The Top 11 Free Website Builders

Destiny Viator

I’ve spent the last month testing free website builders and here’s the truth: companies aren’t jumping at the opportunity to give away something for free— but with a little research you can make it work. Limitations are pretty consistent across free website builders: most include an ad along the footer […]

I’ve spent the last month testing free website builders and here’s the truth: companies aren’t jumping at the opportunity to give away something for free— but with a little research you can make it work.

Limitations are pretty consistent across free website builders: most include an ad along the footer of your website— though some ads are definitely more intrusive than others. All include a free subdomain— though some are too long to be usable. Only two website builders on this list (Ucraft and Google Sites) let you connect a custom domain name on their free plan.

My work is supported by affiliate commissions— so I may earn a comission if you buy a website builder based on my reviews. For ecommerce see my round up the best free ecommerce builders.

Free website builders often put limits on your website— but near the end of the article I’ve explained two helpful ‘hacks’ to get around some common limitations:

    • Upside — You can connect a custom domain name (ex: yourname.com) even on free plans.
    • Downside — There’s a full-width ad that sticks to the bottom of your website.

    The number one reason to use Ucraft’s free plan is that it allows you to connect your own domain name (ex: yourname.com).


    Ucraft's free plan lets you connect a custom domain name. This is awesome.

    Ucraft’s free plan lets you connect a custom domain name. This is awesome.

    Of course, you’ll still need to purchase a domain name— this is unavoidable and will cost approximately $15 annually— but the only other free website builder to let you connect to a custom domain name is Google Sites (and Google Sites isn’t going to be right for most people).

    Otherwise Ucraft is a pretty solid free package: unlimited pages, Google Analytics, SSL and a decent free subdomain (yoursite.ucraft.net) if you don’t want to connect a domain name.

    The biggest downside is the ad. Ucraft used to have a small ad— but they’ve enlarged it to a full-width ad that scrolls alongside visitors. So if you do choose Ucraft, you’ll need to live with this:

    Ucraft has a full-width ad that scrolls alongside your website.

    • Best used for one-page websites.
    • Small, hardly noticable ad.
    • Paid plans are much cheaper than competitors (should you decide to upgrade).
    • Solid free subdomain (yoursite.carrd.co).

    Carrd is for building one-page websites. That’s it. Because of that focus, it’s also the best website builder for one page websites.

    For example, all Carrd themes are designed specifically for one-page websites:


    All Carrd themes are for one-page websites.

    All Carrd themes are for one-page websites.

    And while you can make one-page websites in Weebly or Wix, they’re just not as intuitive as Carrd. Weebly and Wix are tools for building websites with multiple pages— Carrd was designed around a single purpose: creating one-page websites.

    Carrd’s page editor.

    Carrd also has a very small, hardly noticeable ad on free websites:


    Carrd ads appear differently depending on the theme.

    Carrd ads appear differently depending on the theme.

    Finally if you do decide to upgrade, you’ll find that Carrd is extremely affordable. Plans start a $9 / year. This is WAY, WAY cheaper than website builders with multiple pages such as Squarespace or Wix.

    • Very powerful designer— but a learning curve
    • Tiny ad scrolls alongside your website.
    • Includes a CMS

    Webflow is really powerful but has a learning curve. It’s not what I suggest if you’re looking for an easy to use website builder but it is what I suggest if you want flexibility.

    The Webflow Designer gives you the flexibility of front-end coding without actually requiring you to code. You will need to understand the fundamentals of web design but it allows for far, far more design flexibility than any other free website builder.

    Webflow is a no-code tool— but you’ll need learn web fundamentals like the Box Model.

    Webflow also includes a CMS in the free plan. The CMS lets you create Collections, which are custom content types. Think of them like a customizable database— you could define an article collection, add articles and you’ll automatically get new pages for every new article.

    Creating a Webflow collection.

    Beyond that, Webflow includes a super small ad. It’s not very intrusive.

    Webflow includes a small ad on free websites.

    Navigating Webflow’s pricing plans can be confusing. You’ll want to sign up for their free Account plan and then choose the Staging plan for your free website.

    I asked Webflow to confirm that the Staging plan could be used for publishing a website and here’s what they had to say:

    I would think of it like this: Webflow is free until you want to have more than 2 projects, if you want to host a website on a custom domain, or if you want to export code from a project.

    I take this as approval that the Staging plan is essentially a free plan.

    • Free plan has plenty of features.
    • Ad is bright and intrusive.
    • Solid subdomain: (yoursite.weebly.com).

    Weebly is one my top-rated paid website builders. It’s really easy to use— so if ease of use is important to you, you’ll want to use this.

    Weebly’s editor is really easy to use.

    Many website builders limit features on free plans but Weebly actually includes lots of features: ecommerce, forms and unlimited pages. Even the Weebly app store is open to free users.


    The App Center.

    The App Center.

    Weebly also provides a good free subdomain: yoursite.weebly.com.

    The downside of Weebly is the ad that scrolls alongside the page. It’s bright blue and quite intrusive. You’ll only want to use Weebly if you can live this:

    This ad scrolls alongside free Weebly websites.

    I’ve also had a few readers complain that Weebly’s free plan isn’t offered in their country. I asked Weebly about this and they said: “Our free plan is widely available, but our offerings and prices do vary in some countries.”

    • Can add custom domains (though it’s a bit technical).
    • 100% free. Google Sites doesn’t even offer paid plans.
    • Not suitable for small business websites.

    Google Sites is the only website builder that is completely free— they don’t even offer paid plans.

    The thing is, Google Sites is not really a website builder for small businesses. It’s more of a way to connect Google Services for a collaborative tool.

    The elements you use to build your website are mostly Google products— Google Docs, Google Calendars, Google Forms etc. There’s also an option to restrict your website to users in your Google Apps organization (further evidence that this is a collaborative tool for Google Suites— not a website builder meant for small businesses.)


    The elements are mostly Google products.

    The elements are mostly Google products.

    Google Sites doesn’t offer a selection of templates. Instead there is only one single template with 6 styles. It’s very, very minimal— but remember, Google Sites isn’t meant for building small business websites.


    This is the only template Google Sites includes. You customize it by choosing between 6 styles.

    This is the only template Google Sites includes. You customize it by choosing between 6 styles.

    So why use Google Sites? Well there’s two very intriguing upside: you can add a custom domain and there are no ads on your website. So if you can make things work, Google Sites is pretty awesome.

    Just heads up: it requires a bit of technical know-how to setup the custom domain names and of course you’ll still have to pay the annual domain name fee (around $15).

    So in conclusion: if you love the one template Google Sites offers, and the idea of a lifetime free website intrigues you— you might want to give it a shot!

    • Section-based cookie cutter is too simple.
    • A very small ad in the footer.

    In 2019 Jimdo launched a totally new editor that reminds me a lot of GoDaddy’s website builder. You build your website by stacking sections. Sections are cookie-cutter. For example, you can’t add new elements to a section— you can only hide the elements.

    The Jimdo editor only lets you show or hide elements— not add new ones.

    Jimdo’s cookie-cutter editor is too simple— which is too bad because the ad on free Jimdo websites is really quite small:

    Jimdo includes a small ad in the footer of your free website.

    Other than that, Jimdo has a very average free plan: SSL, 500 mb of storage, a 5 page limit and a decent subdomain (yourdomain.jimdosite.com).

    I’m actually quite happy with the Jimdo subdomain— previously the subdomain was yourdomain.jimdofree.com and having the word free felt spammy. Glad to see they’ve fixed that.

  • Overview:
    • Subdomain is long and unreadable.
    • No ads on free websites!

    XPRS doesn’t put advertisements on free websites— which is awesome. That alone makes it very worth considering.


    Doesn't this look nice? A free website with no ads.

    Doesn’t this look nice? A free website with no ads.

    Unfortunately the subdomain they provide free websites is pretty unusable and there is no way to edit it: im-creator.com/free/yourusername/yourwebsitename.

    As a website builder, XPRS has a slick interface but can be a bit overwhelming. It’s not as easy to use as Weebly— it takes time to learn. The upside to XPRS is that they offer some really nice themes.

    • Meant for one-page websites.
    • No SSL is a problem.
    • Ad on free websites is a little intrusive.

    At one time, Strikingly was the best tool for one-page websites. That’s changed. Strikingly has grown stale over the last few years and Carrd has now overtaken it as the best one-page website builder.

    Strikingly is meant to create one-page websites. They do support multiple pages— but only on paid plans.

    Strikingly’s free plan doesn’t include SSL. SSL is what secures your website— Google has said SSL is a ranking signal. When websites don’t have SSL browsers will show a Not Secure message in the browser window. Not ideal.


    Free Strikingly websites will show 'Not Secure' in browsers like Google Chrome.

    Free Strikingly websites will show ‘Not Secure’ in browsers like Google Chrome.

    Strikingly also includes an ad that appears on free websites once a visitor starts scrolling. It’s a bit intrusive:

    Strikingly includes an ad on free plans that shows once the visitor starts scrolling.

    Strikingly’s free plan does include ecommerce (limited to one product) but because it doesn’t include SSL, I’m not sure why you’d want to try to use it for ecommerce.

    • Free subdomain (yourusername.wixsite.com/yoursite) is clunky.
    • Intrusive ad scrolls alongside the page.

    Wix is a blank canvas, drag-anywhere editor that’s pretty good for paid plans but not worth using for their free plans.

    For starters, Wix’s includes an intrusive ad that scrolls alongside free websites:

    Wix includes an ad that scrolls alongside your page.

    The free subdomain that Wix provides is not as friendly as other website builders. Your free URL is: yourusername.wixsite.com/yoursite .

    A better URL would be https://mysite.wix.com .

    You also can’t add your own favicon— the favicon is a Wix logo (favicons are the icons in a browser’s tab).

    Finally Wix has a 500 MB bandwidth limit on free websites. You’ll run into that limit quickly if you’re getting much traffic— since the average Wix homepage is 1.4 MB. Other free website builders are more generous with bandwidth.

    • They randomly insert ads into your content.

    First things first— WordPress.com is not WordPress.org. WordPress.org is what most people mean when they talk about WordPress— it’s the free, open-source CMS. WordPress.com on the other hand, is actually more like a website builder.

    The major downside is that WordPress.com randomly insert ads into your content. There’s no way to control where the ads show— it’s random. This is a big problem. With other free website builders you can at least anticipate and design around the ads.

    WordPress.com randomly inserts ads onto your page— you can’t control where.

    For more information, read their support doc.

    • Big, blue scrolling banner ad.
    • Parent company often uses shady billing practices.

    I don’t recommend Constant Contact’s free plan because they include a big and bright blue banner ad. It’s super obnoxious compared to other free plans:

    Constanct Contact includes a large, bright blue ad on free websites.

    It’s also worth mentioning that Constant Contact was acquired by EIG– a conglomerate with a history of buying companies and ruining them.

    For example: Constant Contact is not the only website builder that EIG owns. They also own WebsiteBuilder.com, SiteBuilder.com and Sitey. I’ve found they’ve often use shady billing practices on these companies— such as adding items into customer shopping carts without telling them.

    I’ve asked them many times to confirm this and they refuse to acknowledge this. I don’t recommend using their products.

  • Source Article

    Next Post

    IETF | About

    The IETF is a large open international community of network designers, operators, vendors, and researchers concerned with the evolution of the Internet architecture and the smooth operation of the Internet. The technical work of the IETF is done in Working Groups, which are organized by topic into several Areas. Much […]
    IETF | About