Quick answer
To choose the right Utah web designer: (1) verify live, clickable portfolio work, (2) confirm you own the site, domain, and key accounts, (3) get written pricing with deliverables, (4) check references from similar businesses, and (5) avoid endless “website subscription” plans with no buy-out. A competent designer welcomes those questions.
The Utah market in 2026
There are hundreds of freelancers and small agencies between Salt Lake City, Utah County, St. George, Logan, Ogden, and Park City calling themselves web designers. Competition keeps pricing reasonable, but quality varies enormously — the difference between a site that generates leads and one that sits dead is often who you hired, not what you paid.
Fifteen red flags
- No live URLs — only mockups or screenshots.
- Won’t name the platform — often means proprietary lock-in.
- Subscription-only pricing with no path to ownership.
- You don’t own domain, hosting, or deliverables.
- Vague “it depends” quotes that never become written scope.
- No contract — scope, timeline, payment, and cancellation must be written.
- Promises #1 Google rankings — legitimate SEO does not guarantee positions.
- Their own site is slow, broken, or years stale.
- Every client site looks identical — template factory, not custom design.
- Instant quotes with zero discovery about your business.
- Cannot explain basic SEO — meta tags, schema, performance, mobile.
- No post-launch plan — updates, security, support.
- No references you can actually talk to.
- Fake urgency — “this price expires Friday” for a custom build.
- “Agency” prices that are too good — often overseas template resale.
Twelve green flags
- 10+ recent live projects, ideally in your industry.
- Clear platform recommendation with reasoning.
- Transparent pricing bands even before full discovery.
- Written proposal with deliverables, timeline, payment schedule.
- You own everything at handover — explicit in writing.
- Defined process — discovery → design → build → content → launch → support.
- Talks SEO and conversion, not only visuals.
- Clear maintenance options — retainer, hourly, or documented self-service.
- Asks hard questions about customers, competitors, and goals.
- Utah market awareness — a plus, not mandatory, but valuable.
- Realistic timelines — professional sites usually weeks, not overnight miracles.
- Says “we’re not a fit” when budget or scope doesn’t match — a trust signal.
Questions to ask before hiring
Ask every candidate the same set: live portfolio links, platform and why, ownership of domain/hosting/files, what happens if you switch developers, what is included vs extra, revision rounds, timeline, SEO included, mobile performance targets, who you communicate with, and two reference calls.
Before you sign any proposal
If you want a second opinion before signing, compare your quote against our Utah website cost guide and website mistakes guide. If you want us to review your scope and timeline, request a pricing walkthrough.
Price vs. quality
| Quote range | What it usually means |
|---|---|
| Under $1,000 | DIY help or template-level work — verify ownership and scope. |
| $1,000 – $2,500 | Template customization — fine for simple needs. |
| $2,500 – $6,000 | Sweet spot for many Utah small businesses — custom marketing sites. |
| $6,000 – $12,000 | Premium design, deeper SEO, photography, integrations. |
| $12,000 – $25,000+ | Agency depth or real e-commerce / application work. |
Compare scope, not sticker price — a higher quote that includes copy, SEO, and performance work may beat a cheaper hollow build.
The bottom line
Choosing well is about avoiding expensive mistakes. Ask consistent questions, talk to references, and trust communication quality during sales — it predicts the project.
Sources
- Federal Trade Commission: hiring and contract warning signs
- Google Search Central: creating helpful, reliable people-first content
- Utah Division of Corporations business search