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Why Web Designers Charge Monthly Fees (and When You Shouldn't Pay Them)

Monthly website fees are everywhere, so they feel normal. They're a business model, not a law of nature. Here is what you're actually paying for, and how to tell a fair retainer from a leash.

A supermarket interior dressed up to look like a market
Photo by Paolo Mazzoleni · Flickr · CC BY 2.0

Almost every web company charges a monthly fee. Because it's everywhere, it feels like just how websites work. It isn't. It's a choice about how to run a business, and understanding the why tells you exactly when to pay it and when to refuse.

Reason 1: the platform is rented, so you rent it forever

Builders like Squarespace and Wix charge monthly because you are using their software to run your site. The fee isn't really for the website — it's for permission to keep using their system to display it. Stop, and the site stops. We walked through that in what happens when you stop paying Squarespace or Wix. This fee is structural. It doesn't go away because there's nothing you own to take with you.

Reason 2: recurring revenue is just easier to run a business on

This is the honest one nobody says out loud. A company living on one-off projects has to find new clients constantly. A company with two hundred clients each paying every month has predictable income and a much calmer business. That's a completely rational thing for them to want. It is not automatically a thing you should fund. A monthly fee that mostly buys the agency stability isn't a service you're receiving.

Reason 3: some of it is genuinely real work

And then there's the legitimate version. Hosting costs something. Monitoring, updates, being reachable when something breaks at 6pm, small ongoing changes — that's real labour with real value. Paying monthly for that is fair, the same way paying a bookkeeper monthly is fair. The test isn't whether a fee exists. It's whether work is delivered for it.

How to tell a fair retainer from a leash

Three questions. What, specifically, do I get each month? A fair retainer answers in concrete terms — hosting, monitoring, this many changes, this response time. Can I cancel any month? A fair retainer says yes, and the site keeps running when you do. Does the site survive without it? If cancelling takes your website offline, you weren't paying for service — you were paying for the site not to be switched off. That's a leash.

What we do, and why

We charge once to build the site, and you own it — code, content, domain in your name. Then there's an optional retainer from $99/month for people who want us on call. Optional is the entire point: cancel it and the site doesn't notice. We explain the model plainly in subscriptions: optional, never required and on /no-subscription-website. It's a worse recurring-revenue business than the standard model. We think it's a better deal for a small business, and that trade is deliberate.

So when should you pay a monthly fee?

When you're getting something for it you actually want — real maintenance, real availability, real changes — and you could stop any month without losing the website. Pay for service, gladly. Don't pay for permission to keep your own site online. If a quote you're holding has a monthly number on it, ask the three questions above before you sign, and email info@mule-digital.com if you want a second read on what it actually says.

Written by

Emile Holemans

Co-Founder & Creative Technologist

emile@mule-digital.com

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Mule builds sites, brands, and digital strategy for rural and small-town businesses. Tiers from $799. We write back personally.