The Real Comparison Isn't Price — It's Cost

Squarespace starts at $16/month. Our Launch tier is $997. On the surface, that's not even close. But the sticker price is the wrong number to compare. The real question is: what does each option actually cost you in time, quality, and business results?

Let's break it down honestly.

Time to Launch

Squarespace gives you the tools. You still have to do the work. Picking a template, customizing it, writing copy, sourcing images, figuring out mobile layouts, setting up forms, connecting your domain, testing everything — most small business owners spend 20-40 hours getting a Squarespace site to a point they're not embarrassed by. Spread over evenings and weekends, that's 2-6 weeks of calendar time.

With 3 Day Website, your site is designed, built, and live in 3 business days. You show up for a strategy session on Day 1. We handle everything else. You get those 20-40 hours back to spend on your actual business.

Design Quality

Squarespace templates are good — genuinely good for what they are. But they're designed for everyone, which means they're optimized for no one. Your accounting firm ends up looking like a yoga studio that ended up looking like a SaaS startup. The templates are the same; only the photos change.

A custom site is designed for your specific business, your specific audience, and your specific goals. The layout, copy hierarchy, color psychology, and conversion paths are all intentional. That's the difference between a site that exists and a site that performs.

The Hidden Costs of DIY

Squarespace's pricing page shows $16-49/month. What it doesn't show is the ecosystem of costs that pile up once you start building:

Premium templates or third-party designs often run $50-150. Custom fonts or icon packs, another $20-50. A decent stock photo subscription for images that don't look generic is $15-30/month. If your template doesn't support the layout you need, you're hiring a Squarespace developer on Upwork ($500-2,000). And if you need custom code for anything beyond the basics — animations, custom forms, integrations — you're paying by the hour.

The first-year cost of a "DIY" Squarespace site that actually looks professional typically lands between $500-1,500. And you still did all the work yourself.

Head-to-Head Comparison

Factor Squarespace 3 Day Website
Upfront cost $192-588/year $997 one-time
Time to launch 2-6 weeks (your time) 3 business days (our time)
Your time invested 20-40+ hours 1-2 hours (strategy session)
Design Template-based 100% custom
Copywriting You write it Included (Grow/Scale tiers)
SEO setup Basic (you configure) Professional setup included
Performance Template-dependent Optimized from scratch
Ongoing cost $16-49/month $0 (optional care from $97/mo)
Ownership Platform-locked You own everything
Vendor lock-in Yes — can't export easily None — your code, your hosting

When Squarespace Is the Right Choice

We're not here to trash Squarespace. It's a solid product for the right use case. If you're a hobbyist, building a personal blog, running a side project with no revenue, or genuinely enjoy web design as a creative outlet — Squarespace is a great tool. It's affordable, well-documented, and endlessly customizable if you have the time.

The question is whether that's you. If you're running a business that generates revenue, your website is a business tool — not a craft project. And business tools should be handled by professionals.

When 3 Day Website Is the Right Choice

You should hire us if your time is worth more than $25/hour (because that's roughly what you'd save in DIY hours), if you need a site that converts visitors into leads or customers (not just looks nice), if you want to launch fast without cutting corners, or if you've been "meaning to redo the website" for months and it keeps slipping.

Our sweet spot is small businesses, consultants, SaaS companies, and service providers who need a professional web presence without the 6-8 week agency timeline or the $10,000+ agency price tag.

The Verdict

Squarespace is a tool. 3 Day Website is a service. If you have 20-40 hours to spare and enjoy the process, Squarespace will save you money upfront. If you value your time, want a site that's strategically designed to perform, and would rather launch in days instead of weeks — the $997 isn't a cost. It's an investment that pays for itself the first time your website converts a visitor into a customer.