Skip to Main Content

Weebly Website Builder Review

Well-rounded features, limited customization

3.5
Good
By Michael Muchmore
& Jordan Minor

The Bottom Line

Weebly is an easy-to-use site builder that lets you create attractive, responsive-design sites, blogs, and online stores, but it could use more themes and a better photo repository.

PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

Pros

  • Attractive, responsive-design themes
  • Full commerce options, including the ability to sell digital goods
  • Site stats included
  • Lets you switch themes without rebuilding your site
  • Unlimited data transfers with all plans
  • Excellent uptime
  • Free tier

Cons

  • Limited theme customization
  • Lacks reusable photo storage
  • No interface-wide undo feature
  • Slow-responding customer services in testing

Weebly Website Builder Specs

Free Version Offered
Unlimited Monthly Data Transfers With All Plans
Unlimited Storage With All Plans
Web Store
Blogging Tool
Download Selling
Basic Image Editing
Site Portability
Site Membership

In the world of online website builders, Weebly from Square—not to be confused with Squarespace—remains a contender. The site-creation tool impresses with a clear, simple interface that lets you easily build excellent-looking, responsive web pages. In addition, Weebly's many, attractive template designs and integrated e-commerce tools offer good site-creation flexibility, especially for mobile sites. However, Weebly has limited theme customization and lacks a universal undo button or the ability for you to reuse uploaded images. The category's Editors' Choice picks, Duda and Wix, offer greater flexibility.


Weebly's Free and Paid Plans

You can start building your Weebly site for the low, low price of your email address and password. That's right, Weebly has a free tier, unlike Squarespace. Naturally, the free option comes with a few limitations. Your site will have just 500MB of storage, a Weebly-based domain name, Square ads, and a 10MB maximum file size. On the upside, all Weebly plans come with unlimited monthly data transfers.

You Can Trust Our Reviews
Since 1982, PCMag has tested and rated thousands of products to help you make better buying decisions. Read our editorial mission & see how we test.

For $10 per month, the Personal account removes the Weebly branding and lets you connect a custom domain name, sell digital goods, and leverage a shipping calculator. At $12 per month, the Professional account adds unlimited storage, a free domain name, site search, password protection for up to 100 site members, and improved site stats. With a $26-per-month Performance account, you can sell unlimited products, receive payments through PayPal, let users leave item reviews, print shipping labels, and access priority support. If you're looking to sell products, Weebly's performance tier is the way to go.

The first choice you make when you start building with Weebly is whether you want to sell on your site. Once you've made that choice, you choose a template. Unlike Squarespace, Weebly lacks a questionnaire to help you narrow down the options or a system of tags to search through. Instead, Weebly has a few categories, such as Blog, Business, or Portfolio. With only about 100 choices, Weebly doesn't offer as many site themes as Squarespace or Editors' Choice pick Wix.

Unlike most site builders, Weebly doesn't let you preview how it looks on smartphones or tablets. On the upside, Weebly's templates sport good-looking, modern designs, and you can swap themes without needing to rebuild your site from scratch as you would with Squarespace 7.1.

Early on in the site-creation process, many website builders task you with filling out a form that contains your basic business and contact info; info that populates into your site design. Weebly, however, requires you to activate this in Settings or manually enter the business info into pages.

Weebly's basic editor interface
(Credit: Weebly)

Web Design Tools

Weebly's editor is clear and easy to read, with a grey top bar for managing pages and changing settings, such as your site's name or category. The editor's left side houses a dark grey bar with site elements; you drag and drop elements from this panel onto your site in the edit window. The panel switches function modes when you make choices—Build, Pages, Theme, Store, Apps, Settings, and Help—from a menu across the top. A large orange button tempts you to upgrade from a free account to a paid account, and a blue one publishes the site you're building.

You can add all the usual elements to your site's page, including text boxes, images, maps, spacers, and media. The latter consists of video, audio, and document files, but only the Professional, Performance, and Premium tiers can insert audio and HD video. There are also elements for feeds, forums, polls, RSVP forms, and surveys. If what you're looking for isn't available, you may find it in the Apps section—more on this below.

As with Squarespace (but unlike Wix), Weebly doesn't exactly let you just drag items anywhere you like on the page. In testing, the object we tried dragging to a spot often flew somewhere else on the page vaguely where we wanted it. When you move the mouse cursor to the right away from the toolbar, it hides to show more of the site you're designing. Premium objects' buttons have an orange lightning icon on them, and if you drag one onto your page, you get a message asking you to upgrade.

The Section element offers a way to add a content area into which you can drop more objects. A Section can be a free-form rectangle or it can use one of five layout types: Gallery, Contact, Menu, Featured, and Team. Team is the typical staff profile page you see on corporate sites, and the others are self-explanatory. You can drag the top or bottom of a Section up or down to resize it—something you surprisingly cannot do with a lot of elements, though you can use the Space element to resize areas.

The theme customization options are limited. You can change the text is certain sections—you can customize any text type's font, color, spacing, and size—and generally choose between some limited color options. Most site builders, including Squarespace, let you customize the web design template's color palette, too. The flip side of these limitations is you can change theme at any time without having to rebuild the site from scratch. At the moment, Weebly doesn't seem to have any AI tools either.


Page Management

You can add site pages from the sidebar that appears when you choose Pages from the top menu bar. We like this because it doesn't boot you from your site's preview page. It offers a choice of a standard page, blog page, store page, or external page. We also like the way clicking navigation elements in the Weebly builder takes you to the target destination. Wix makes you navigate via the sidebar. On the other hand, Wix also lets you do some cool things that aren't built into Weebly, such as animating your title text and using image carousel backgrounds.

Unfortunately, Weebly lacks an Undo feature for site changes, such as adding elements or changing the theme, let alone a full history feature like that in Wix, which lets you roll back your entire site to a previous state. However, Weebly offers Undo and Redo buttons for simple text entry, however. With Wix, you can hit Ctrl-Z to undo a box resizing, for example, and both it and Duda have permanent undo and redo buttons for everything you do in the builder.

We like how Weebly (like Wix) lets you enter text directly on the page rather than in a sidebar, something that Squarespace and a few others still make you do. But Wix also goes one better by offering right-click context menu options for replacing images and editing text. Wix even offers animation of your site objects!


Apps and Images

From the toolbar's Apps button, you can head to the App Center, where there's an array of more than 350 widgets to add to your site—some free, some with fees. These extend your site's capabilities, similar to WordPress plug-ins. When adding a FAQ app to our Weebly site, we just had to grant it access to our Weebly account, which is similar to authorizing a web app with Facebook. Once added, your apps show up under Installed Apps. Like WordPress, the quality of the apps are variable; some we tried had tutorials, while others did not.

Other available apps include Facebook Chat, Printful, and Privy, with categories for eCommerce, Marketing, or Social apps. In terms of sheer numbers, Weebly has a respectable widget selection, rivaling Wix. However, Wix's apps are better integrated and easier to navigate.

Perhaps one of Weebly's biggest drawbacks is that it doesn't provide online storage for your site images and videos so that you can reuse them. Instead, you must store the images locally, and re-upload them every time you want to use them somewhere else. Backgrounds, which appear on multiple pages, are an exception. Wix, Duda, and Squarespace offer an online repository for all your images.

Weebly has fine image-editing shops. You can adjust brightness, contrast, and color saturation, or apply over two dozen adjustable Instagram-style filters. You also have the ability to add text, as well as a linear or circular focus effect. One quibble with the last tool is that it's only a circle, making it hard to fit to a face. Squarespace and Wix offer a fuller set of photo editing capabilities, with the integrated Aviary online image editing tools.

You can upload multiple images at a time with Weebly's attractive gallery widget. It's also easy to assign an internal or external link to an image. Wix lets you access your photos from other online sources, such as Flickr and Facebook, as well as offering stock photography (as Squarespace also does). Weebly's image search lets you find images on Flickr, leaving you to determine licensing and attribution for those images. You can set these as favorites, though you can't do that for your own uploaded images.

Weebly lacks standard post templates
(Credit: Weebly)

Blogging and Publishing

Weebly's blogging interface is as straightforward as the rest of its site builder, with a New Post button appearing on the bottom of any page of the Blog type. You can drag any element from the sidebar into your blog post, but Weebly is a bit tedious here. There are no standard blog templates, so you have to drag any text, images, or galleries every time you want to use them. You can control social sharing and commenting, however, and comments are threaded and can be easily deleted.

Weebly lets you add tags to your posts, and you can save them as drafts before publishing. You can set posts to be announced on your Facebook and Twitter feeds automatically, too. Wix offers a few more blog-related widgets like tag clouds and feature posts, but Weebly does a good job of presenting the archive and categories list, as well as offering Flickr and LinkedIn badges. Both services automatically produce RSS feeds for your blogs.

A Publish button takes your Weebly site live. There's no need for a Save button, since edits are saved automatically. This contrasts with Wix, which requires you to explicitly hit save any time you want site edits to stick. Which you prefer depends on your work style. Thankfully, Weebly contrasts with some site builders, such as 1&1 MyWebsite, that publish whenever you edit, giving you no chance to change your mind. Another plus here for Weebly is that, as with Wix, you can have multiple editors working on a site. To set it up, you just send an email and specify whether your coeditor should have full Admin, Author, or Dashboard-only rights.


Making Money With Your Site

Weebly lets paid account holders add Store and Product page types with a rich set of commerce tools. You can even import products from Etsy, Shopify, or a CSV file. You can accept payments using Square and Stripe, as well as PayPal starting from Performance tier. The builder includes inventory tracking and abandoned cart notifications, the latter of which requires a top-level Performance account. Weebly—unlike Simvoly, Squarespace, and Wix—charges a 2.9 percent transaction fee (plus $0.30 per transaction) on top of what the payment processor charges.

The Store builder has all the elements you expect, including a shopping cart, sale prices, invoices, coupons, sizes, and colors. The page editor includes ecommerce elements. Like Squarespace, Weebly lets you sell digital downloads, but this requires a Personal account. Weebly lets you bulk-edit and delete products and to redesign categories. It also lets your shoppers write reviews about your products.

You can paste AdSense ads on your Weebly pages, for an additional (albeit usually meager) stream of revenue. An easy-to-use integrated setup feature lets you authorize Weebly for your AdSense account (or even create a new one).

Weebly includes an integrated newsletter email feature for paid account levels, called Promote, and an element in which site visitors can subscribe. When a user signs up, Weebly sends an email to your admin email notifying you of the new subscriber. The email marketing tool is easy to use and offers a flexible way to get the word out, even suggesting mail blasts when you have a product on sale.


Mobile Site Design and App

Weebly has mobile site-creation strategy similar to Squarespace's. It automatically generates a good-looking, responsive mobile site based on your site template. Like Duda and Wix, Weebly offers a button that takes you to mobile site editing. Weebly's responsive designs do look great on mobile phones, and can even fill the whole background with an image, but all this comes at the cost of customizability.

Weebly is ahead of most of the pack in delivering touch-friendly, drag-and-drop supporting Android and iOS apps for site building. Weebly's app even offers an associated Apple Watch app that alerts you about site traffic or commerce transactions. Jimdo has an app, too, but it's limited in the number of page elements it can add. The Wix app lets you edit ecommerce features and blog with it, but it doesn't offer site creation and design edits like Weebly's does. In any case, editing a site design on the iPad isn't ideal. For example, iOS has its own ideas about what should happen when you long-press on an image, making it hard to perform some edits.

Weebly apps give you options to expand your site
(Credit: Weebly)

Site Statistics and Mobility

Even free users get access to some site-activity stats for their Weebly sites—not the case with Wix or Virb. Free users can see page views and unique visitors for each day of the month, but upgraded accounts, starting from the Professional tier, can see search terms used to get to the site, referring sites, and top-visited pages.

A big advantage of Weebly, and one that differentiates it from nearly all other online site builders, is that you can take a site built in Weebly elsewhere for hosting. From the editor's Settings page, Weebly lets you download your site as a ZIP archive file with all of your HTML and send it via email. This means you can move the site to a standard web hosting service. This doesn't include some of the interactive features like your storefront and comments, but even this much is not possible with Squarespace or Wix. This capability is a serious differentiator, and it's worth considering if you don't want your site to be locked into one service.


Ho-Hum Customer Service

Weebly offers a full knowledge base with hundreds of articles to help you out, but if you need more, the service also has 24/7 online chat and email support. By default, you're routed to an online bot that'll do its best to forward you towards a specific article. The Customer Success Team is available everyday via email or chat from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. EDT. Unfortunately, it took 30 minutes for a representative to respond to our query. By then, we were actually working in another tab and missed the response. We understand why they want you to use the bot.


Top-Tier Uptime

Website uptime is one of the most important aspects of a hosting service. If your site is down, clients or customers will be unable to find you or access your products or services.

We used a website-monitoring tool to track our Weebly-hosted test site's uptime over a 14-day period. Every 15 minutes, the tool pings our website and fires off an email if it is unable to contact the site for at least 1 minute. The testing data reveals that Weebly is remarkably stable; in fact, it didn't go down once in the two-week testing period. So, you can trust Weebly to act as a foundation for your website.

5 Things You Need to Know About Web Hosting
PCMag Logo 5 Things You Need to Know About Web Hosting

Weebly Is Worth Considering

Apart from its lack of sitewide undo functionality and photo storage, Weebly remains one of the easiest site builders to use. It offers many free options, and is one of the few services we've reviewed that let you export standard site code. The responsive designs look great, but they limit design customizability. Our Editors' Choice picks, Duda and Wix, edge it out because they are more intuitive and contain more features.

Mike Williams also contributed to this review.

Weebly Website Builder
3.5
Pros
  • Attractive, responsive-design themes
  • Full commerce options, including the ability to sell digital goods
  • Site stats included
  • Lets you switch themes without rebuilding your site
  • Unlimited data transfers with all plans
  • Excellent uptime
  • Free tier
View More
Cons
  • Limited theme customization
  • Lacks reusable photo storage
  • No interface-wide undo feature
  • Slow-responding customer services in testing
View More
The Bottom Line

Weebly is an easy-to-use site builder that lets you create attractive, responsive-design sites, blogs, and online stores, but it could use more themes and a better photo repository.

Like What You're Reading?

Sign up for Lab Report to get the latest reviews and top product advice delivered right to your inbox.

This newsletter may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. Subscribing to a newsletter indicates your consent to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe from the newsletters at any time.


Thanks for signing up!

Your subscription has been confirmed. Keep an eye on your inbox!

Sign up for other newsletters

TRENDING

About Michael Muchmore

Lead Software Analyst

PC hardware is nice, but it’s not much use without innovative software. I’ve been reviewing software for PCMag since 2008, and I still get a kick out of seeing what's new in video and photo editing software, and how operating systems change over time. I was privileged to byline the cover story of the last print issue of PC Magazine, the Windows 7 review, and I’ve witnessed every Microsoft win and misstep up to the latest Windows 11.

Prior to my current role, I covered software and apps for ExtremeTech, and before that I headed up PCMag’s enterprise software team, but I’m happy to be back in the more accessible realm of consumer software. I’ve attended trade shows of Microsoft, Google, and Apple and written about all of them and their products.

I’m an avid bird photographer and traveler—I’ve been to 40 countries, many with great birds! Because I’m also a classical fan and former performer, I’ve reviewed streaming services that emphasize classical music.

Read Michael's full bio

Read the latest from Michael Muchmore

About Jordan Minor

Senior Analyst, Software

In 2013, I started my Ziff Davis career as an intern on PCMag's Software team. Now, I’m an Analyst on the Apps and Gaming team, and I really just want to use my fancy Northwestern University journalism degree to write about video games. I host The Pop-Off, PCMag's video game show. I was previously the Senior Editor for Geek.com. I’ve also written for The A.V. Club, Kotaku, and Paste Magazine. I’m the author of a video game history book, Video Game of the Year, and the reason why everything you know about Street Sharks is a lie.

Read Jordan's full bio

Read the latest from Jordan Minor

Weebly Website Builder Start for Free at Weebly
Check Price