Most Irish businesses get sold a website when what they actually need is customers. The website is a means to that end — not the end itself.
This guide covers what a good Irish business website actually looks like, what it should cost, and why most of the websites being sold to small businesses right now are failing the people who paid for them.
What an Irish business website needs to do
A website for an Irish small business has one job: turn strangers into enquiries. Everything else — the design, the copy, the hosting, the speed — serves that goal.
The businesses that understand this build sites that:
- Load in under a second on a mobile phone (where most Irish customers are searching)
- Clearly answer “what do you do, where do you do it, and how do I get in touch”
- Show up in Google when someone in your town or county searches for what you offer
- Make it easy to call, email, or send a message without hunting for the information
The businesses that get sold the wrong thing end up with a site that looks impressive in a presentation but sits quietly on page three of Google, invisible to the customers they were hoping to reach.
What web design actually costs in Ireland
Pricing varies enormously and most web designers are not transparent about it. Here is a realistic picture:
Under €500 — template-based sites using Wix, Squarespace, or basic WordPress themes. Fine for a very basic online presence, but almost impossible to get ranking well on Google and often locked into monthly fees forever.
€1,000–€2,500 — the right range for most Irish small businesses. A properly built, fast, SEO-ready site with four to eight pages, a contact form, and the technical foundation to rank. This is where the investment starts paying off.
€2,500–€5,000 — larger sites with more pages, booking functionality, e-commerce, or significant custom development. Worth it when the scope demands it, not as a default.
€5,000+ — enterprise and complex custom builds. Rarely necessary for a local Irish service business.
The most important rule: get a fixed price before work starts, in writing. Any designer who quotes you a vague range and bills by the hour is handing you a blank cheque.
The Irish local market: what your customers are actually doing
Across Ireland, the pattern is the same whether you are in Dublin, Cork, Galway, or any of the smaller counties. Customers search Google on their phones. They scroll past the ads. They click the first organic result that looks credible. They check the website for about thirty seconds. If it loads slowly, looks outdated, or does not answer their basic question quickly, they go back and click the next result.
This cycle plays out thousands of times every day across every trade and service industry in Ireland. The businesses winning that cycle are not necessarily the best at their trade — they are the ones with the fastest, clearest, best-structured website.
Web design for trades and home services
Trades businesses — plumbers, electricians, builders, roofers, tilers — are among the most searched categories on Google in Ireland, and among the most underserved when it comes to decent websites.
Most trades websites are slow, hard to navigate on a phone, and don’t make it obvious how to get a quote. A well-built trades website does three things: loads in under a second, shows the areas covered, and makes the phone number impossible to miss.
Local SEO matters more for trades than almost any other sector. A plumber in Limerick does not want national traffic — they want to rank for “plumber Limerick”, “emergency plumber Castletroy”, and “plumber near me” searches from people who are ready to book.
Web design for hospitality and tourism
Ireland’s hospitality and tourism businesses face a different problem: booking platforms. Booking.com, TripAdvisor, and similar platforms take a significant commission on every booking they send you. A fast, well-designed direct booking website that ranks on Google lets you capture those bookings yourself.
For businesses in Galway, Kilkenny, and Waterford, where tourism is a major revenue driver, a well-optimised website often pays for itself in recaptured commission within the first busy season.
Web design for professional services
Solicitors, accountants, consultants, healthcare providers, and other professional services businesses need websites that build trust quickly. Customers in this category spend longer researching before they make a decision, which means more attention to clear copy, credentials, and obvious next steps for getting in touch.
For professional services businesses in Dublin particularly, the competition is fierce — which makes both design quality and SEO more important, not less.
What to look for in an Irish web designer
Ask these questions before you hire anyone:
Do you own your website? Any competent designer will give you full ownership and access to everything — domain, hosting, code, content.
What is the fixed price? Vague estimates lead to invoice surprises. Get a number before work starts.
How will it rank on Google? If the answer involves lots of jargon and no clear plan, walk away.
Can you see examples of their work ranking? A web designer who cannot show you evidence of their sites appearing in Google search is not the right choice for a business that needs local search visibility.
Who will you deal with? Many agencies have salespeople who win the contract and hand it to a junior or offshore team. Know who is actually building your site.
The technical side: what matters for Google
You do not need to understand the technical details, but your web designer does. The things that make the biggest difference to Google rankings:
Page speed — Google uses Core Web Vitals as a direct ranking signal. A slow site ranks lower. A fast site ranks higher. This is not debatable.
Mobile-first — Google indexes the mobile version of your site, not the desktop version. If your site is hard to use on a phone, Google knows.
Structured data — schema markup tells Google exactly what your business is, where it operates, and what services it offers. Properly implemented, it improves how your site appears in search results.
Local signals — for Irish local businesses, your site needs to clearly state your location, the areas you serve, and the services you offer. Vague, generic copy does not rank for local searches.
Getting started
The right starting point for any Irish business website project is a conversation about what you are actually trying to achieve. Not a sales pitch — a genuine question about where your customers come from, what is not working, and what “this worked” would look like six months from now.
If you want that conversation, get in touch. There is no obligation, no follow-up spam, and no pressure — just a straight answer about whether a new website makes sense for your business.

