How much does it cost to hire a Webflow enterprise agency?
Written by
Passionate Designer & Founder
What you'll pay a Webflow enterprise agency depends on project scope, agency reputation, where they're based, and how technically complex your requirements are. Having a rough sense of the numbers before you start talking to agencies saves a lot of time.
A standard enterprise website redesign runs between $50,000 and $150,000 at most established agencies. That covers strategy and discovery, UX research and wireframing, visual design, Webflow development, CMS setup, basic integrations, QA, and launch support.
More complex projects get more expensive quickly. If you need extensive CMS architecture, multi-language setups, advanced API integrations, custom JavaScript, or migration off a legacy platform, expect to pay somewhere between $150,000 and $500,000. Global rebrands with dozens of templates and thousands of content entries can push past that.
Most agencies also offer monthly retainers ranging from $5,000 to $30,000, covering ongoing development, performance work, A/B testing, analytics, CMS training, and support. Whether that's worth it depends on how much your site is expected to change after launch and how much internal bandwidth you have.
Hourly rates for Webflow enterprise work typically fall between $150 and $350, varying by role. That said, most enterprise clients prefer fixed-price projects. The predictability matters when you're managing internal budgets and stakeholder expectations.
One cost people sometimes miss: Webflow's own Enterprise plan is separate from agency fees. It starts at roughly $40,000 per year and scales based on usage and whatever you negotiate directly with Webflow. Make sure you're accounting for that in your total budget.
When reviewing agency proposals, the things worth scrutinizing are the depth of their discovery process, how specific the deliverables are, and what happens after launch. A cheaper proposal that goes quiet once the site is live will usually cost more to fix than a thorough one that didn't.

