Squarespace

All-in-one website builder with designer-quality templates, e-commerce, blogging, scheduling, and built-in SEO tools.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Squarespace For?
  2. Templates & Fluid Engine
  3. E-Commerce
  4. Blogging & Content
  5. Scheduling, Domains & Analytics
  6. SEO Tools & Member Areas
  7. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Squarespace For?

Squarespace is an all-in-one website builder designed for people who want a beautiful, professional website without hiring a developer or learning to code. It launched in 2004 and has grown into one of the most popular website platforms in the world, powering millions of sites across portfolios, small businesses, online stores, restaurants, and creative projects.

The platform's core strength is design quality. Where competitors like Wix give you maximum flexibility (sometimes at the cost of messy layouts) and WordPress gives you maximum power (at the cost of complexity), Squarespace occupies a middle ground: constrained enough to keep everything looking polished, flexible enough to make it your own. Every template looks like it was designed by a professional agency, because it was.

Squarespace is ideal for creatives and visual professionals — photographers, designers, artists, architects, and anyone whose work needs to look stunning online. It's equally strong for service-based businesses — consultants, coaches, therapists, restaurants, and salons — who need appointment scheduling, contact forms, and a professional web presence without the overhead of managing a CMS.

It's also a solid choice for small online stores. The built-in e-commerce handles product listings, inventory management, shipping calculations, and payment processing. You won't outgrow it until you're processing serious volume or need advanced warehouse integrations — at which point you'd move to Shopify or a custom solution anyway.

Where Squarespace is not the best fit: large-scale blogs with thousands of posts (WordPress is better), complex web applications (you need custom development), sites that rely heavily on third-party plugins (WordPress and Wix have larger ecosystems), or businesses on a very tight budget (cheaper alternatives exist).

Templates & Fluid Engine

Templates are where Squarespace has always led the market, and the gap has only widened with the introduction of the Fluid Engine editor.

In our testing, we built the same portfolio site on Squarespace, Wix, WordPress (with Elementor), and Webflow. Squarespace produced the most visually polished result in the least time. The Fluid Engine made layout adjustments intuitive, and the built-in image handling — automatic compression, lazy loading, responsive sizing — meant we didn't need to optimise anything manually.

The main limitation is that you can't switch templates after building your site without starting over. Squarespace recommends choosing your template carefully, and while the Fluid Engine means all templates share the same underlying editor, your content won't automatically reflow into a different template's layout. This is a genuine drawback compared to platforms where template switching is seamless.

E-Commerce

Squarespace's e-commerce features have matured significantly and now serve as a viable option for small to mid-sized online stores.

Squarespace e-commerce is best for stores with fewer than 500 products. The product management interface is clean and straightforward, but lacks the bulk editing, advanced filtering, and warehouse integration features that high-volume stores need. If you're selling handmade goods, digital products, a curated selection of items, or services, Squarespace handles it beautifully. If you're building the next Amazon, look at Shopify or WooCommerce.

Blogging & Content

Squarespace's blogging tools are solid and well-integrated, making it a strong choice for content-driven sites.

For small to medium blogs — up to a few hundred posts — Squarespace works well. The writing experience is pleasant, the posts look beautiful by default, and the integration with the rest of your site is seamless. For large-scale content operations with thousands of posts, complex taxonomies, and advanced content workflows, WordPress remains the better choice. Squarespace lacks the plugin ecosystem and content management depth that serious publishers need.

Scheduling, Domains & Analytics

Beyond websites and stores, Squarespace bundles several tools that would otherwise require separate subscriptions.

The bundled tools approach is a genuine advantage for small businesses. Instead of paying separately for a website builder, scheduling software, email marketing platform, and analytics tool, you get a cohesive package under one login. The individual tools aren't best-in-class, but they're good enough for most small businesses, and the integration between them is seamless.

SEO Tools & Member Areas

Squarespace's SEO capabilities have improved substantially and now cover the fundamentals that most sites need.

Member areas let you create gated content sections that require a login or paid subscription to access. This is useful for online courses, premium content libraries, client portals, and community spaces. Members can sign up, manage their accounts, and access exclusive pages. Pricing for member areas is tiered based on the number of members and features you need.

The SEO tools cover everything most small sites need. You won't find the advanced SEO features of WordPress plugins like Yoast or Rank Math — things like advanced schema generation, content analysis scoring, and redirect managers. But for the majority of Squarespace users, the built-in SEO capabilities are sufficient to rank well in search engines when paired with good content.

Pricing & Plans

FeaturePersonal ($16/mo)Business ($23/mo)Commerce Basic ($27/mo)Commerce Advanced ($49/mo)
Templates & Fluid EngineYesYesYesYes
Free custom domain (1 year)YesYesYesYes
SSL certificateYesYesYesYes
SEO toolsYesYesYesYes
Built-in analyticsYesYesYesYes
Contributors2UnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Custom CSS/code injectionNoYesYesYes
E-commerceNoYes (3% fee)Yes (0% fee)Yes (0% fee)
Customer accountsNoNoYesYes
Abandoned cart recoveryNoNoYesYes
SubscriptionsNoNoNoYes
Advanced shipping & discountsNoNoNoYes

All prices are billed annually. Monthly billing is available but costs roughly 30-40% more. Squarespace offers a 14-day free trial on all plans — no credit card required — which is enough time to build a basic site and evaluate the platform.

The Personal plan at $16/month is the entry point and covers most needs for portfolios, personal sites, and simple business pages. You get all templates, the Fluid Engine editor, SEO tools, analytics, SSL, and a free domain for a year. The main limitations are no e-commerce, no custom code injection, and only two contributors.

Business at $23/month adds e-commerce (with a 3% Squarespace transaction fee), unlimited contributors, custom CSS and JavaScript injection, pop-ups and banners, and advanced analytics. The 3% transaction fee is the catch — it's on top of payment processor fees, making this plan expensive for stores with meaningful sales volume. Most businesses with serious e-commerce needs should jump to Commerce Basic.

Commerce Basic at $27/month removes the Squarespace transaction fee, adds customer accounts, checkout on your domain, merchandising tools, and abandoned cart recovery. For only $4/month more than Business, the eliminated transaction fee makes this the obvious choice for any site that sells products.

Commerce Advanced at $49/month adds subscriptions, advanced shipping with real-time carrier rates, advanced discounts, and commerce APIs. This plan is for established stores that need subscription products, complex shipping rules, or custom integrations.

Squarespace — Website Builder

Designer templates, Fluid Engine editor, e-commerce, scheduling, and SEO tools. 14-day free trial.

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