Web Design in Pierrefonds-Roxboro
Compare local web designer / web developer pros in Pierrefonds-Roxboro and get free quotes — no obligation, no call-backs you didn't ask for.
Typical price: CA$550–CA$20,200
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Web Design prices in Pierrefonds-Roxboro
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Landing page (1 page) Single-page site with contact form | CA$550 | CA$1,300 | CA$2,750 |
| Small business site (5 pages) Custom brochure site | CA$1,650 | CA$3,700 | CA$7,350 |
| Business site with CMS (~10 pages) CMS-driven site with blog and on-page SEO | CA$3,200 | CA$6,450 | CA$12,000 |
| Basic e-commerce store Shopify/WooCommerce store with payments and shipping | CA$4,150 | CA$9,200 | CA$20,200 |
How to hire a web design pro in Canada
- Review live portfolio sites and confirm who does the work
- Contract with IP transfer, domain in your name, and hosting credentials handed over
- If you'll email marketing contacts, confirm CASL-compliant consent capture on forms (Canada's anti-spam law has real penalties)
- Serving Quebec? Confirm French-language requirements — Quebec's language law (Bill 96) requires French for commerce in the province
- Agree scope: pages, revisions, CMS, included SEO basics
- Pay 30-50% deposit, remainder on launch
No licence is needed to sell web design in Canada. Two real compliance points: CASL requires express consent for commercial email captured through your site, and businesses serving Quebec must offer French under the province's language law — plan bilingual content if Quebec matters to you.
Budgeting first?
See the full breakdown of what drives web design prices — job sizes, unit rates, and how to save.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need my website to be accessible?
Morally yes, legally increasingly so — several markets now enforce accessibility standards (WCAG) for business websites, and lawsuits and fines are real in some countries. Practically: proper headings, alt text, keyboard navigation and color contrast cost little at build time and a lot to retrofit. Ask your designer to build to WCAG 2.1 AA.
Who owns the website after it's built?
You should. Insist that the domain is registered in YOUR name (not the designer's), you hold the hosting account credentials, and the contract transfers full rights to the design and code on final payment. Designer-owned domains are the single most common lock-in trap in this industry.
Do I need e-commerce or is a brochure site enough to start?
If you take fewer than a handful of orders a week, a brochure site with a contact/order form or a payment link costs half as much and launches faster. Move to full e-commerce (cart, inventory, shipping rules) when order volume makes manual handling the bottleneck.
How do I brief a web designer properly?
One page: what the business does, the site's single main goal (calls, bookings, orders), the pages you need, 2-3 example sites you like and why, your content status (ready or needed), deadline, and budget range. Sharing your real budget gets you an honest proposal instead of a guessing game.
What should a web design quote include?
A proper quote itemizes: number of pages, responsive/mobile behavior, number of revision rounds (2-3 is standard), CMS setup, basic on-page SEO (titles, metas, sitemap), browser testing, and what happens to hosting and domain after handover. If a quote is one line with one number, ask for the breakdown.
What is a CMS and do I need one?
A content management system (WordPress, Webflow, Shopify) lets you edit text, images and posts without a developer. If you'll update content more than a few times a year — blog, menus, listings — you need one. If the site is a static business card, skipping the CMS makes the site cheaper, faster and harder to hack.
What does a small-business website cost in Canada?
Freelancers typically run CAD 50-140/hr, with 5-page small-business sites commonly at CAD 2,000-8,000 and e-commerce from CAD 5,000. Rates track close to US levels in Toronto and Vancouver.
Does my Canadian site need to be bilingual?
Only if you do business in Quebec, where French is required for commercial websites serving the province — and federally regulated sectors have their own rules. For the rest of Canada, English-only is legally fine; bilingual is a market-reach decision.
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