Framer cost guide
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Framer Per-Site Billing, Page Caps & Real Costs: 2026 Guide

Framer prices by the published site, not the seat. Basic is $15 a site, Pro $45, and each is one website, so a studio running several pays several times over. Page caps push you up a tier too.

Typical annual cost

$120-$1,200

one Basic site at $10/mo up to one Scale site at $100/mo, billed yearly, per site

Hidden fees

Yes

billing is per site, page caps force the next tier, Scale bills overages

Free tier

Subdomain only

publish free on a Framer subdomain, but a custom domain needs a paid plan

Cost transparency

Medium

scores 4 of 6 on our transparency checklist

What Framer really costs per site

High· Verified July 15, 2026

Framer bills per published site, from a free tier to $100 a site a month, across five plans as of July 15, 2026. The free tier publishes to a Framer subdomain but blocks custom domains. Basic is $15 a site, or $10 annually, for up to 30 pages, and Pro is $45, or $30 annually, for up to 150 pages. Scale runs $100 a site on annual billing with a 300-page, 200GB base, and going over costs extra. Enterprise is a custom quote. Running several sites multiplies the bill.

  • Free (subdomain)$0
  • Basic, monthly$15/site
  • Basic, annual$10/site
  • Pro, monthly$45/site
  • Pro, annual$30/site
  • Scale, annual$100/site
Running Scale sites or eyeing Enterprise? The negotiation email draft below frames the volume ask with live rival prices from our catalog.
Free tier
Subdomain only
Hidden fees
Per-site + overages
Annual discount
Save ~33%
Negotiable
Enterprise

Framer Basic is $15 a site, or $10 on annual billing, near the $14.50 median across the 18 design tools we track. The per-site model, though, multiplies that for anyone running several sites.

Where a Framer bill multiplies on you

Framer prices by the published site, not the seat, and that single fact reshapes the bill. Each subscription covers one website, so running several means paying several times. Three separate Basic sites is three times $15, or $45 a month, and three Pro sites is three times $45, or $135. A studio or agency shipping client sites cannot spread one plan across them, which is the cost most people discover only after the second launch.

The second lever is page count. Basic stops at 30 pages and Pro at 150. A content site that grows past 30 pages jumps from Basic at $15 to Pro at $45, a threefold increase driven purely by page count rather than traffic or features. So the tier you need is set by how large the site will actually get, and planning around that ahead of time avoids a forced mid-project upgrade.

The third cost sits at the top. Scale at $100 a month per site includes 300 pages, 20 CMS collections and 200GB of bandwidth as a base, and exceeding any of those adds cost. Framer does not publish the overage rate on the plan, so a high-traffic site can run past the 200GB allowance and owe an amount you cannot pre-calculate. The tier grid is on the Framer plan page, and the per-site math is what to model first.

Per-site billing multiplies fast

Each plan covers one site, so several sites means several subscriptions. Three Basic sites is $45 a month, three Pro sites is $135. An agency shipping client sites pays per site, not once.

Page caps push you up a tier

Basic stops at 30 pages and Pro at 150. Growing past 30 jumps Basic to Pro, a threefold rise driven by page count alone. Plan the tier around the site's final size, not its launch size.

Scale bills overages on top

Scale is $100 a month per site with 300 pages, 20 CMS collections and 200GB of bandwidth as a base. Exceed any of those and it costs more, at an overage rate Framer does not publish on the plan.

Free publishing carries Framer branding

The free tier publishes to a Framer subdomain and shows Framer branding, and a custom domain needs a paid plan. So the real entry cost for a professional site is Basic at $10 to $15, not zero.

What Framer's free tier can and cannot do

Framer's free plan lets you build and publish a real site, which is more than many builders allow at no cost. You get 10 CMS collections, up to 1,000 pages and a working project. For learning the tool or a throwaway prototype, it is genuinely useful.

The wall is the domain. Free publishes only to a Framer subdomain with Framer branding, and connecting a custom domain requires a paid plan. So any professional or client-facing site crosses into Basic at $10 to $15 a site almost immediately. The free tier is best read as an extended trial, and the Framer alternatives page shows how other builders handle custom domains.

Framer annual billing takes a third off each site

The annual discount is sizable on the lower tiers. Paying yearly drops Basic from $15 to $10 a site a month, a cut of a third, and Pro from $45 to $30. Scale is billed annually at $100 a site. On a single site the saving is modest in dollars, but across an agency running many sites it compounds quickly.

The trade is the usual annual commitment, multiplied by the per-site model. Committing a year to five Basic sites is $600 up front, and to five Pro sites $1,800. Because each site is billed separately, you can take the annual rate on the stable sites and keep newer or experimental ones monthly, rather than locking everything at once.

Monthly rate vs. annual billing, per Framer site
PlanMonthlyAnnual, per monthYou save per year
Basic$15$10$60 (33%)
Pro$45$30$180 (33%)
Scalebilled annually$100annual only

The Framer savings worth planning around

The clean saving is annual billing, a third off Basic and Pro, and it needs no code. On a per-site model that discount repeats for every site you run, so an agency gains more from it than a solo user with one project. Take it on the sites you know you will keep.

The larger saving is architectural: sizing each site to the right tier from the start. A site planned to stay under 30 pages belongs on Basic, and jumping to Pro only when page count genuinely demands it avoids paying triple early. Consolidating small projects rather than spinning up a separate paid site for each also matters. The negotiation tactics below cover the Scale and Enterprise angle.

Annual billing, a third off per site

Basic falls to $10 and Pro to $30 a site on yearly billing. Because Framer bills per site, that one-third cut repeats across every site you run, so it compounds fastest for studios and agencies.

Right-size the tier to page count

A site staying under 30 pages belongs on Basic, not Pro. Since the tier jump is driven by page count, planning the site's size upfront avoids a threefold increase you did not need to trigger.

Enterprise for many sites at once

Running a large number of sites, Enterprise is quote-based and can price better than stacking individual Pro or Scale plans. Volume and a custom contract are the levers once the per-site total gets large.

Keeping a Framer bill from multiplying

For a single site, Framer's prices are fixed and the annual toggle is the only lever. The real cost problem is the per-site model. The savings come from architecture, not haggling: how many sites you run, what tier each needs, and whether Enterprise beats stacking plans.

A genuine negotiation opens only at Scale volume and Enterprise. Three moves cover most buyers.

Consolidate before you multiply plans

Target
Studios and multi-site owners
Argument
Every extra site is another full subscription, so combining small projects into one site where possible avoids paying $15 or $45 again. Spin up a separate paid site only when it genuinely needs its own domain and plan.
Expected discountone plan per merged site

Plan the tier around the final page count

Target
Content and marketing sites
Argument
The jump from Basic to Pro is triggered by pages, not traffic. Estimate the site's full size before launch, so you land on the right tier once rather than paying triple after an unplanned mid-project upgrade.
Expected discountavoids a forced Pro jump

Price Enterprise against stacked plans

Target
Agencies running many sites
Argument
Past a handful of Scale or Pro sites, the per-site total gets large enough that a quoted Enterprise contract can undercut it. Ask for a volume rate and compare it against the sum of your individual plans.
Expected discountvolume vs stacked total

When to commit or upgrade a Framer site

For a single site, the timing decision is about the annual toggle. Commit a site to yearly billing once it is live and stable, since that is when the one-third discount is pure saving. For a site you might scrap after a launch, keep it monthly until it proves it will last.

At Enterprise scale, the usual sales calendar applies. A large multi-site contract signed near a quarter's close tends to find more room, since a rep is chasing the number. Arrange the deal so your sign-off is ready as the quarter ends.

Jan

 

Feb

 

Mar

Q-END

Apr

 

May

 

Jun

Q-END

Jul

 

Aug

 

Sep

Q-END

Oct

 

Nov

 

Dec

Q-END

Pro tip: Estimate a site's final page count before you pick a tier, not after. Discovering the 30-page Basic cap mid-build forces an unplanned jump to Pro, and re-timing that upgrade to a billing boundary avoids paying for an overlap.

Framer costs that flex, and those that hold

The split follows the tier. Self-serve plans are fixed, only Enterprise flexes, and the per-site architecture is yours to shape whatever a rep offers.

Usually negotiable

  • Enterprise rate for many sitesHIGH
  • How many separate sites you runHIGH
  • Monthly versus annual per siteHIGH
  • Term commitment on an Enterprise contractMEDIUM
  • Overage terms on Scale, in a contractMEDIUM

Rarely negotiable

  • Self-serve prices ($15 Basic, $45 Pro per site)
  • The 30 and 150 page caps per tier
  • Custom domains needing a paid plan
  • Per-site billing itself

Framer negotiation email generator

Framer's per-site plans are fixed, so this tool is built for Scale volume and Enterprise, where the total is large enough for a rep to engage. Enter how many sites you run and your tier mix, and it drafts a note asking for a volume or custom rate. The competitor price it plugs in is drawn from our catalog, so it survives a rep's scrutiny.

What you are buying

$100/site, annual, plus overages

Team size
Decision deadline
Contract length
SubjectFramer Volume Pricing Discussion - [Your company]
Hi Framer team,

I lead tooling decisions at [Your company], and we are evaluating Framer for a team of 10-50 people, specifically the Scale sites option ($100/site, annual, plus overages).

As part of this evaluation we are also looking at Figma, which comes in at $16/user/mo billed annually, and Penpot at $7/user/mo. Can you help us understand the value difference at your current rates?

Our usage puts us into volume territory. Where do the price breaks sit at this scale, and what committed-use or volume rate can you put in writing?

We are ready to commit to an annual term. What is the best rate you can offer on annual billing, and can you cap the renewal price in the contract?

We are aiming to sign before the end of this quarter, and budget sign-off is already in place.

Could you share a proposal covering the rate for this scope, the renewal terms, and any programs we qualify for?

Best regards,
[Your name]
[Your company]

Send it Tuesday to Thursday, and follow up once after 3 business days.

Before you send

  • Total up your current per-site spend first, since the multiplied number is your strongest argument for a volume rate.
  • Reach a Framer sales contact rather than support, because Enterprise pricing is handled by a rep, not the help centre.
  • Lead with site count and a term commitment, the two things that move a per-site contract.
  • Cite Figma or Penpot with the real rate as a design-tool comparison, not a vague claim that alternatives are cheaper.
  • Ask for the per-site or bundled rate and any overage terms written into the contract, not agreed on a call.

Framer billing mistakes that cost per site

These all follow from the per-site model, and planning before launch avoids every one.

Reading $15 as your total. Each site is a separate subscription, so three Basic sites is $45 a month, not $15.

Launching on Basic for a site that will grow. Crossing 30 pages forces a jump to Pro at triple the cost.

Spinning up a separate paid site for every small project. Consolidating where a shared site works avoids repeat subscriptions.

Ignoring Scale overages. The 200GB bandwidth base can be exceeded, and the overage rate is not published on the plan.

Treating the free tier as production-ready. It cannot use a custom domain, so a real site needs Basic at $10 to $15.

Locking every site annually at once. Keep newer or experimental sites monthly, and commit only the stable ones.

Framer rivals worth weighing on cost

Framer's per-site model makes it worth knowing what design and web tools charge differently, especially if you run many projects. These three are the closest comparisons for design-led work, with each price below taken from our live catalog. Naming one clarifies what Framer's publishing model actually costs. The Framer alternatives page has the wider set.

Is Framer worth it for building sites?

Framer is a genuine design-to-publish platform, and for a designer shipping one or two polished sites it is a strong tool at a fair price. Basic at $10 to $15 a site is reasonable for what it does, and the free tier is a real way to learn it. If your output is a small number of sites, the per-site model barely bites.

The model turns expensive at volume. Because every site is its own subscription, a studio or agency running many projects pays repeatedly, and page caps can force a threefold jump to Pro before you expect it. So the honest question is not the sticker but how many sites you run and how large each grows.

So size each site to the right tier, consolidate small projects, and take the annual rate on the ones you keep. At real volume, price a quoted Enterprise contract against your stacked plans. Every tier's limits are laid out on the Framer plan page; what this page chased was the lowest bill for the sites you actually run.

Framer pricing and discount FAQ

What does Framer cost per month, per site?

+

Framer bills per published site. The free tier publishes to a Framer subdomain at no cost but cannot use a custom domain. Basic is $15 a site a month, or $10 on annual billing, for up to 30 pages. Pro is $45, or $30 annually, for up to 150 pages. Scale is $100 a site on annual billing, with a base of 300 pages and 200GB of bandwidth. Enterprise is a custom quote. The key point is that each of those covers one site, so running several multiplies the total.

Why does Framer charge per site instead of per seat?

+

Framer is a design-to-publish platform, so its unit of value is a live website rather than a designer's seat. Each subscription covers one published site, which is why running several means paying several times. Three Basic sites cost three times $15, and three Pro sites three times $45. For a solo designer with one project it is a non-issue, but for a studio or agency shipping client sites, the per-site model is the single biggest cost factor. Planning how many separate paid sites you truly need is the main way to control it.

What happens when a Framer site passes its page limit?

+

You are pushed to the next tier. Basic caps at 30 pages and Pro at 150, and crossing the cap forces an upgrade rather than an overage on the same plan. So a content site growing past 30 pages jumps from Basic at $15 to Pro at $45, a threefold increase driven purely by page count, not traffic or features. To avoid a surprise, estimate the site's final size before launch and pick the tier that fits. Then the jump is planned rather than forced mid-project.

Does Framer's free plan let me use my own domain?

+

No, and that is the main limit. The free tier publishes only to a Framer subdomain and shows Framer branding, and connecting a custom domain requires a paid plan. The free plan is genuinely useful for learning the tool or building a prototype. But any professional or client-facing site needs at least Basic, at $10 to $15 a site, to use a real domain. Treat the free tier as an extended trial rather than a home for a live site you want on your own address.

What are Framer's Scale plan overages?

+

Scale is $100 a site a month on annual billing, and it includes a base of 300 pages, 20 CMS collections and 200GB of bandwidth. Exceeding any of those adds cost, but Framer does not publish the overage rate on the plan itself. That means a high-traffic site can run past the 200GB bandwidth allowance and owe an amount you cannot calculate in advance from the pricing page. If you expect heavy traffic, it is worth asking Framer directly what the overage rate is before committing, so the bill holds no surprises.

Does Framer annual billing save money?

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Yes, about a third on the lower tiers. Annual billing drops Basic from $15 to $10 a site a month, and Pro from $45 to $30, while Scale is billed annually at $100. On a single site the dollar saving is modest. But because Framer bills per site, the one-third cut repeats for every site you run, so an agency benefits far more than a solo user. The trade is a year-long commitment per site. A sensible approach is to take the annual rate on stable sites and keep newer or experimental ones on monthly billing.

Is Framer expensive for an agency?

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It can be, because of the per-site model. An agency running many client sites pays a full subscription for each one, so ten Pro sites is ten times $45, or $450 a month before annual discounts. That is where Framer stops looking cheap. The levers are consolidating small projects, sizing each site to its tier, and taking annual billing on stable sites. At real volume, negotiate an Enterprise contract that can undercut stacked plans. For a handful of sites Framer is fair, but the cost scales directly with how many separate sites you publish.

How do I keep Framer costs down across several sites?

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Start with architecture, since the per-site model is the cost. Consolidate small projects into shared sites where a separate domain is not essential, so you pay one subscription instead of several. Size each site to its tier by estimating final page count, avoiding a forced Basic-to-Pro jump. Take the annual rate, a third off, on the sites you know you will keep, while leaving experiments monthly. And once your stacked per-site total gets large, ask Framer for an Enterprise quote and compare it against the sum of your individual plans.

Sources & verification

Verified by ComparEdgeMethod: Vendor docs and official pages
SourceWhat was checkedLast checked
Framer official pricingVerified plan prices, renewal rates and credit allowancesJuly 15, 2026
Framer websiteOfficial vendor websiteJuly 15, 2026
Framer pricing on ComparEdgeCurrent prices for every plan, with the cost calculatorJuly 15, 2026

Every fact on this Framer pricing page is tied to a named source and a verification date. Freshness-sensitive figures trace to the sources above; verify against the vendor before relying on them.