Web Design Toronto
Web Design Toronto — Built to Convert, Not Just Impress
Strategy-first web design for Toronto businesses. Every layout, color, and CTA is built around your goals — not just aesthetics.
Timeline
Design phase 1–2 weeks, full build 4–8 weeks total
Model
Fixed-price project
Search Intent
Toronto business owner searching for a professional web designer or web design agency.
Ideal For
What You Get
Website strategy and information architecture
High-fidelity Figma design for all key pages
Responsive design optimized for mobile, tablet, and desktop
Motion design and micro-interaction specifications
Brand alignment and typography system
Handoff to development or full-stack design-to-code delivery
Delivery Process
Strategy workshop — goals, audience, and competitor benchmarking
Site architecture and wireframe sign-off
High-fidelity Figma design with your feedback incorporated
Development-ready asset export and annotation
Launch and post-launch iteration based on heatmaps and analytics
Stack and Tools
Target Keywords
Relevant Project Signals
Next.js, custom design system
Husn Spa
Designed a premium luxury spa experience with booking-first UX that reflects the brand's in-clinic quality.
Visit live siteNext.js, enterprise component system
Visit Saudi
Led design modernization for a global tourism platform serving millions of visitors, improving engagement by 34%.
Visit live siteFAQs
How much does web design cost in Toronto?+
Professional web design in Toronto typically starts at $2,500–$4,000 for a simple service site and ranges to $15,000+ for complex multi-page builds with custom interactions. We provide fixed-price quotes after a free discovery call.
Do you offer just design, or do you also build the website?+
Both. We offer design-only engagements (Figma files for your team to build) or full design-to-code delivery where we handle design, development, and launch. Most Toronto clients prefer the full-service approach.
Will my website design be optimized for mobile?+
Always. Every design we produce is mobile-first — designed for small screens first, then adapted to tablet and desktop. With 60%+ of Toronto web traffic coming from mobile, this isn't optional.