Pricing
Web Development Rates Lebanon 2026: Real USD Prices
Furrsati TeamNovember 1, 20258 min read
The first question almost every business owner asks is simple: what are realistic web development rates in Lebanon 2026? The honest answer is that there is no single number. Prices range from a few hundred dollars for a simple landing page, to several thousand for a full custom business site, to a lot more for a web app or e-commerce store with payment gateways tied to OMT or Whish. This guide breaks down the realistic USD ranges for 2026, explains why price moves with scope, why local developers quote in fresh dollars even when clients still think in lollars, and how electricity and internet downtime affect delivery timelines and therefore cost.
Why There Is No Fixed Price for a Website
A website is not a product sitting on a shelf. It is a service tailored to your business. A single landing page for a restaurant is fundamentally different from an online store with a hundred products, user accounts, and a payment gateway. That is why any serious developer asks questions before quoting: How many pages? Do you need a dashboard to edit content yourself? Will users log in? Is there online payment? Do you have a design ready, or do you need one built from scratch? Are your content and images prepared?
Every one of those answers pushes the price up or down. The clearer you are upfront, the more accurate the quote, and the fewer surprises later.
Realistic USD Ranges for 2026
Let us split the Lebanese market into three clear tiers. The numbers below are approximate fresh-USD ranges, not guarantees. The final figure depends on the developer, their experience, and the real scope of the work.
The Low End: WordPress Sites and Landing Pages
Here we are talking about a simple informational site or a single landing page, usually built on WordPress or a ready platform (Wix, Webflow) with a customized template.
- A single landing page: roughly $150 to $400.
- A small informational site (3 to 5 pages): roughly $350 to $800.
- A WordPress site with a professional theme and light customization: roughly $500 to $1,200.
This tier suits the solo professional, the clinic, the restaurant, or the startup that needs a quick online presence on a limited budget. Expected timeline: one to three weeks.
The Mid Range: Custom Business Sites
Here custom design enters the picture (not a ready template), with more pages, a content dashboard, advanced contact forms, email integration, and search engine optimization (SEO).
- A custom business site (6 to 12 pages): roughly $1,200 to $3,500.
- A business site with a dashboard and bespoke features: roughly $2,500 to $5,000.
This is the most common tier for mid-sized companies, law and engineering firms, and brands that take their digital presence seriously. Expected timeline: three to eight weeks.
The High End: E-Commerce and Web Apps
Here the price jumps because the work becomes real programming, not just design: user accounts, shopping carts, inventory management, payment gateways, shipping integrations, and complex admin panels.
- A basic e-commerce store (limited products, simple checkout): roughly $2,500 to $6,000.
- An advanced store or a custom web app: roughly $6,000 to $15,000 and up.
Integrating a local payment gateway like OMT or Whish, or accepting payment via USDT, adds time and cost because it requires careful testing and dealing with APIs that may not be well documented. Expected timeline: two to six months.
For more on the service itself, see our web development page or browse web developers in Beirut.
What Actually Drives the Price
Page Count and Content
Every extra page means design, code, and content. The surprise is that content itself raises the price: if you ask the developer to write the copy, prepare images, or translate the site into more than one language, that is additional billable work.
Integrations and Payment Gateways
Wiring up a simple contact form is one thing; wiring up a payment gateway is another entirely. Every integration (payment, shipping, booking, CRM) adds hours of work and testing. Local payment gateways in particular tend to take longer than expected.
Custom Design vs Ready Template
A ready template saves money and time but makes your site look like thousands of others. Building from scratch gives you a unique identity but can double the cost. The decision depends on your budget and how much visual distinction matters to your brand.
Maintenance and Hosting
The price you usually hear is the build cost only. Hosting, the domain name, and the security certificate (SSL) are all extra annual expenses. And if you want a monthly maintenance contract (updates, backups, troubleshooting), budget that separately.
Why Developers Quote in USD While Clients Think in Lollars
This is a sensitive point in the Lebanese market. Developers quote in fresh dollars because their tools and costs are in dollars: hosting, software subscriptions, and backup electricity are all paid in real USD. Yet many clients still think in old numbers or confuse fresh dollars with bank dollars (lollars).
The advice for both sides: agree clearly from the start that the price is in fresh USD, and agree on the payment method, whether cash, OMT transfer, Whish, bank transfer, or USDT. Clarity prevents misunderstandings later. On a platform like Furrsati, contracts are written in USD and payments are protected by escrow, which safeguards both parties.
If you are a developer unsure how to price, read our piece on hourly vs fixed vs milestone pricing, and if you are just starting out, review pricing your first freelance project in Lebanon.
How Electricity and Internet Affect Timelines and Prices
This is something many foreign clients do not grasp, but it is a daily reality in Lebanon. The Lebanese developer works in an environment with intermittent power and internet. A generator subscription, a UPS to protect the computer, an inverter, a Starlink subscription, or a backup mobile data line are all costs the developer carries to keep the work going.
In practice, this means two things:
- Timelines may be slightly longer. A sudden outage while deploying a site or testing a payment gateway can cost hours. A serious developer adds a buffer to the timeline for exactly this reason.
- There is a hidden cost. Part of the hourly rate covers backup infrastructure. The developer who quotes far cheaper than everyone else usually has not accounted for these costs, which can show up later in quality or in missed deadlines.
When discussing the timeline, ask the developer how they handle power and internet outages. A serious answer reveals how professional they really are.
Tips for Getting an Accurate Quote
- Prepare a clear list of pages and features before asking for a price.
- Decide whether you need a design from scratch or a customized template.
- Clarify whether you have content and images ready, or need someone to prepare them.
- Ask directly: does the price include hosting, domain, and maintenance, or are those separate?
- Agree on the payment method and currency (fresh USD) from the very first conversation.
To go deeper on writing a professional quote request, see our guide on how to quote a freelance project estimate in Lebanon.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a simple website cost in Lebanon in 2026?
A landing page or small informational site ranges roughly between $150 and $800 in fresh USD, depending on the number of pages and whether the design is custom or a ready template. Prices far below that usually mean an untouched template or a service with no follow-up.
Why is an e-commerce store so much more expensive than a regular site?
Because a store needs real programming: user accounts, a cart, inventory management, and a payment gateway. Integrating a local gateway like OMT or Whish, or accepting USDT, adds significant testing time, so a store typically starts around $2,500 and climbs quickly with features.
Should I pay in fresh USD or lollars?
Most developers quote and get paid in fresh USD because their costs are in real dollars. Agree on this clearly from the start, along with the payment method (cash, OMT, Whish, bank transfer, or USDT), to avoid any misunderstanding.
Does the website price include hosting and maintenance?
Not always. The quoted price is often the build cost only. Hosting, the domain, and the SSL certificate are separate annual expenses, and a monthly maintenance contract is counted on its own. Ask clearly before you sign.
How do electricity problems affect the delivery timeline?
Power and internet outages can extend the timeline, so a serious developer adds a time buffer and invests in a generator, a UPS, and backup internet. These costs are a natural part of the price of working in Lebanon.
Join Furrsati
Whether you are a business owner looking for a reliable developer, or a developer who wants serious clients paying in fresh USD through escrow-protected contracts, Furrsati exists to make that easier. Browse the available jobs and start your next project with confidence and peace of mind.
Tags
lebanonweb developmentpricingwordpresse-commerceratesusdfreelancing
Ready to Start Freelancing?
Join Furrsati today and connect with clients who pay on time, every time.
Get Started Free