Your website crashes at 2 AM. Who fixes it? If you’re paying for managed website design services, the answer is simple: not you. These packages bundle initial development with perpetual maintenance, hosting, security patches, speed optimisation, the works. You get a professional site that doesn’t become a digital ghost town six months after launch.
UK businesses usually pay £1,200 to £4,000 upfront for design, and then £50 to £500 per month for management. This is even less than what you’d pay for a junior developer, and you get the whole support ecosystem.
Now, let’s break down what you’re actually paying for.
Design Phase: Building Your Digital Storefront
Before you start paying the monthly fee, there’s someone who has to create the thing. Managed services begin with a custom design, and not template spam. Here’s the minimum:
Core deliverables:
- Responsive design (mobile-first, since 63% of UK traffic is mobile)
- Integration with CMS (usually WordPress, sometimes Webflow)
- 5-10 pages (Home, About, Services, Contact, Blog template)
- Contact forms with spam protection
- Social media integration (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn)
- Basic SEO (meta tags, alt tags, header tags)
- Google Analytics 4 setup
- SSL certificate (non-negotiable for HTTPS)
Most suppliers include first-year hosting as part of the deal, with a £120-£1,200 value, depending on server requirements. Shared hosting for brochure sites, VPS hosting for e-commerce sites.
What’s not included? Advanced SEO campaigns. Custom illustrations. E-commerce solutions. We’ll discuss those prices in the next section.
Timeline Expectations
- Design phase: 4–8 weeks from wireframes to launch. Agencies that promise “48-hour websites” are installing templates and calling them bespoke. Real custom work requires stakeholder reviews, copywriting rounds, and test-and-iterate cycles.
- Post-launch, you get 30–90 days of training and handover support. If you can’t update a blog post or swap an image after that window, the agency failed onboarding.
Managed Services: The Retainer That Keeps You Online
Here’s where monthly fees justify themselves. Websites aren’t static; they’re living systems that rot without attention.
What Your Retainer Covers
Every managed plan includes technical hygiene:
| Service | Frequency | Why It Matters |
| Plugin/theme updates | Weekly/monthly | Prevents security exploits |
| Backups | Daily/weekly | Disaster recovery |
| Security scans | Continuous | Blocks malware, brute-force attacks |
| Uptime monitoring | 24/7 | Alerts if site goes down (99.9% SLA) |
| Performance tweaks | Monthly | Page speed impacts SEO rankings |
| Broken link fixes | Quarterly | User experience + search penalties |
Malware removal is usually included—critical for e-commerce. A single hack can trash your Google rankings for months.
Optional Add-Ons (AKA The Upsell Zone)
Need more than basic maintenance? Be prepared for tiered pricing:
- Content updates: Image swaps, copy edits, and new page additions (£50-£150/month for 2-5 hours)
- SEO management: Keyword analysis, backlink checks, Google Business optimisation (£200+/month)
- Conversion rate optimisation (CRO): A/B testing for forms, heat maps, and funnels (£500+/month)
Small businesses won’t require the enterprise plan. If your online sales are <£500k/year, the mid-tier “Pro” plan is all you’ll need.
Pricing Tiers: What £50 vs £500/Month Actually Buys You
Not all retainers are equal. Here’s the typical UK breakdown for 2026:
| Tier | Monthly Cost | What’s Included |
| Basic | £50–£150 | Updates, backups, security scans, and uptime monitoring |
| Pro | £200–£500 | Everything in Basic + SEO maintenance, 5 hours of content edits, and analytics reporting |
| Enterprise | £500–£1,500+ | Everything in Pro + CRO testing, custom development hours, priority support |
Hidden Costs That No One Talks About
- Domain renewal: £10 to £50 per year (not always included)
- Premium plugins: £50 to £300 per year for add-ons such as WooCommerce extensions
- Third-party integrations: CRM synchronisation, email marketing integration tools (£20 to £100 per month per tool)
Read your contract. “Fully managed” does not always include domain renewal fees and premium software licensing.
Who Actually Needs Managed Services?
Not everyone. DIY-savvy solo founders can handle WordPress updates themselves. But managed plans make sense if:
- You lack in-house IT staff (most SMBs have under 20 employees)
- Your site generates revenue (downtime = lost sales)
- You’re scaling and can’t babysit technical tasks
- Compliance matters (GDPR, accessibility standards, PCI-DSS)
E-commerce businesses benefit most. A WooCommerce site with 500 SKUs requires plugin compatibility testing for every update cycle; a single bad patch can break checkout flows.
When to Avoid Managed Packages
If your site is purely informational and updates quarterly, a managed plan is overkill. Pay for design upfront, then hire a freelancer £40/hour as needed. You’ll spend £200–£400/year instead of £600–£1,800.
Vetting Providers: Questions That Expose Amateur Hour
Before signing, demand specifics:
“What’s your SLA for security patches?”
The answer should be <48 hours for critical vulnerabilities.
“Show me three sites you’ve managed for 2+ years.”
Check their uptime, speed scores (use Google PageSpeed Insights), and update logs.
“What happens if my site gets hacked on your watch?”
Free malware removal should be standard. If they charge extra, walk.
“Can I see a sample monthly report?”
Transparent agencies send backup confirmations, uptime stats, and completed task lists. Vague “we monitored everything” emails are red flags.
Portfolio Red Flags
- All sites look identical (template resellers)
- No case studies with measurable outcomes (traffic growth, conversion lifts)
- Portfolios stuck in 2019 design trends (they’re not updating their own site, why trust them with yours?)
Verdict
For businesses treating their website as a revenue channel, managed services from a website redesign agency are cheaper than the consequences. A 12-hour outage during Black Friday? You just lost £5k–£50k, depending on scale. A security breach exposing customer data? GDPR fines start at 4% of annual turnover.
Break-even calculation: If you value your time at £50/hour and save 5 hours/month on updates/troubleshooting, a £250/month retainer pays for itself. Anything beyond that is buying peace of mind.
Just don’t conflate “managed” with “set and forget.” Review quarterly reports. Ask why traffic dipped. Demand A/B test results if you’re paying for CRO.
The best providers feel like extensions of your team. The worst are digital landlords who keep your site hostage with terrible contracts and inaccessible backups.

