If you're thinking about getting a website for your Singapore business, you'll quickly run into the template versus custom decision. Wix or WordPress? Squarespace or a custom build?
The answer is more nuanced than "custom is always better" or "templates are always cheaper." Let me break down when each makes sense.
Templates: When They're Actually Fine
Personal Blogs or Side Projects
Writing a blog, sharing your photography portfolio, documenting a hobby? Templates work great. Low risk, low stakes, you're not losing money if the site isn't perfect.
Testing an Idea
You're not sure if a business idea will work. You want a quick, cheap website to validate it before investing more. Templates let you get something live in a day for $20/month. That's smart.
Very Simple Content-Only Sites
If your site is literally just "here's what I do, here's how to contact me," and you never plan to add anything else, a template might be enough. Minimal pages, minimal changes, minimal headaches.
You Want to Own and Update It
Some business owners prefer learning Wix or Squarespace so they can update their site themselves without paying for changes. If that's you, templates give you that autonomy.
Why Templates Often Disappoint
You Look Like Every Other Business Using That Template
Squarespace is beautiful. So beautiful that you end up with the same header design, the same footer, the same animations as thousands of other businesses. You don't stand out. You look generic.
Slow Page Speed
Templates come bloated. They load 50 JavaScript files you don't need, they run massive image files, they execute code for features you're not using. On Singapore's mobile networks, this matters. Visitors bounce after 3 seconds if your site is slow.
Custom-built sites can be lean and fast. Templates almost never are.
Limited Customization
You'll hit a wall. You want to change a button color or adjust spacing, but the template doesn't allow it. You want to add a specific feature, but you can't without custom code. You're locked into the template's constraints.
Plugin Bloat and Costs
Need an email newsletter signup? $10/month add-on. Need a booking system? $15/month add-on. Need better SEO tools? $20/month. Suddenly your "$20/month" site is costing $60/month in add-ons.
Updates That Break Things
The platform updates the template or theme, and suddenly your site looks weird or functionality breaks. You didn't ask for the update, you didn't approve it, but now you have to fix it.
You're Locked In
Want to move to a different host or platform? Good luck exporting your site. You're essentially renting, not owning. If the platform goes down or changes their pricing, you're stuck.
Custom Websites: The Real Story
Custom Doesn't Have to Mean Expensive
This is the big misconception. "Custom" doesn't mean $15,000. A custom site built by a good developer can cost $500–$1,500, which is competitive with templates when you factor in all those monthly add-ons.
You Actually Own It
Your code is yours. You own your domain. You own your content. You can move hosts anytime. You can hire a different developer. You're not dependent on a platform's pricing or policy changes.
Fast and Optimized
Custom sites can be lean. Only the code and features you need. Fast load times. Optimized for mobile. This matters for conversions and SEO.
Unique Design
Your site doesn't look like everyone else's. It reflects your brand, not a cookie-cutter template. This actually matters for standing out.
Easy Updates
Good custom sites can be built so you can update copy and images yourself without needing a developer for every small change.
The Catch: Requires Good Development
A custom site is only as good as the developer who builds it. A bad custom site is worse than a good template. So you need to find someone who actually knows what they're doing.
The Comparison
| Factor | Templates | Custom Build |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Cost | $0–$300 | $500–$1500 |
| Monthly Cost | $20–$60+ with add-ons | $30–$50 (hosting only) |
| Speed | Slow (bloated) | Fast (optimized) |
| Design Uniqueness | Generic | Unique to your brand |
| SEO Performance | Limited control | Full control |
| Customization | Limited | Full flexibility |
| You Own It? | No (renting) | Yes |
| Setup Time | 1 day | 2–4 weeks |
| Maintenance | Platform updates can break things | You control updates |
| Moving Platforms | Difficult or impossible | Easy |
The Math
Let's actually calculate:
Template site (3-year estimate):
- Setup: $300
- Monthly: $50 × 36 months = $1,800
- Total: $2,100
Custom site (3-year estimate):
- Build: $800
- Monthly hosting: $35 × 36 months = $1,260
- Total: $2,060
They're basically the same cost over time. But the custom site is faster, yours to keep, and doesn't look like everyone else's.
What Most Singapore SMEs Should Choose
If you have a straightforward business (services, products, simple info), you want it to look professional, and you want to own it: go custom.
If you're genuinely only using it for 6 months to test an idea and you plan to rebuild later anyway: use a template.
If you really want to update your own site and learning a platform matters more than speed or uniqueness: use a template.
For most Singapore SMEs looking to build credibility and get customers, a lean custom site is the smarter long-term choice.
Kopi Studio