Designers looking for a visual web builder need a platform that balances creative freedom, performance, and cost. Webflow remains the top choice for 2026 because it lets you design without code, host fast sites, and hand off projects to clients. This guide compares the most relevant Webflow plans, highlights real‑world use cases, and helps you decide which tier fits your workflow.
The Lite plan costs $24 per month (billed annually) and is built for designers who need a simple portfolio or a one‑off client site. It includes 100 static pages, 50 GB bandwidth, and basic form submissions. You cannot export code, but you can publish to a Webflow subdomain.
Pro is $42 per month (annual) and adds unlimited static pages, 400 GB bandwidth, and code export. It’s the sweet spot for designers who build multiple client sites and need to hand off clean HTML/CSS.
The CMS plan is $39 per month (annual). It adds a full visual CMS, allowing designers to create repeatable content structures (blogs, portfolios, product catalogs). It includes 2,000 CMS items and 100 GB bandwidth.
The Business plan is $84 per month (annual). It offers 400 GB bandwidth, 10,000 CMS items, site‑wide password protection, and advanced SEO settings. It also includes white‑label client billing and team roles.
Enterprise pricing is custom, but typical contracts start around $500 per month. It adds SSO, dedicated account manager, SLA guarantees, and unlimited sites. Ideal for design consultancies with 20+ designers and strict security compliance.
| Feature | Lite | Pro | CMS | Business | Enterprise |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price (annual) | $24/mo | $42/mo | $39/mo | $84/mo | Custom |
| Static pages | 100 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| CMS items | 0 | 0 | 2,000 | 10,000 | Unlimited |
| Bandwidth | 50 GB | 400 GB | 100 GB | 400 GB | Custom |
| Code export | No | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Team editors | 1 | 2 | 2 | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Client billing | No | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| SSO & SLA | No | No | No | No | Yes |
| Best for | Solo portfolios | Freelance multi‑site | Content‑rich sites | Agencies & high‑traffic | Large enterprises |
| Downside | No code export | No CMS | No export, item limit | Higher cost | Expensive, contract |
The Lite plan is usually best for freelancers. It costs $24/month, gives 100 static pages, and includes basic CMS. It lacks team collaboration tools, which most solo designers don’t need.
Yes. The CMS and Export code features in the CMS and Business plans let you hand off clean HTML/CSS or let clients edit content directly in Webflow.
For agencies or designers with many high‑traffic sites, the Business plan’s higher bandwidth (400 GB) and site‑wide SEO tools justify the cost. Smaller studios may stay on the Pro plan.
Enterprise adds SSO, custom SLAs, and a dedicated account manager. If you have 20+ designers and need strict security, it’s a good fit. Otherwise, Pro or Business covers most needs.
Webflow generally costs more but offers granular design control and a visual CMS. Squarespace starts at $16/month but limits layout flexibility. Choose Webflow if you need pixel‑perfect design.
Choosing the right Webflow tier depends on your project volume, need for a visual CMS, and team size. For most solo designers, Lite or Pro is enough. Content‑heavy sites benefit from the CMS plan, while agencies should aim for Business. Large firms with strict security requirements may need Enterprise.