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Framer Pricing Explained: Every Plan Compared for 2026

Framer Pricing Explained: Every Plan Compared for 2026

Framer offers four pricing tiers in 2026: Free ($0), Mini ($5/month), Basic ($15/month), and Pro ($25/month), all billed per site. The Free plan supports up to 2 pages with a Framer subdomain, while paid plans unlock custom domains, more pages, CMS items, and advanced analytics. Additional team seats cost extra on all paid tiers.

Key Takeaways

  • Framer’s Free plan is genuinely useful for prototyping, but the 2-page limit and Framer branding make it impractical for client-facing sites.
  • The Mini plan at $5/month is the cheapest way to launch a live site with a custom domain — ideal for personal portfolios and simple landing pages.
  • Most businesses land on Basic ($15/month) for 150 CMS items, 10 pages, and enough bandwidth to handle real traffic.
  • Pro at $25/month is the move for content-heavy sites, SaaS landing pages, or teams that need staging environments and advanced analytics.
  • Total cost of ownership extends beyond the subscription — factor in custom domains (~$12/year), premium fonts, third-party integrations, and potentially agency design fees to get the full picture.
  • Framer consistently undercuts Webflow on price while offering comparable (and in some areas superior) design capabilities.

Framer Pricing Plans: Full Breakdown

Framer structures its pricing per site, not per account. That means each website you build gets its own plan and billing cycle. Here’s what every tier includes as of 2026.

Feature Free Mini ($5/mo) Basic ($15/mo) Pro ($25/mo)
Pages 2 5 10 Unlimited
CMS Items 10 50 150 300
Bandwidth 1 GB 10 GB 100 GB 200 GB
Custom Domain No Yes (1) Yes (1) Yes (1)
Framer Branding Yes No No No
Analytics Basic Basic Standard Advanced
Staging No No No Yes
Password Protection No No Yes Yes
Annual Price $0 $3/mo $10/mo $18/mo

Annual billing saves you roughly 30-40% across all paid tiers. If you’re committing to Framer for a production site, annual billing is a no-brainer.

Free Plan: What You Actually Get

Framer’s Free plan isn’t a crippled trial — it’s a legitimate design environment. You get the full visual editor, responsive breakpoints, scroll animations, and component library. The catch is publishing: only 2 pages, 1 GB bandwidth, and mandatory Framer branding on a .framer.app subdomain.

This makes the Free plan excellent for three scenarios:

  • Prototyping and client previews — build the full design, share the preview link, then upgrade once approved.
  • Learning the platform — there’s no better way to evaluate Framer than building a real project in it.
  • Internal tools or link-in-bio pages — if you don’t need a custom domain and 2 pages is enough, the Free plan works indefinitely.

Where it falls short: no custom domain, no password protection, limited CMS (10 items), and the Framer badge in the footer. For anything client-facing or commercial, you’ll need to move up.

Mini Plan ($5/month): The Starter Sweet Spot

The Mini plan is Framer’s most underrated tier. At $5/month (or $3/month annually), it removes the Framer badge, adds a custom domain, and bumps you to 5 pages and 50 CMS items.

Best for:

  • Personal portfolios and creative showcases
  • Simple landing pages for a product or service
  • Freelancers who want a professional web presence without recurring overhead
  • Small blogs with fewer than 50 posts

At $60/year (or $36 on annual billing), the Mini plan competes directly with basic Squarespace and WordPress hosting — except you get Framer’s design capabilities included. For a deeper comparison, see our Framer vs Squarespace breakdown.

Basic Plan ($15/month): The Business Standard

This is where most businesses, startups, and professional sites land. The Basic plan at $15/month ($10/month annually) delivers 10 pages, 150 CMS items, 100 GB bandwidth, standard analytics, and password protection.

Best for:

  • Business websites with multiple service pages
  • Startup landing pages that need password-protected staging or beta access
  • Content sites publishing regularly (up to 150 blog posts or portfolio items)
  • Client projects where professional features like analytics matter

The jump from Mini to Basic is significant — you triple your pages, triple your CMS items, and get 10x the bandwidth. If your site has any commercial purpose, Basic is the minimum viable plan.

Pro Plan ($25/month): For Power Users and Teams

The Pro plan at $25/month ($18/month annually) unlocks unlimited pages, 300 CMS items, 200 GB bandwidth, advanced analytics, and — critically — staging environments.

Best for:

  • Content-heavy sites exceeding 150 CMS items
  • SaaS companies running continuous landing page experiments
  • Agencies building and maintaining client sites
  • Teams that need staging to preview changes before pushing live
  • High-traffic sites approaching 100 GB/month bandwidth

The staging feature alone justifies the upgrade for many teams. Without it, every change you make goes directly to production — fine for a portfolio, risky for a business generating leads or revenue from its website.

Per-Seat Pricing: Team and Editor Costs

Framer charges per seat for collaborative editing. The site owner’s seat is included in the plan price. Additional editors cost extra, typically in the range of $10-$20 per seat per month depending on the plan tier.

This pricing model works in your favor if you’re a solo founder or freelancer — you pay nothing extra. But for agencies or in-house teams with multiple designers, per-seat costs add up quickly. A 5-person design team on a Pro plan could be looking at $75-$125/month total.

Strategies to manage seat costs:

  • Designate one primary editor per site and use screen shares for reviews
  • Remove seats when projects wrap instead of keeping them active
  • Use the Free plan for design exploration before committing paid seats to production sites

Hidden Costs Most Guides Won’t Mention

The plan price is only part of the story. Here’s what else goes into your total Framer spend.

Custom Domain Registration

Framer doesn’t sell domains. You’ll need to register one through Namecheap, Google Domains, Cloudflare Registrar, or similar. Budget ~$12/year for a .com. Premium or brandable domains can cost hundreds or thousands.

Premium Fonts and Assets

Framer includes Google Fonts for free, but if your brand uses a licensed typeface (Neue Haas Grotesk, GT Walsheim, etc.), you’ll need a web font license. These range from $25-$200+ depending on the foundry and traffic tier.

Third-Party Integrations

Framer doesn’t have built-in forms, e-commerce, or email marketing. You’ll likely integrate with:

  • Form handling: Formspree ($8/mo), Typeform ($25/mo), or native embed codes
  • Email capture: Mailchimp (free to $13/mo), ConvertKit ($15/mo+)
  • Analytics: Google Analytics (free), Plausible ($9/mo), Fathom ($14/mo)
  • E-commerce: Lemon Squeezy, Gumroad, or Shopify Lite ($5/mo+)

Design and Development Help

Framer’s visual editor is powerful, but pixel-perfect results still require design skill. If you’re not a designer, you’ll likely invest in either templates ($49-$149 one-time) or professional help. For a full breakdown of what a professionally built Framer site costs, read our complete cost analysis.

Framer Pricing vs Competitors

Context matters. Here’s how Framer stacks up against the platforms you’re probably comparing it to.

Platform Entry Price Business Plan Best For
Framer $5/mo $15/mo Design-forward marketing sites
Webflow $14/mo $39/mo Complex CMS and e-commerce
Squarespace $16/mo $33/mo Template-based simplicity
WordPress $4/mo (hosting) $10-30/mo (hosting + plugins) Unlimited customization

Framer vs Webflow

Framer undercuts Webflow at every tier. Webflow’s Basic site plan starts at $14/month versus Framer’s $5/month Mini. At the business level, Webflow’s CMS plan ($39/month) costs more than double Framer’s Basic ($15/month) while offering a comparable CMS item count.

Where Webflow wins: deeper CMS functionality, native e-commerce, and a more mature ecosystem. Where Framer wins: design speed, animation capabilities, and price-to-value ratio. For the full comparison, read our Framer vs Webflow analysis.

Framer vs Squarespace

Squarespace starts higher at $16/month and locks you into templates with limited customization. Framer’s visual editor gives you significantly more design freedom at a lower price point. The tradeoff: Squarespace includes built-in e-commerce, email marketing tools, and scheduling — features Framer doesn’t offer natively.

For pure marketing and portfolio sites, Framer delivers more value. For sites that need integrated commerce, Squarespace might save you money on integrations. See the detailed Squarespace comparison.

Framer vs WordPress

WordPress hosting can start as low as $4/month, but the real cost includes themes ($50-$200), plugins ($0-$300/year), security maintenance, and development time. A properly maintained WordPress site often costs more than Framer when you account for the ongoing overhead.

WordPress wins on flexibility — there’s virtually nothing you can’t build. Framer wins on speed-to-launch and design quality without needing a developer. Our Framer vs WordPress comparison covers this in detail.

When to Hire a Framer Agency vs DIY

Framer’s visual editor makes DIY tempting, and for simple sites, it’s absolutely viable. But there’s a meaningful gap between a functioning Framer site and one that converts visitors into customers.

DIY makes sense when:

  • You’re building a personal site, portfolio, or simple landing page
  • You have design experience and strong visual instincts
  • Budget is the primary constraint and you have time to invest
  • The site is a prototype or MVP that will be rebuilt later

Hiring a Framer agency makes sense when:

  • The site directly generates revenue (leads, sales, signups)
  • Your brand demands a polished, differentiated design
  • You need complex interactions, custom components, or CMS architecture
  • Time-to-launch matters more than budget
  • You want ongoing optimization and iteration support

At Framer Websites, we build conversion-focused Framer sites for businesses that need their website to perform — not just exist. If your site is a revenue channel, professional design typically pays for itself within months through improved conversion rates.

Total Cost of Ownership: Real Numbers

Let’s model the actual annual cost for three common scenarios.

Cost Item Freelancer Portfolio Startup Website Business with Blog
Framer Plan Mini ($36/yr) Basic ($120/yr) Pro ($216/yr)
Domain $12/yr $12/yr $12/yr
Font License $0 (Google Fonts) $75/yr $75/yr
Form Handling $0 (free tier) $96/yr $96/yr
Analytics $0 (built-in) $0 (GA4 free) $108/yr (Plausible)
Email Tool $0 $0 (free tier) $180/yr
Total Annual $48/yr $303/yr $687/yr

Even in the most feature-rich scenario, Framer’s total cost of ownership stays well under $60/month. Compare that to a comparable Webflow setup ($39/month plan + same integrations = $900+/year) and the value proposition is clear.

How to Choose the Right Framer Plan

Don’t overthink this. Match your plan to your current needs, not hypothetical future ones. Framer makes it easy to upgrade (and downgrade) at any time.

Start with Free if: You’re evaluating Framer for the first time or building a prototype.

Go Mini if: You need a live site with a custom domain but don’t need more than 5 pages.

Go Basic if: You’re building a business website, need a blog, or require password protection.

Go Pro if: You’re running a content-heavy site, need staging, or manage multiple team members.

One thing we consistently see at Framer Websites: businesses that start on Mini quickly outgrow it. If you know your site will have more than 5 pages, skip Mini and go straight to Basic — the $10/month difference pays for itself in avoided migration headaches.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Framer really free to use?

Yes, Framer’s Free plan is genuinely free with no credit card required. You get the full design editor, 2 published pages, 10 CMS items, and hosting on a .framer.app subdomain. The limitations are on publishing features (page count, bandwidth, custom domains), not on the design tools themselves. You can design and prototype complex sites for free — you only pay when you’re ready to publish professionally.

Can I switch Framer plans at any time?

Yes. Framer allows you to upgrade or downgrade your plan at any point. When upgrading, you’re charged the prorated difference immediately. When downgrading, the change takes effect at the end of your current billing cycle. If your site exceeds the limits of the lower plan (too many pages or CMS items), you’ll need to remove content before the downgrade can take effect.

Does Framer charge per site or per account?

Framer charges per site. Each website you create has its own plan and billing cycle. This means you could have a Mini plan on your portfolio, a Basic plan on your business site, and a Free plan on a prototype — all under one Framer account. There’s no account-level fee beyond the individual site plans and any additional editor seats.

Is Framer cheaper than Webflow?

At every comparable tier, yes. Framer’s Mini ($5/month) vs Webflow’s Starter ($14/month). Framer’s Basic ($15/month) vs Webflow’s Basic ($18/month). Framer’s Pro ($25/month) vs Webflow’s CMS ($39/month). The gap widens further on annual billing. However, if you need native e-commerce or advanced CMS filtering, Webflow’s higher price includes features Framer doesn’t match natively. Read our full Framer vs Webflow comparison for specifics.

What happens if I exceed my Framer plan limits?

Framer won’t suddenly shut down your site. If you approach your bandwidth limit, Framer will notify you and recommend upgrading. If you try to publish more pages or CMS items than your plan allows, the editor will prompt you to upgrade before publishing. Your existing published content remains live — Framer doesn’t take pages down retroactively. This gives you time to decide whether to upgrade or optimize your content to stay within plan limits.

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