately.",[141,1034,1036],{"id":1035},"professional-photos","Professional Photos",[10,1038,1039,1040,1043,1044,1047],{},"Phone photos of your food in bad lighting will hurt more than help. Restaurants with high-quality food photography get ",[24,1041,1042],{},"42% more direction requests"," and ",[24,1045,1046],{},"35% more website clicks"," on Google. Spend $300-500 on a food photographer for a couple hours. You will use those shots on your website, Google listing, and social media for years.",[17,1049,1051],{"id":1050},"the-miami-factor","The Miami Factor",[10,1053,1054],{},"Miami has over 2,600 restaurants competing for attention. The competition does not just live on the street anymore — it lives inside phones, apps, search results, and delivery platforms. A restaurant appearing next to a ghost kitchen on a DoorDash screen is competing with that ghost kitchen, even if it is operating from a warehouse three miles away.",[10,1056,1057,1058,1061,1062,1065],{},"The restaurants winning in Miami right now have at least three digital tools working for them — a website, Google Business Profile, and some form of direct ordering or reservation system. Restaurants using this combination are showing ",[24,1059,1060],{},"25% higher revenue growth"," compared to those without a digital presence. And restaurants with complete Google Business Profiles get ",[24,1063,1064],{},"7 times more clicks"," than incomplete ones.",[10,1067,1068],{},"Hyper-local SEO is becoming the deciding factor. Customers expect results tailored not just to Miami, but to their specific neighborhood — Brickell, Wynwood, Little Havana, Coral Gables. A website optimized for your neighborhood shows up when it matters most.",[17,1070,1072],{"id":1071},"a-real-example-la-ceiba-restaurant","A Real Example: La Ceiba Restaurant",[10,1074,1075,1076,1080],{},"When ",[317,1077,1079],{"href":1078},"/case-studies/la-ceiba-restaurant","La Ceiba",", a Puerto Rican restaurant, came to us, they had zero web presence beyond a Facebook page. We built them a website that captures their culture, displays their menu as a real web page (not a PDF), and makes it easy for customers to find them.",[10,1082,1083],{},"Within a few months, they were getting 500+ menu views a month through the site, showing up in local Google searches they were completely absent from before, and sitting at a 4.8-star rating from the review system we built into their workflow.",[17,1085,1087],{"id":1086},"what-it-costs","What It Costs",[10,1089,1090,1091,1094],{},"A professional restaurant website in Miami typically runs ",[24,1092,1093],{},"$3,000 to $5,000",". That includes custom design, mobile optimization, web-based menu pages, Google Business setup, and foundational SEO.",[10,1096,1097],{},"For perspective: if DoorDash takes 30% of a $35 average order, you are paying $10.50 per order in fees. A website that drives just 10 direct orders per week saves you $5,460 per year. The website pays for itself in months, and after that, it is pure margin recovery.",[10,1099,1100],{},"The winning strategy is not to choose between your website and delivery apps. It is to use delivery apps for customer acquisition and your website for retention — keeping the profit and owning the relationship.",[17,1102,1104],{"id":1103},"ready-to-stop-paying-the-platform-tax","Ready to Stop Paying the Platform Tax?",[10,1106,1107,1108,1112],{},"We build ",[317,1109,1111],{"href":1110},"/industries/restaurants","restaurant websites"," that bring in orders and reservations — not just look pretty. Menu pages that Google can actually index, direct ordering that keeps the margin in your pocket, and local SEO that gets you found in your neighborhood.",[10,1114,1115,1116,1119],{},"Check out our work, or ",[317,1117,1118],{"href":347},"get in touch"," for a free consultation.",{"title":351,"searchDepth":352,"depth":352,"links":1121},[1122,1125,1126,1127,1133,1134,1135,1136],{"id":837,"depth":352,"text":838,"children":1123},[1124],{"id":871,"depth":359,"text":872},{"id":904,"depth":352,"text":905},{"id":952,"depth":352,"text":953},{"id":978,"depth":352,"text":979,"children":1128},[1129,1130,1131,1132],{"id":998,"depth":359,"text":999},{"id":1018,"depth":359,"text":1019},{"id":1025,"depth":359,"text":1026},{"id":1035,"depth":359,"text":1036},{"id":1050,"depth":352,"text":1051},{"id":1071,"depth":352,"text":1072},{"id":1086,"depth":352,"text":1087},{"id":1103,"depth":352,"text":1104},"restaurants","2026-03-25","Your Instagram page isn't enough. DoorDash is eating your margins. Here's why Miami restaurants need their own website — and the real numbers behind direct ordering vs. third-party platforms.","/images/blog/restaurant-website.jpg",{},"/blog/why-every-miami-restaurant-needs-a-website",{"title":823,"description":1139},"blog/why-every-miami-restaurant-needs-a-website","vE1G_rq7hXqAuXvm9kCkm32OcG9GJ9sfHS7Z7uUh_ZA",1775588470369]