Wix. Squarespace. GoDaddy website builder. They all promise a professional website in an afternoon. Technically they deliver. You get a page on the internet with your business name. That part is real.
But there is a cost nobody puts on the pricing page. For rural and small-town businesses that hidden cost is significant enough that I think these platforms do more damage than good.
I see this constantly. A business owner spends a weekend building on Squarespace, feels proud of it, then wonders for two years why nobody finds them online. The platform didn't fail them. But it never gave them what they needed.
"The question is not whether you have a website. The question is whether your website is doing anything for your business."
The template trap
Website builders sell templates. Clean ones. Modern ones. Ones that look great at 2am when you're excited about launching. They were not built for a hardware store in Beaver Dam or a family restaurant in rural Belgium. They were built to be generic enough for anyone. Generic is the opposite of what builds trust in a small community.
When a local customer lands on your website and it looks like every other small business website they've ever seen, something happens. They don't consciously think about it. The impression lands as ordinary. Ordinary doesn't drive a decision to call, visit, or buy.
The SEO problem nobody warns you about
Website builders generate bloated code. Google measures how fast and cleanly a page loads when deciding rank. A custom-built site scores 95 out of 100 on Google's performance tools. Wix or Squarespace typically scores 50s and 60s. That gap translates directly to your search result position.
For a rural business where the addressable market is one county, page two instead of page one is not a minor inconvenience. Those are customers who will never find you.
What you are actually paying
Squarespace costs about $23 per month on their basic business plan. Over three years that is about $830. That subscription never stops. Wix is similar. GoDaddy charges extra for almost every meaningful feature. By year three you spent close to a thousand on a site that ranks poorly, looks like everyone else's, and you clocked dozens of hours maintaining instead of running your business.
A custom website from Mule costs $349. Once. No monthly fee. No platform you rent forever. No annual price hikes. You pay once, own it, and it is built to rank in your area. Over three years a Squarespace site costs you more and delivers less. That is not a knock on Squarespace. It is a reasonable tool for testing a side project. It is not a substitute for a real website for a real business.
I am not against these tools in every situation. If you are testing an idea before committing, a quick Wix site is fine. But if your business is real and your customers are real, your website should be too. See what a custom site from Mule actually includes.
Common questions
Are website builders like Wix or Squarespace good for small businesses?
Website builders can get you online quickly, but they often cost rural small businesses more in the long run. They come with limitations on SEO, customization, and performance that a professional web design agency can avoid. For a business that depends on local search traffic, those limitations have a real dollar cost.
Why do rural businesses need a custom website instead of a website builder?
Rural businesses compete in specific local markets where search visibility and credibility matter enormously. A custom website is optimized for search engines, loads faster, and is designed to convert visitors into customers · none of which website builders do reliably.
How does a website builder hurt my Google ranking?
Website builders generate bloated code that slows page load times. Google uses page speed as a ranking signal. A custom-built site typically scores 90+ on Google's PageSpeed tools. Wix and Squarespace sites often score in the 50s and 60s. For a rural business where the market is one county, that gap can mean being invisible to potential customers.
What is the true cost of Squarespace over three years?
Squarespace's basic business plan costs around $23 per month. Over three years that adds up to roughly $830 · and the subscription never stops. Add in the time you spend maintaining the site yourself and the true cost climbs significantly higher than a one-time custom build.
How much does a professional website cost for a small rural business?
A professional website for a rural small business typically starts around $349 with Mule Digital. That includes custom design, development, and launch · with none of the ongoing platform fees that website builders charge.
Can I switch from a website builder to a custom website?
Yes. Mule Digital can build a new custom site to replace your existing website builder site. Your domain, content, and SEO value can all be migrated or preserved during the transition.
What makes a custom website better for local SEO?
A custom site can be built with clean code, fast load times, and structured data that helps Google understand exactly where you are and what you do. Website builders add unnecessary code overhead and limit your control over technical SEO. For local businesses competing in a specific geography, that control is the difference between page one and page two.
Is a website builder ever the right choice?
If you are testing a side project or need a temporary placeholder, a website builder is a reasonable short-term tool. For any business that depends on being found online and building credibility in a local market, a custom site is worth the investment.
How long before a custom website starts ranking on Google?
A new domain typically takes 3 to 6 months to start ranking competitively on Google. A well-structured custom site with proper SEO will rank faster and rank higher than a website builder site over time. In low-competition rural markets, results often come faster.
Will my website look unique or like a template?
Mule Digital builds custom sites · not templates. Every site is designed specifically for the business it represents. Website builders use shared templates used by thousands of other businesses, making it nearly impossible to stand out visually.
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