— Handyman businesses
Websites that get handyman phones ringing.
Most handyman websites look the same: stock photo of a toolbelt, generic "services" page, contact form nobody fills out. Yours won't. I build sites around the high-margin work you actually want — and the local SEO that gets neighbors calling you, not the next guy.
— What I do for handymen specifically
Everything tuned for trades.
Service pages that match what you actually do
Most handyman sites have a generic "services" page. Yours gets a page per specialty — drywall, deck repair, gutter cleaning, fence repair — each ranking for its own keyword.
Click-to-call front and center
Most of your customers are calling, not filling out forms. The phone number is sticky, big, and clickable on every page. Form is there for the ones who want to schedule.
Photos of real work, not stock
Stock photos kill conversion in the trades. We use your actual project photos. If you need help organizing your phone's photo roll into a portfolio, I help.
Reviews + GBP integration
Your Google reviews show on the site, automatically updating. The GBP profile is optimized so the local pack listing matches what the website is doing.
Web Design for Handymen
Service-page websites built around the calls you actually want to take. Drywall, deck repair, gutter cleaning, whatever your specialty — your site sells the right work.
See detailsLocal SEO for Handymen
Get found when neighbors search "handyman near me." GBP optimization, citations, and the structural SEO that puts you in the local pack.
See details— Common questions
Things people ask before we get started
I just need a basic site to look legit. Do I really need all this?
If you're getting all the work you want from word-of-mouth and Facebook groups, a basic site is fine. But if you want the phone to ring more, especially for the high-margin work (kitchen tile, custom carpentry, deck builds, not just "come fix my dripping faucet"), the website + local SEO matters. The customers who shop online tend to be the customers who pay better.
How much do handymen typically pay for this?
Most handyman websites land at $1,500–$2,000 for a 5–6 page site. Local SEO adds $500/month if you want active growth, or you can stop at the website and let the GBP do the heavy lifting.
Do you handle the GBP setup if I don't have one?
Yes. Or I help you claim and verify the existing one if it's already there. Either way the GBP work is part of the local SEO retainer; you're not paying separately for it.
— Ready when you are
Phone not ringing the way it used to? Let's fix that.
I work with a few new businesses each month. If you've got a project in mind, send me a note. I'll get back within one business day.