In short: In Lithuania in 2026, a simple presentational website usually costs from ~€500, a larger business website with a custom design — ~€1,000–3,000, and an e-commerce store — from ~€2,000. The final price is driven by the number of pages, how unique the design is, the features, and who prepares the copy and photos. On top of the build, add the monthly costs: domain, hosting and maintenance.
Want a preliminary price for your project in a minute? Try our website price calculator — pick a type and features and the price is calculated instantly.
This is probably the most common question we hear. And the honest answer is "it depends" — but that doesn't help when you're planning a budget. So in this article we set out the real price ranges in the Lithuanian market, explain what specifically drives the final sum, and how to avoid paying for things you don't need.
What the price of a website depends on
Two "websites" can differ in price tenfold, because very different work hides behind the same word. The biggest factors affecting the price are:
- Number and scope of pages — a single-page "business card" versus a 30-page catalogue.
- Design — an off-the-shelf template or a custom design created for your brand.
- Features — a contact form vs registration, bookings, payments, integrations with other systems.
- Content — whether you supply the copy and photos, or the team prepares them (often a "hidden" part of the price).
- Languages — one or several language versions.
- SEO and speed — whether the website simply "exists", or is built from the start to be found on Google.
Website types and price ranges
Indicative 2026 price ranges in Lithuania (the build only, excluding VAT and monthly costs):
| Website type | Price from | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Business card / landing page | ~€500 | Presenting a small business, service or a single campaign |
| Presentational business website | ~€1,000–3,000 | A company with services, a custom design and several sections |
| Larger portal / catalogue | from ~€3,000 | Complex structure, search and lots of content |
| E-commerce store | from ~€2,000 | Selling online with payments and delivery |
Our own prices start from €500 + VAT for a presentational website and from €2,000 + VAT for an e-commerce store. We always put the exact figure in writing after our first conversation — with no hidden fees.
What should be included in the price
When comparing quotes, it's important to look not only at the number, but at what sits behind it. A solid quote usually covers:
- a custom design adapted to every device (phone, tablet, desktop);
- speed optimisation and SEO fundamentals so the site is found on Google;
- uploading the content and training you on how to manage the site;
- setting up the domain, hosting and email;
- maintenance after launch.
If a quote's price looks suspiciously low — check whether the design is custom or just a template, and whether copy and SEO are included in the price. This is often exactly where extras appear later on.
Monthly costs that are often forgotten
The price of a website is a one-off build. But for it to keep working, you also need a few ongoing costs:
- Domain — around €10–15/year.
- Hosting — from a few euros per month; with us from €3.99/mo
- Maintenance and updates — optional, but recommended to keep the site secure and fast.
How long it takes to build a website
A simple presentational website is usually ready within a few days to a couple of weeks; larger projects or e-commerce stores take several weeks to a month, depending on the scope and how quickly the content is supplied. A serious provider states the exact timeline in the quote.
How to avoid overpaying
- Define the goal clearly — should the website bring in enquiries, or simply present the company? That determines what you need and what you don't.
- Start with the essentials — it's better to launch a tidy, smaller site now and grow it, than to wait for the "perfect" one.
- Ask for a written quote with scope and timelines — so there are no surprises later.
- Judge value, not price — the cheapest website that brings in no customers is the most expensive one.