Yes — almost every UK small business needs a website in 2026. A website gives you a credible, professional online presence that you own and control, provides a destination for Google, social media, and word-of-mouth to point to, and enables you to be found by buyers who search before they buy (which is the majority of UK consumers). The alternative — relying solely on social media profiles or Google Business Profile — leaves you dependent on platforms you do not own, limits your ability to appear in search results, and signals lower professionalism to many buyer types. The cost of a first professional website (from £1,000–£1,500) is now low enough that the question is not whether to have one, but how to build the right one for your stage.
The question 'do I need a website?' has become more nuanced in recent years as social media, Google Business Profile, and AI-powered search have changed how buyers discover businesses. But the answer for the vast majority of UK small businesses remains firmly yes — for reasons that go beyond just showing up in Google.
Why a website still matters in 2026
- Buyers research online before contacting you — even referral-driven businesses lose leads to competitors with better online presence when prospects go to 'just check you out' before calling.
- AI engines cite websites, not social profiles — Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, and ChatGPT pull information from websites with structured content and schema markup. A business with no website has no presence in AI-generated responses.
- You own a website — Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn can change their algorithms, remove your profile, or simply decline in relevance. A website you own is yours permanently.
- Google Business Profile has limitations — GBP is excellent for local search and maps, but it cannot substitute for a full website with service pages, testimonials, and conversion-optimised content.
- Professional credibility — for B2B services, professional services, healthcare, legal, and financial businesses especially, a polished website is a credibility signal that social media profiles cannot replicate.
- Email at your own domain — having a professional email address (name@yourbusiness.co.uk) typically requires owning a domain, which comes with a website.
A Facebook Page is a useful supplement but a poor substitute for a website in 2026. Facebook Pages: do not appear prominently in Google search results for your business category; do not give you control over the customer journey and conversion process; do not support schema markup, structured data, or AI search visibility; and depend entirely on a platform you do not own. Some very local businesses (market stalls, community events) operate primarily through Facebook successfully — but for any business taking clients seriously and wanting to grow, a website is essential.
Businesses that can survive without a website (short term)
- Businesses in early testing phase — if you are validating whether a business idea has a market before committing to it, a landing page or social profile is sufficient for initial validation.
- Purely referral-driven sole traders — some tradespeople and local service providers build full client lists through referral alone and have minimal need for online discovery.
- Side projects and hobbies — informal income streams that are not serious business propositions.
Businesses that absolutely need a website
- Any business that wants to be found via Google search
- Professional services (legal, financial, healthcare, consultancy) — credibility and trust are paramount
- Ecommerce — you cannot sell online meaningfully without one
- B2B services — procurement and buying teams always research suppliers online before contact
- Businesses in competitive markets — if competitors have good websites, you are at a disadvantage without one
- Any new business seeking credibility in its first year
- Charities and non-profits seeking donations, volunteers, or awareness
Non-profits pay £1,000. Up to 10 pages, live in 3–4 weeks.
The minimum viable website for a new UK small business: a single-page or 3–5 page site with a clear description of what you do, who you serve, your professional credibility (experience, qualifications, testimonials), a contact form or clear contact details, and a privacy policy. This should run on your own domain, not a free subdomain (not yourname.wixsite.com or yourname.squarespace.com — these look unprofessional and harm SEO). The cost of even this minimum viable professional presence from an agency is typically £500–£1,000 — or £1,500 for a 10-page version that gives you room to grow.