Every customer asks the same thing: 'do you do X?' Your site never answers it.
A handyman's whole problem is that nobody knows everything you do. The customer has a specific task — mount a TV, fix a fence gate, patch drywall, install a ceiling fan — and they're searching that exact thing. If your site offers a wall of comma-separated services and a phone number, they can't tell if you do it, so they keep scrolling. We build handyman sites with a page for every common task, online booking, and a membership offer that turns a one-time job into a customer for years.
The handyman business runs on a single recurring frustration: the customer has one specific task in mind and can't tell from your website whether you do it. They typed 'TV mounting near me' or 'drywall repair near me,' and a homepage that lists forty services in a paragraph answers none of those searches — Google can't rank it and the customer can't find their job in it. The handymen winning the market have a real page for each common task, so the search lands exactly where it should and the answer to 'do you do X?' is the page itself.
The second opportunity most handymen leave on the table is recurring revenue. A handyman is the most repeat-able trade there is — every house generates a new small job every few months — yet most operate purely transactionally, booking each job from scratch and hoping the customer remembers them. The smart ones offer a membership or a punch-list plan: a monthly or quarterly visit that turns the honey-do list into predictable income. Add online booking and a visible insured-and-trusted signal, and a one-off TV mount becomes a five-year relationship.
The four ways handyman websites lose money
We've audited hundreds of handyman business sites. The same problems show up over and over — and every one of them costs you a customer who was ready to pay.
Your services are an unreadable wall of commas
Forty tasks crammed into one paragraph means the customer can't find theirs and Google can't rank you for any of them. The person searching 'ceiling fan installation' needs to see those exact words on a page, not buried in a list on the homepage.
No way to book, so the easy jobs go elsewhere
Small handyman jobs are low-stakes, fast decisions — exactly the ones customers want to book online without a call. If your site only offers a phone number, you lose every customer who'd have booked a Saturday slot at 9 p.m. but won't wait for a callback.
Nothing says you're insured or trustworthy
A handyman is a stranger the customer is letting into their home for a small job, and trust is the whole sale. Insured, background-checked, years in business, real reviews — if none of that is visible, you're competing on price alone against the cheapest guy with a truck.
No membership, so every job starts from zero
You're the most repeat-able trade there is and you're treating each job like the last one. With no recurring plan, you re-earn every customer from scratch instead of turning the endless honey-do list into a subscription.
The vibe we'd build for a handyman business
A handyman's whole problem is that nobody knows everything he does. The vibe: tool-belt tan, pencil-graphite grey, get-it-done orange — a site with a page for every task and a booking button that answers 'do you do X?' with 'yes, here.'
Built for how a handyman business actually wins work
A handyman website wins by answering 'do you do X?' instantly and turning the first job into the next ten. Everything we build does one or the other.
A page per common task
TV mounting, drywall repair, ceiling fans, gate and fence fixes, faucet swaps, furniture assembly — each its own rankable page that answers one specific search. That's how 'do you do X?' becomes 'yes, here's the page for exactly that.'
Online booking for the small stuff
Pick the task, pick a slot, done. Handyman jobs are low-stakes decisions customers want to book without a phone call — the business that lets them book at 9 p.m. catches the work the phone-only competitor loses.
The trust stack, up front
Insured, background-checked, years in business, and your reviews — laid out where a customer letting a stranger into their home can see it before they book. Trust is what wins this over the cheapest guy.
A membership or punch-list plan
A monthly or quarterly visit presented like a subscription, with a real price and a signup form. It turns the never-ending honey-do list into recurring revenue and makes you the household's default fix-it person.
Service-area pages across the metro
A page for every city and neighborhood you cover, so 'handyman near me' lands on a page that names their area and ranks you in the towns you actually drive to.
Clear pricing or honest ranges
Flat rates for common tasks and honest starting ranges for the rest, stated plainly. Removing the price mystery on small jobs is what converts the customer who just wanted to know roughly what it'd cost.
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.
Handyman Services 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
I do everything — how can I have a page for every single task?
You don't need one for everything, just for the dozen or so tasks people actually search by name: TV mounting, drywall repair, ceiling fans, faucet swaps, furniture assembly, gate repair. Those are the searches with real volume, and a dedicated page for each captures a job a generic services list never could. The rest stay on a well-organized capabilities page. We help you pick the dozen that earn their keep — it's the highest-leverage SEO in this trade.
Will online booking work for handyman jobs, or are they too varied to schedule?
It works for the bread-and-butter tasks, which is most of your volume. The customer picks a common task and a time window, and you confirm before the visit — so a TV mount or a furniture assembly books itself while you're on another job. For the open-ended 'come look at a list of things' jobs, the same flow captures the request and the task list up front, so you arrive prepared. Either way you stop losing the customers who won't play phone tag for a $200 job.
Is a membership plan realistic for a one-person handyman business?
It's one of the best moves a small handyman business can make. A simple quarterly-visit plan — you show up, knock out the accumulated small list, charge a flat monthly or per-visit rate — turns sporadic one-off jobs into predictable income and makes you the household's default. You stay in control of scheduling, the customer stops shopping around every time something breaks, and your calendar fills with repeat work instead of cold leads. We build the plan page and the signup so it runs without extra admin.
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 handyman business'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.
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