

These metrics are used for tracking how visitors convert on your goals (example: filling out a contact form, booking a service, joining a mailing list). The Business plan includes conversion metrics in your Squarespace’s analytics. The Business plan lets you use 3rd party tools like Gmail, Opentable, Chownow, Acuity Scheduling and Mailchimp. If you’re doing any sales volume, you’ll want to upgrade to Squarespace’s ecommerce plans (which have no transaction fees). This may be useful if you’d like to just try out ecommerce. The Business plan lets you sell products and accept donations- though there is a 3% transaction fee. Here are the four reasons you’d want to upgrade to the Business plan: 1. The Personal plan is Squarespace’s cheapest plan, and it will be good enough for most websites.
#Squarespace versus wix pricing domaine update#
We’ll update this article if the new plans are made public/available to everyone. But, as it stands, you are likely to see the four plans we discussed above. Squarespace seems to be testing a new pricing model with only three plans: Personal ($16/month), Professional ($27/month), and Premium ($59/month). Here’s what you would save if you paid for the Personal or Business plan annually instead of monthly: Plan Squarespace's four plans Want to save money? Choose an annual plan. I explain the differences here.Įcommerce websites should choose either Basic Commerce or Advanced Commerce. Most websites should choose either the Personal or Business plan.
