Short answer: an electrician's website should cost less than a single EV charger install. If it costs more than that every month, or ties you in for three years, someone's having you.

The trouble is nobody quotes it straight. Ask five companies what a website costs and you get five shrugs, a "well, it depends," and a monthly figure with the contract length buried in clause 14.3. So here's the honest map: what the real options cost an electrician in 2026, and the bit they leave out of the sales call.

A good site pays for itself the first time it wins you an EICR round or an EV charger job.
The options, honestly priced

Build it yourself

Cheapest on paper. Dearest in evenings.

DIY website builder

£15–£30/month+ your evenings

Wix, Squarespace or WordPress. Pick a template, write the words yourself, publish. No build fee.

The hidden cost

Your time, and your ranking. A proper site is 30 to 60 hours of work, and even then it won't show up for "EV charger installer in your town" because nobody told you about area pages, schema, or getting your NICEIC number where Google can read it.

The "free website" subscription

Monthly subscription companies

£79–£199/month36-month minimum, typically

"Free website, just £99 a month." The word free is doing a lot of lifting.

The hidden cost

Three years at £99 a month is £3,564, and you usually don't own the site. Stop paying and it vanishes. Four figures spent, nothing owned.

A traditional agency

Traditional web agency

£2,000–£8,000 build+ changes billed by the hour

One-off fee, you own it. Nothing wrong with that in principle.

The hidden cost

Every change after launch is on the clock. Updating a phone number: £75. A new service page: £200 to £400. So nothing gets updated, the site goes stale, and Google quietly drops you.

What actually matters for a spark

It has to rank for the jobs that pay

A pretty website nobody finds is a business card that charges rent. What earns is a site that shows up when someone in your patch searches "EICR in your town", "EV charger installer near me", or "NICEIC electrician in your town". That means a page for each job in each area, your accreditations in the schema, and the AI-search plumbing so ChatGPT and Perplexity recommend you too. Cheap sites do none of it.

The one-job maths

Do the sum that counts

An EICR runs £120 to £350. An EV charger install is £800 to £1,200. A rewire is thousands. Now put the website next to that. A Starter build is £500 and £49 a month. Win one extra EV charger install a month and the site has paid for itself several times over, every month, for the price of a tank of diesel.

Zenlio pricing, July 2026

Three tiers, all transparent

A one-off build fee plus a small monthly. No long tie-in. You own the site. Cancel any time after the 3-month minimum.

Starter
£500
+ £49/month
Professional
£1,000
+ £79/month
Growth
£1,500
+ £129/month

Three years at the Professional tier is £3,844 all in: about the cost of one agency build, but with 36 months of new content, updates, hosting and ongoing SEO bundled in. Stop any time and you keep the site.

How to spot a fair price

Three questions before you sign

Do you own it? If the answer mentions "platform" or "as long as you're a customer", you don't. Walk.

What's the three-year total? Monthly times 36, plus any build fee. That's your real number, and the cheap monthly with a long contract usually wins the wooden spoon.

What does the monthly actually buy? Hosting is £5 to £15. The rest should be real content, updates and SEO. If you can't list what next month's fee delivers, you're paying for nothing.

The right question isn't "what does it cost?" It's "what does it win me, and do I own it at the end?"

Want the full breakdown of every route, ours included? That's the honest cost of a tradesperson's website. And the version built specifically for sparks is the electrician websites page.