How to create an affordable website for a church?
There are several ways to set up a church website with minimal cost and effort—sometimes even for free.
Simon Vreman
February 11, 2025
If I had to set up a website for a church right now, with no specific requirements (which I’ll get back to later), I would set it up for free in no time. Look at quick, simple solutions like a Facebook page. It may not seem the most professional, but it saves a lot of money and effort! People often underestimate how much work goes into a website. Want to do it yourself? Here’s how I would approach it.
No custom server and development
Don’t do it. It almost always ends up in one of these three scenarios, from most to least common:
- Quickly put together – Some issues get fixed, and voilà, a website! But it’s usually insecure, hard to maintain (especially when the volunteer who built it leaves), and more expensive in the long run.
- Never finished – Starts with enthusiasm but remains an unfinished project for years, sharing many issues with the first scenario.
- Professionals involved – Experts set it up and maintain it properly, resulting in a custom solution for a bargain! Unfortunately, this is rare.
Then what is the solution? A managed hosting solution prevents heavy reliance on volunteers with technical skills, as that’s never guaranteed. This can be incredibly cheap, even free for most churches. Services like Vercel or Netlify are great examples.
Who should be able to manage it?
My rule of thumb: at least half of the congregation should be able to run the website. Only then can you ensure a sustainable system. However, this is nearly impossible if you build a website yourself. So, there’s a choice:
- Take the risk and develop it yourself (not recommended).
- Pay a monthly fee for a package—but be careful! Many churches buy packages that don’t meet their needs, wasting money.
User-friendly website builders like Squarespace and builder.io require almost no technical knowledge and work well for these cases.
What’s the real goal?
A website alone is often not the solution. Most churches also need member administration and an app. A combined package can be very beneficial:
- Data syncs between different tools—super practical!
- Only one system to manage, controlling everything else.
- Lower costs—providing more services to the same customer is cheaper.
That’s why this would be my choice. Even though I could build a custom system for a very low monthly price, I simply can’t guarantee long-term maintenance. Platforms like planning center or Kerkcloud offer solid alternatives.
What fits your church?
The best choice depends on your church’s character and needs. The right answer can range from a simple Facebook page to a fully custom solution by a professional company. Kerkcloud aims to balance both—offering churches a solution close to custom development but at a much lower price.