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Squarespace

4.4(105 reviews)

10 comparisons available

About Squarespace

Squarespace is a leading all-in-one website building platform known for its elegant, award-winning templates and seamless user experience. Founded in 2003 by Anthony Casalena, Squarespace powers millions of websites worldwide and is particularly popular with creatives, photographers, bloggers, and small businesses. The platform handles hosting, security, and updates automatically, letting users focus entirely on design and content. Squarespace's block-based editor makes it easy to arrange layouts, and all templates are mobile-responsive by default. The platform offers comprehensive e-commerce tools including inventory management, tax and shipping calculation, abandoned cart recovery, and subscription products. Squarespace Email Campaigns and Scheduling (formerly Acuity) are native add-ons that eliminate the need for third-party tools. In 2024, Squarespace went private in a $6.9 billion deal. Pricing starts at $16/month (Personal), $23/month (Business), $28/month (Basic Commerce), and $52/month (Advanced Commerce), with annual billing discounts. Squarespace Blueprint, their AI-powered website generation tool, can create a full site in minutes.

Award-winning design templatesBuilt-in e-commerce and schedulingAI-powered Blueprint site generatorAll-in-one with no add-ons needed

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does Squarespace cost?

Squarespace plans start at $16/month (Personal), $23/month (Business), $28/month (Basic Commerce), and $52/month (Advanced Commerce) billed annually. All plans include custom domain, SSL, and unlimited storage.

Is Squarespace good for e-commerce?

Squarespace is a solid e-commerce platform for small to medium stores. It handles physical products, digital downloads, subscriptions, and service bookings natively. However, for large catalogs or complex storefront needs, Shopify or BigCommerce offer more advanced features.

Squarespace vs WordPress: which should I choose?

Squarespace is better for users who want a beautiful site without technical complexity — no plugins to manage, no updates to handle. WordPress is better for users who need complete control, custom functionality, or are running a large content-driven site. WordPress has a steeper learning curve but virtually unlimited flexibility.