Finding a web development agency in the US is easy. Finding one that doesn't blow your budget before the first sprint ends — that's another matter.
After working with dozens of engineering teams and agencies across different scales, I've noticed the pricing conversation almost never happens clearly upfront. Here's what you actually need to know.
The numbers agencies don't lead with
Agency rates in the US run $100–$250/hour for mid-tier shops. For full projects:
- Simple marketing site: $8,000–$25,000
- Mid-tier custom build (CMS + e-commerce integration): $25,000–$75,000
- Complex product or SaaS web app: $75,000–$200,000+
These reflect real market rates once you factor in discovery, design, development, QA, and basic SEO setup. The number on the initial proposal is often 40–60% of the real final cost.
What drives the price up (and why agencies won't mention it)
1. Hidden compliance requirements
Depending on your industry and audience, ADA/WCAG compliance isn't optional — it's a legal exposure. A site built without accessibility review can cost more to retrofit than to build correctly from day one. Government, healthcare, finance, and retail serving public-facing users are all in scope.
The key question to ask before signing: Does this estimate include WCAG 2.1 AA compliance?
2. Scope creep from unmapped product behavior
The mockup looks simple. The actual product isn't. Empty states, failed form submissions, admin workflows, user permissions, onboarding flows — these aren't in the wireframes but they're all in the code.
3. Integrations that multiply cost
Every third-party integration (payment, CRM, email, analytics, auth) adds dev time, testing surface, and ongoing maintenance. A single Stripe integration done correctly takes 3–5 days. Done quickly, it creates months of support tickets.
What the breakdown usually looks like
| Phase | % of total |
|---|---|
| Discovery + strategy | 10–15% |
| Design (UX + UI) | 20–25% |
| Development | 45–55% |
| QA + testing | 10–15% |
| Launch + handoff | 5–10% |
Agencies that skip or compress discovery almost always blow scope in development.
The questions to ask before you sign
- Does this include responsive QA across devices?
- Is ADA/WCAG compliance scoped in, or is that a change order?
- What integrations are included at this price?
- What does the post-launch support period cover?
- Who owns the code and content after delivery?
We put together a detailed breakdown of US web development costs and what goes into each phase — including the compliance layer that most project timelines ignore: Website Cost in the US in 2026 + ADA & WCAG Compliance: What US Websites Actually Need.
The short version: the agencies worth working with are the ones who talk about risk before they talk about price.
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