Handymen are losing jobs to Thumbtack, TaskRabbit, and Angi because their websites look like they were built in 2012. The homeowner doesn’t want to trust “Bob’s Handyman Service” when the site has three stock photos and a Gmail contact address.
A good handyman website fixes that in under 10 seconds. Here’s what it takes.
1. Transparent pricing upfront
Handymen compete on price way more than other trades. Homeowners compare you to Thumbtack quotes before they call. If your site doesn’t show pricing, they assume it’s too expensive and move on. Post your hourly rate, minimum charge, and common job pricing (mount a TV: $80, assemble furniture: $60/hr, hang a door: $120-$180). Specificity wins jobs.
2. A booking form that doesn’t suck
Most handyman sites have a 12-field contact form that asks for home address before giving any info. Kill it. Replace with a short 3-field form: name, phone, what you need help with. Booking should take 15 seconds, not 15 minutes.
3. Real job photos, not stock
A homeowner hiring a handyman is worried about three things: Will you show up? Will you do quality work? Will you overcharge? Real photos of finished jobs — the deck you rebuilt, the bathroom tile you replaced, the shelves you hung — kill all three fears at once. Stock photos of men with tool belts do the opposite.
4. Service list, not a “we do everything” page
“We do it all” is the handyman version of saying nothing. Homeowners search for specific tasks: “TV mounting,” “furniture assembly,” “drywall repair,” “deck pressure washing.” Build a clear service list with each of your top 10-15 jobs named explicitly. Each one should be a searchable phrase that ranks locally.
5. Service area clearly stated
Handymen serve small radiuses. A homeowner 20 minutes away needs to know within 3 seconds if you cover their neighborhood. List specific towns, neighborhoods, or zip codes. Not “serving the greater metro area.”
6. Insured and bonded, visible everywhere
This is the #1 thing that separates a real handyman from a Craigslist listing. If you’re licensed, insured, and bonded, say so on every page. Put the badge in the header. This alone justifies charging 30% more than uninsured competitors.
7. Response time promise
“Get a quote within 2 hours” or “Same-day scheduling for most jobs” on the homepage. Handyman buyers are often impatient — broken garbage disposal, furniture that needs assembling before guests arrive, a shelf that fell. Fast response promises close leads that would otherwise go to the next listing.
8. Reviews pulled live from Google
Handymen live or die by reviews. A homeowner hiring a stranger to work in their house checks reviews before anything else. Pull them live from your Google Business Profile so they stay current. Written testimonials look staged.
Handyman Website Design Across the U.S.
We build handyman websites for trade businesses nationwide. Here’s where we’ve worked with handymen recently:
Centennial, Colorado — A booming Denver-metro suburb where handymen are competing with large home services franchises. Local handymen here win by emphasizing personal service and neighborhood familiarity in their websites.
Tempe, Arizona — Phoenix-area handymen face year-round demand thanks to AC repair, sun damage, and remodeling. The best Tempe handyman sites lead with fast response times and emergency capability.
Orange County, California — A premium market where handymen need polished websites to match the area’s design standards. Trust signals (license, insurance, bonding) are non-negotiable.
Colorado Springs, Colorado — A growing market where handymen serve both residential and military housing communities. Specific service area pages perform well here.
Denver, Colorado — The Denver metro is one of the most competitive handyman markets in the U.S. Local SEO and reviews matter more here than almost anywhere.
Whether you’re a solo operator in Colorado, a growing handyman business in Arizona, or somewhere else entirely, the principles in this guide apply nationally. We’ve built handyman websites in 30+ U.S. cities and the patterns are consistent: real photos, transparent pricing, local SEO done right.
Specific to your city? Book a free 15-minute call and we’ll show you what’s working for handyman businesses in your market.
What a Handyman Website Should Cost
Under $500 is a DIY placeholder. Fine if you’re brand new, but you’ll outgrow it in 6 months.
$900 to $1,500 is where most established handymen should be. Professional site, fast load, built for mobile, booking form that works.
$3,000+ is rarely worth it for a solo handyman. The extra budget pays for agency process and account management, not better design.
Handyman templates ($50-$300) are a middle ground. The problem: when 50 other handymen in your city use the same template, you blend in instead of standing out. A $900 custom site is usually a better bet than a $150 template.
Journela builds handyman websites for $900 flat, delivered in 5 days. You own the domain, hosting, and every file.



