The honest answer is: it depends. But thatâs not helpful, so let me give you actual numbers from the Rwandan market in 2026.
Option 1: Hire a freelance developer
A freelance web developer in Kigali typically charges between RWF 300,000 and RWF 2,000,000 for a business website. Thatâs a one-time cost for design and development. A simple 3-5 page site sits at the lower end. An e-commerce site with product management, payment integration, and multi-language support pushes toward the higher end.
Whatâs not included in that price: hosting (RWF 10,000â50,000/month), domain registration (RWF 15,000â30,000/year), SSL certificate (often free), ongoing maintenance, and content updates. When a freelancer finishes the project and moves on, youâre on your own for updates. Want to change a photo? Add a new service? Fix something that broke? Thatâs either another invoice or learning to do it yourself.
Option 2: Web agency
Local agencies in Kigali charge RWF 500,000 to RWF 5,000,000+, depending on scope. You get more structure: a project manager, designer, developer, possibly content writing. The result is typically more polished. But the dynamic is the same â itâs a project, not a relationship. After launch, maintenance is billed separately.
Option 3: Monthly subscription service
This is the newer model and itâs gaining traction in Rwanda. Instead of a big upfront payment, you pay a monthly fee that covers design, hosting, domain, maintenance, and ongoing updates. Think of it like renting vs buying.
Kisimenti, for example, offers packages starting from about RWF 30,000/month that include a custom-designed website, hosting, domain, and content updates. No upfront cost. Cancel anytime. For businesses that want to get online quickly without a large capital outlay, this is often the most accessible route.
Other platforms like Wix and Squarespace offer self-service tools from about RWF 20,000/month, but youâre designing it yourself â which means it looks like you designed it yourself.
Option 4: DIY (free-ish)
You can build a website for nearly free using WordPress.com, Google Sites, or Carrd. These tools cost RWF 0â10,000/month. The tradeoff: they look generic, customisation is limited, and your URL will either be yourbusiness.wordpress.com (not great) or require a separate domain purchase.
For a personal portfolio or side project, DIY is fine. For a business that wants to compete, itâs usually not enough.
Hidden costs to budget for
- Domain renewal: RWF 15,000â30,000/year, every year
- Hosting: RWF 10,000â50,000/month if not included
- Content updates: If you canât edit the site yourself, every change is a billable request
- Photography: Stock photos look fake. Budget for a photographer or learn phone photography
- Copywriting: Someone has to write the text. Bad copy on a beautiful site is still bad copy
Which option is right for you?
Tight budget, just need to exist online: DIY or a basic subscription service (RWF 20,000â30,000/month)
Want quality without upfront cost: Monthly subscription service with professional design (RWF 30,000â80,000/month)
Have capital and want full control: Freelancer or agency (RWF 300,000â2,000,000 upfront + monthly hosting)
Enterprise/complex needs: Agency with ongoing retainer (RWF 2,000,000+ upfront + RWF 100,000+/month)
The real question isnât how much a website costs. Itâs how much not having one costs. At even RWF 30,000 a month, a website that brings in one extra client per month pays for itself many times over.