Why Squarespace Is Bad (For Businesses That Actually Want to Grow)
Why Squarespace Is Bad (But Also… Kinda Cute?)
Look, Squarespace is like your high school sweetheart. Fun, easy, and looks great in pictures. But would you build a life with them? Would you scale your business with them?
Let’s get into why Squarespace is bad—not because we’re haters, but because we want your business to grow up, glow up, and not stay stuck in “template land” forever.

1. It’s Not Really Yours (Surprise!)
When you build on Squarespace, you don’t own your website in the traditional sense. It’s more like you’re renting space in their gated, pastel-colored condo complex. If Squarespace goes down, so do you. If they change their pricing or features? Too bad.
Want to move your site to another platform? Good luck exporting your content without a wrench and a few tears.
Think of it like Airbnb vs. owning your own house. One looks great in photos. The other actually builds equity.
2. “Easy” Isn’t the Same as “Effective”
Yes, you can drag and drop things. Yes, there are pre-made templates. But then what? You still need:
- Good copy
- Professional images
- Calls-to-action
- Search engine optimization
- A site that actually loads fast on mobile
- Analytics setup
- Domain configuration
- Email forms that actually go somewhere
Squarespace doesn’t do any of that for you. It just hands you the keys and says, “Go wild!”—while you build a Franken-site at 2am wondering why your contact form isn’t working.
3. Maintenance? Hope You Brought Your Toolbox
You think you won’t need to touch your site again once it’s launched? That’s adorable. What happens when:
- You want to add a new service?
- Your hours change?
- Google updates their algorithm?
- You realize your homepage says “2022 Special Offer” in 2025?
DIY means you’re the developer now. Welcome to the club—you didn’t want to join.
4. All Squarespace Sites Kinda Look… The Same
No shade (okay, a little shade), but once you’ve seen one Squarespace site, you’ve kinda seen them all. There are only so many ways to rearrange beige blocks and floating text.
Even the “customizable” templates? Yeah—customizable like ordering extra guac at Chipotle. Sure, it’s a nice touch, but it’s still the same bowl.
If you’re a brand trying to stand out in a competitive market (aka Earth in 2025), blending in isn’t the move.
5. It Can’t Grow With You
Squarespace is fine if you’re:
- A solo yoga instructor
- A food blogger with two recipes and a dream
- A dog named Charlie with an online merch shop
But if you’re building:
- A full-blown service business
- A multi-location brand
- A content hub
- Anything that needs third-party integrations, CRM, automations, gated content, dynamic pages…
🚨 You will hit a wall. 🚨
And when you do, you’ll either rebuild from scratch or duct tape plugins and third-party tools together until it becomes a tech Frankenstein you resent.
6. That Monthly Fee Adds Up
People say, “It’s just $16/month!”
Right. And Adobe is “just” $19.99/month. Canva is “just” $12.99/month. ChatGPT is “just” $20/month. Google Workspace? Shopify? Your calendar tool? CRM?
By the time you realize it, you’re paying more than a car lease to run your ‘affordable’ DIY business stack. And you’re still doing all the work.
So, Is Squarespace Ever a Good Idea?
Sure! Squarespace is great if you:
✅ Want to test a business idea
✅ Need something up today
✅ Have zero budget and high patience
✅ Love tinkering with design at 1am
✅ Don’t mind rebuilding later when things get real
But if you’re past that “side hustle in pajamas” phase, it’s time to think bigger.
Let’s Be Real: Your Business Deserves Better
You’ve worked too hard to hand your digital storefront over to a WYSIWYG drag-and-drop box.
At Everyday Web, we work with small businesses that are ready to look legit, convert better, and scale without learning HTML at night. Starting at just $1,000, we build real websites—built to grow with you, not hold you back.
Ditch the builder. Build a business.
👉 Explore Our Website Packages
👉 Get a Free Consultation