On this page
How Much Does a Contractor Website Cost in Oklahoma? (2026)
If you run a contracting business in Oklahoma, you have heard five answers to this question. One guy quotes $500 while an agency quotes $15,000. Both call it “a website.”
Here is the real answer: a contractor website in Oklahoma costs anywhere from $10 a month to $10,000 or more. The price depends on who builds it and what the site must do. The wide range is not a scam. It reflects real gaps in what you get.
This breakdown covers the full 2026 pricing picture. It runs from DIY builders and freelancers to local and national firms. Our own published prices are in here too, so you can see where we sit.
Contractor Website Cost in Oklahoma: The 2026 Pricing Table
Start with the ranges. Every option below can produce a working website, but not every option produces leads.
| Option | Typical Investment | What You Get |
|---|---|---|
| DIY builder (Wix, Squarespace, GoDaddy) | $10 to $50/mo | A template you build yourself. No SEO plan and no lead engineering. |
| Freelancer | $1,500 to $5,000 one-time | One person’s skill set. Quality varies, and support often vanishes after launch. |
| Local agency | $3,000 to $10,000 | A team, a process, local market knowledge, and ongoing support. |
| National agency | $10,000 and up | Big-firm polish with big-firm overhead. You are one account among hundreds. |
Those are market-wide numbers, not our quote. Now let’s look at what drives the price, because that tells you which tier you need.
What Drives the Price of a Contractor Website
Pages and Structure
A one-page site for a solo handyman is a small build. A 20-page site for an HVAC company covering six cities is a big one. More service pages and more service-area pages mean more research, more writing, and more work. They also give you more chances to rank. Each page can show up when someone types “electrician Broken Arrow” into Google.
Lead Engineering vs. a Digital Brochure
This is the biggest cost driver, and most contractors never hear about it. A digital brochure shows your logo and a contact form, and that is where it stops. A lead-engineered site is different. It has click-to-call buttons, fast mobile load times, and reviews on the page. It adds clear calls to action and tracking that shows which pages make the phone ring.
Speed matters more than most owners think. Google’s own Core Web Vitals guidance says the main content of a page should load within 2.5 seconds. Google treats load speed as a core part of the user experience. A slow site loses visitors before they ever see your phone number.
Reviews carry the same weight. BrightLocal’s Local Consumer Review Survey found that 97% of consumers read reviews for local businesses. That is nearly everyone who might hire you. A site that puts your reviews up front works with that habit instead of against it.
SEO Foundation
A website nobody finds is an expense. A website that ranks is an asset. Keyword research, page titles, schema markup, and Google Business Profile work all take real hours. Google’s own local ranking help page says businesses with complete and accurate info are more likely to show up in local search results. It also lists links to your website among the signals that build prominence. Skip that work now and you will pay for it later. The bill often goes to a second company hired to fix the first one’s job.
Ongoing Care
Websites are not one-and-done. Hosting, security patches, backups, and content updates continue for the life of the site. Any quote that skips monthly care is hiding part of the real number.
What Each Option Actually Delivers
DIY Builders: $10 to $50 Per Month
Wix, Squarespace, and GoDaddy will get you online for the price of a lunch. For a brand-new contractor with zero budget, that beats having nothing.
Here is the trade. You become the designer, the writer, and the SEO person. You do it all on nights and weekends after running crews all day. Most DIY contractor sites never rank for anything beyond the company’s own name. The dollars stay low, but the hours pile up and the leads rarely come.
Freelancers: $1,500 to $5,000
A good freelancer can build a solid site. The hard part is finding one. The range runs from skilled developers to someone reselling a $60 template. There is no team behind them and no process. There is often no answer when the site breaks eight months later. If you go this route, ask for examples of contractor sites that rank, not just sites that look good.
Local Agencies: $3,000 to $10,000
A local agency brings a team and a process. Strategy, design, writing, SEO, and ongoing support all live under one roof. A Tulsa-based agency also knows the Oklahoma market. It knows which suburbs search for what, what your rivals rank for, and what a service call is worth in your trade. This tier is where most established contractors get the best return.
National Agencies: $10,000 and Up
National firms produce polished work with big processes and big pricing. For a regional contractor, much of that budget pays for account managers and overhead. None of that makes your phone ring in Owasso. Unless you work in multiple states, this tier is usually more firm than you need.
Where Driller Design Co. Sits: Our Published Prices
We publish our prices. Most agencies make you sit through a sales call to hear a number. Here are ours, the same figures on our investment page:
- Landing Page: $850 one-time, plus a $99/mo Care Plan (hosting, security, and updates) from launch. You get one engineered page built to convert.
- Launch Site: $2,800 one-time, plus a $175/mo Care Plan from launch. You get a full multi-page site built for search rankings and lead capture.
- Growth Engine: $2,500/mo. This is our flagship. The website build is included, along with managed SEO, Google Business Profile management, monthly content, and review generation. It is the full service stack, run end to end.
Check those numbers against the market table above. The Launch Site sits at the low end of the local-agency range, yet it includes the lead engineering that range is supposed to deliver. We set it there on purpose. We would rather earn a contractor’s business on results than on a discount.
The Bottom Line for Tulsa and Oklahoma Contractors
So how much does a contractor website cost in Oklahoma? The honest range runs from $10 a month to $10,000 and up. The right answer depends on what you need the site to do. A placeholder is fine at placeholder prices. A lead engine is an investment. In a market like Tulsa, a well-built one pays for itself in a handful of jobs. A site is only half the math, though. It converts the click; something has to send the click. If you want the phone ringing before your rankings mature, here is what a real Google Ads budget buys a Tulsa contractor.
Get real numbers in writing before you commit. Ours are already in writing on the investment page, where anyone can read them.
If you work in Tulsa or the metro around it, we already know your market. We build sites for Tulsa trades every year. We can tell you what your rivals rank for before we quote a dime. Request a consultation and we will run the numbers on your territory first.
Common Questions About Contractor Website Pricing
The word "website" names the container, not the contents. A $500 site and an $8,000 site can look the same in a screenshot. The difference is the research, the writing, and the SEO work underneath. Those hidden parts decide whether the site brings in leads or just sits there. You are paying for an outcome, not a set of pages.
Every website has ongoing costs. Hosting, a domain, security updates, and backups never stop. Budget $99 to $300 per month for pro care. A DIY platform runs $10 to $50 per month, and you handle it all yourself. Managed SEO is a separate investment. Contractor budgets in Oklahoma usually run $1,000 to $3,000 per month for it. Any provider who says there are no ongoing costs is hiding them somewhere.
It can be, as long as you are honest about what it is. A $500 site or a DIY build is a placeholder. It proves you exist when a referral looks you up. It will almost never rank in search, and it will rarely turn cold traffic into calls. If your business runs on word of mouth and you like it that way, a placeholder works fine. If you want the phone ringing from Google, think twice. A cheap build costs less up front and more every month in lost leads.
A landing page takes about two weeks. A full site usually runs four to eight weeks. The timeline depends on the page count and how fast you can send photos and approvals. Be careful with anyone promising a full custom site in three days. That speed only comes from skipping the research that makes the site work.
Tulsa Contractors: Get Real Numbers Before You Build
We build websites for contractors across Tulsa and the rest of Oklahoma. Request a consultation and we will quote you the same prices we publish on this site.
Request a Consultation