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How much to charge for website design and maintenance? A quick breakdown

If you’re a freelancer, digital agency, or even a client trying to understand fair pricing, one question inevitably comes up: how much to charge for website design and maintenance? It’s not a one-size-fits-all answer. In Namibia, website costs vary significantly based on scope, functionality, and who’s handling what.

Let’s break it all down into bite-sized insights to help you make informed decisions, whether you’re quoting clients or budgeting for your own site.

1. Types of Websites: What Are You Actually Building?

The first factor that affects how much to charge for website design and maintenance is the type of website:

  • Single-page websites 
    Great for portfolios or landing pages. Minimal scroll, focused content, fast to build.

  • Multi-page websites 
    Ideal for businesses wanting an online home, about, services, contact, and blog pages. Usually includes responsive design and light SEO.

  • E-commerce websites 
    These require more than just aesthetics; they need shopping carts, payment gateways, shipping integrations, and often inventory management.

     

  • Custom or headless websites 
    If you’re using frameworks like React.js, Vue, or building API-integrated portals, you’re stepping into advanced development territory, which is very pricey.
2. Maintenance: Retainer or Once-Off?

Ongoing website health is just as important as the initial build. Maintenance pricing depends on how hands-on the client wants you to be:

  • Once-off maintenance
    This could include plugin updates, backups, bug fixes, or speed optimisation.

  • Monthly retainers 
    Great for clients who want peace of mind with regular updates, hosting support, SEO tweaks, and priority fixes.
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3. Experience Matters and affects Prices

A junior designer using a template and a senior developer building a headless CMS don’t charge the same, and shouldn’t. When quoting or evaluating prices:

  • Entry-level freelancers might charge N$250–N$450/hour

  • Experienced designers and developers range from N$600–N$1,200/hour

  • Agencies typically work on project-based quotes and factor in strategy, UX, and analytics.

Show your value through testimonials, case studies, and a solid local portfolio.

4. DIY Builders: Wix, Shopify & the Cost-Per-Click Trap

Website builders make launching a website fast and affordable, but there are trade-offs.

Wix
  • Great for basic business sites
  • Free and premium templates available
  • Monthly costs: N$200 – N$600
  • High design flexibility, but performance can be limited
  • In many cases can have a “home made” look & feel to it
Shopify
  • Built for e-commerce 
  • Plans start at N$450/month, but extras add up very quickly
  • Good for Namibian businesses using PayToday, Ozow or international gateways like PayPal or Flutterwave

Builder-based sites may cost less upfront, but maintenance, upgrades, and plugins often raise the long-term cost. Support is also limited compared to having a professional on standby.

5. Going Headless: When to Charge More

Headless design (e.g. React, Next.js, Gatsby) separates the front-end from the back-end. It’s ultra-flexible and fast, but not cheap.

If you’re quoting a headless website, include:

  • API development
  • Front-end framework setup
  • CMS integration (like Sanity or Strapi)
  • Testing and scalability

In Namibia, these setups are ideal for large corporations or cross-border portals. For smaller businesses, headless sites may not be cost-effective unless growth justifies the complexity.

FInd out why businesses

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6. Who Covers Hosting & Domain?

Clients often ask, “Does this include hosting and domain?”

Here’s how to handle it:

  • Domain registration: Typically N$800/year (.com.na).
  • Hosting: N$300–N$2,000/year, depending on whether it’s shared or VPS.
  • SSL Certificates: Often included, but premium versions can cost more.

Many freelancers and agencies mark this as “client responsibility,” but make sure what you get beforehand.

7. Hidden Costs

Even a well-planned quote can catch you off guard if you forget about:

  • Premium theme/template licences
  • Email setups (e.g. with Zoho Mail or Google Workspace)
  • Stock images, fonts, or video content
  • Booking tools or form builders
  • SEO tools (e.g. Rank Math, Yoast Premium)
  • Fancy paid plugins with once-off costs or annual renewals

Mention these early in the process to avoid client surprises.

Final Thoughts

There’s no magic number for how much to charge for website design and maintenance in Namibia, but make sure you ask the right questions when looking for the right option for you. 

Namibian clients value clarity, reliability, and realistic expectations. So keep things simple, be honest about what’s included, and most importantly, charge for the value you bring, not just your hours.

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