FastWeb

FAQs

Frequently asked questions.

Everything you need to know about working with FastWebWorks.

FAQ 1

How much does a website cost?

Open

Every project is unique. We quote based on the goals, timeline, and features you actually need. Starter sites begin around $1,500, while larger custom builds and application-style projects scale from there.

FAQ 2

How long does it take to build a website?

Open

Most websites take 2 to 6 weeks depending on complexity. A focused landing page can move much faster, while larger systems, migrations, and content-heavy builds take longer.

FAQ 3

Do you offer ongoing maintenance?

Open

Yes. Ongoing maintenance plans start at $99 per month and can include updates, security monitoring, backups, performance tuning, and priority support.

FAQ 4

Can you help with SEO?

Open

Absolutely. Technical SEO is part of how FastWebWorks builds from the start, and dedicated support can also include keyword planning, content structure, local SEO, and continuous optimization.

FAQ 5

What technologies do you use?

Open

The stack depends on the project, but the focus is always modern, proven tooling that stays fast and maintainable. That usually means frameworks like React and Next.js, TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, and backend services chosen for reliability and scalability.

FAQ 6

Do you work with clients outside Los Angeles?

Open

Yes. FastWebWorks is based in Los Angeles and works with clients remotely as well. Discovery, reviews, and delivery can all run smoothly over video, email, and shared systems.

FAQ 7

What is the payment structure?

Open

Most projects begin with a 50% deposit and finish with the remaining balance on completion. Larger engagements can be split into milestone-based payments.

FAQ 8

Do you provide hosting?

Open

FastWebWorks can recommend, configure, and launch on hosting that fits the project. The goal is always a fast, secure setup that can scale cleanly later.

Still have questions?

If your project has edge cases, deadlines, migrations, or a more complex stack, the fastest move is still a direct conversation.