Your seams are invisible. So is your website.
Drywall runs in two lanes that barely speak: builder contract work won on capacity and bid speed, and homeowner repairs — the patches, ceilings, and texture matches that half the metro is searching for and most drywall companies refuse. The contractor who takes the small work, publishes a clear minimum, and proves the patch disappears owns an underserved search category almost by default. We rebuild drywall sites to run both lanes cleanly — and to make the finish work the proof.
Drywall has a strange market failure working in its favor: 'drywall repair near me' is one of the highest-demand home-service searches in any metro, and most drywall companies refuse the work. They're built for hanging whole houses on builder contracts, so a doorknob hole or a water-stained ceiling isn't worth a truck roll — which means the contractor who publishes a clear repair minimum and books small jobs efficiently owns an underserved search category almost by default. The economics are better than they look: a $275 to $600 patch visit stacks several to a day, generates the review volume big jobs never produce, and every satisfied patch customer knows someone finishing a basement.
The homeowner's real fear in drywall is the seam that shows. Anyone can screw a board to a stud; matching a 1990s orange-peel texture so the patch disappears is the craft, and customers know the difference because they're living with someone's bad patch right now. A gallery of repairs you genuinely can't find — before, after, same angle — sells better than any paragraph. Meanwhile the other lane, builder and GC work, is won on completely different terms: crew capacity, schedule reliability, level-5 finish capability, and clean bid turnarounds. A drywall site that separates the two lanes cleanly — homeowner repairs here, contract hang-and-finish there — speaks to both and embarrasses neither.
The four ways drywall websites lose money
We've audited hundreds of drywall contractor sites. The same problems show up over and over — and every one of them costs you a customer who was ready to pay.
'No job too small' with no way to book one
Or worse, the unspoken opposite — a site so clearly built for builders that the homeowner with a ceiling stain assumes you'd laugh at the call. Either way the metro's biggest drywall search category walks past you to the handyman who answered.
No proof the patch disappears
Texture matching is the entire anxiety of the repair customer — they're living with a visible patch right now and dreading another one. A site with no same-angle before-and-afters of invisible repairs is asking for faith in the exact place the customer has been burned.
No minimum, no pricing, no expectations
The repair customer's real question is 'will you even come, and what does small work cost?' A published service minimum — most repair visits start around $275–$400 — answers it, filters the truly tiny jobs, and books the rest. Silence just reads as 'we don't want your call.'
The builder lane and the homeowner lane mashed together
A GC vetting hang-and-finish subs wants crew counts, schedule reliability, and finish levels; a homeowner wants the hole gone by Friday. One page trying to talk to both convinces neither — and the GC quietly concludes you're a patch outfit while the homeowner concludes you're too big to call.
The vibe we'd build for a drywall contractor
Drywall's product is a surface you can't see, so the design is built on light: raking golden window light across a flawless wall, gypsum white against steel blue-gray. Clean geometry, generous whitespace, seams nowhere — a site whose finish quality makes the argument the trade can't photograph any other way.
Built for how a drywall contractor actually wins work
A drywall website wins by welcoming the small job, proving the finish, and keeping the contract lane clean and separate. We build all three.
A repair lane with the minimum published
Patches, holes, cracks, ceiling repairs — with the service minimum stated plainly and a fast booking path. Publishing the number most companies hide is what converts the metro's biggest drywall search into your fullest route days.
A texture-match proof gallery
Same-angle befores and afters of repairs that genuinely disappeared — orange peel, knockdown, skip trowel, smooth. This is the whole sale for the repair customer, and almost no competitor can show it because almost no competitor photographs it.
A water-damage repair page
Post-leak ceilings and walls are urgent, insurance-adjacent, and constantly searched. A dedicated page — including how you coordinate after the plumber or the restoration crew — captures the most motivated repair customer there is and builds the referral pipeline from adjacent trades.
A separate builder and GC lane
Crew capacity, schedule reliability, finish levels through Level 5, stocking, and bid turnaround — the contract customer's language, on its own page. It keeps the volume lane open without making the homeowner feel too small to call.
Ceiling and specialty pages
Popcorn ceiling removal, ceiling repair, skim coating, garage and basement finishing — each its own rankable page with honest ranges. Popcorn removal alone, typically $900–$2,500 a room area, is a search category with almost no committed local competition.
Reviews engineered from repair volume
Small jobs produce reviews at a rate whole-house contracts never will — dozens of chances a month instead of a handful a year. The site and follow-up flow are built to harvest that volume, because the review count is what makes every other page believable.
Old site gone, new site live, in 7 days.
Audit & quote
60-minute call. We tell you exactly what's broken and lock a fixed price before you hang up.
Design + copy + SEO
You watch the real site take shape in the browser. We write the copy and wire the schema.
You review, we polish
One round of revisions, applied the same day. No tickets. No project-manager relay.
Launch — you keep the keys
Your domain, your hosting, your code. No platform lock-in, no retainer, no hostage situation.
Drywall Contractors websites, built market by market
Everything happens over a call and a shared screen — no office visit, no markup for geography. These are the markets we focus on:
Before you call
Is small repair work actually worth building the website around?
It's worth building a lane around, and the math says so. Repair visits stack three to five a day at $275–$600 each, the demand is enormous and largely unserved, and the review volume compounds — fifty patch reviews make your whole company more hireable, including to GCs. And repair customers renovate: today's ceiling stain is next year's basement build-out. You're not choosing small work over big work; you're using the small work everyone else refuses to feed both.
Won't publishing a minimum scare off customers?
It filters exactly the calls you want filtered. The customer with a $40 expectation was never going to book; the one with a real repair sees a $300 minimum and books with relief, because the alternative was mystery pricing and a contractor who might not show. The minimum is a promise dressed as a price: it says small work is genuinely welcome here, which is the message the whole repair market is waiting to hear.
Most of our revenue is hanging houses for two builders. Why does the public site matter?
Two reasons, one defensive and one offensive. Defensive: two builders is a fragile book of business, and when one slows down — and they do — the repair lane is the flywheel that keeps crews busy without racing to the bottom on bid work. Offensive: GCs vet subs online like everyone else now, and a site showing real crews, finish-level capability, and schedule reliability wins the third and fourth builder. The site isn't instead of the contract lane — it's how the contract lane grows.
What does it cost, exactly?
Three fixed packages: $1,500 for a 5-page rebuild with full SEO in 7 days, $3,800 for up to 20 pages with a blog, lead forms and integrations in 14 days, and $8,000 for 100+ page builds with a custom hero video, calculators and lead funnels. The quote we send before you sign is the number on the final invoice — no scope-creep charges, ever.
Ready to bulldoze your drywall contractor's website?
Tell us your domain. We'll send a brutal audit of what's broken, with a fixed quote to fix it. No sales call required.
Got it. Your teardown is on its way to — we reply within 24 hours.