You've decided it's time to get your business online. Good. The next question is the one that traps almost everyone: do you need a website or just a booking page?
It sounds like a small distinction. It isn't. Picking wrong costs you either way — too much site for the customers you actually have, or too little page to convert the ones who find you. So before you sign up for Wix, before you embed Calendly into a Squarespace template, before you spend a weekend on Carrd, walk this decision tree.
Last updated: May 2026.
The Honest Question First: What Are You Actually Selling?
A website and a booking page do different jobs.
A website is a collection of pages designed to inform — home, about, services, blog, gallery, contact. Wix, Squarespace, and Carrd build this kind of thing. The goal is for a visitor to learn enough about you to take some action later (call, email, fill out a form, follow you).
A booking page is a single page designed to convert. EchoSlam, Setmore, and Acuity build this kind of thing. The goal is for a visitor to leave with an appointment in their calendar before they close the tab.
If you sell your time — appointments, sessions, classes, consults — your job is conversion, not information. That's the entire decision tree compressed into one line, and for 80% of service businesses, it's the only line you need.
But let's walk it properly.
The Decision Tree
Question 1: Do you take appointments?
If yes → you need a booking page. The only question left is whether you also need a website on top of it.
If no, and you sell physical products instead → you need an online store, not the kind of site this article is about. Stop reading and look at Shopify.
If no, and you sell consulting or coaching by retainer instead of by session → you need a one-page site that builds credibility and captures emails. Carrd or Squarespace, not a booking page. Stop reading.
For everyone else — and that's most of you — keep going.
Question 2: How often will you publish new content?
If you'll write a blog post or shoot a video every week → you need a full website. Wix, Squarespace, or WordPress. A booking page doesn't have a CMS for serial content, and trying to bolt one on is more work than just using the right tool.
If you'll publish maybe once a quarter, or never → a booking page is enough. The "blog" tab on most service-business websites has three posts from 2022 and an embarrassing "watch this space" placeholder. Don't build infrastructure for content you won't make.
Question 3: How many services and locations do you have?
If you're a solo operator with under ten services in one city → a booking page covers you. EchoSlam, Setmore, and Acuity all handle services lists, photos, and prices natively.
If you're a multi-practitioner team with branches in three cities and want a landing page per location → you've crossed into website territory. Wix Bookings or Squarespace Scheduling, or a website + a booking tool stacked together.
Question 4: How fast do you need to be live?
If "this week" → booking page, every time. The fastest Wix or Squarespace site takes a weekend; the slowest takes a freelancer six weeks. EchoSlam, Setmore, and Acuity get you a working URL in under an hour.
If "this quarter, I want it perfect" → fine, go build the website. Just understand the opportunity cost is real customers who didn't book between now and launch.
If most of your answers point at booking page — congratulations, you're done. The rest of this guide compares the actual tools.
Pricing Comparison: Booking Pages vs Full Websites
| Tool | Monthly Cost | What You Get | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| EchoSlam | ~$9 | Booking page, branded URL, services list, payments, calendar sync, FAQ schema | Solo service businesses who want one URL to do everything |
| Setmore | Free / $5+ | Booking calendar, basic page, payment add-on | Tightest budgets, simple service menu |
| Acuity | $20+ | Booking, intake forms, packages, classes, gift certificates | Established practices with complex scheduling |
| Carrd | $19/year | One-page site, no native booking (embed Calendly) | Portfolios and one-pagers, not appointment businesses |
| Wix | $17+ | Full site, Wix Bookings add-on, blog, store | Multi-page businesses publishing content |
| Squarespace | $23+ | Full site, Acuity-powered scheduling, blog, store | Visual brands who need a polished multi-page site |
Prices are list rates as of May 2026 and shift often — always check current pricing before you commit annually.
When a Website Wins
There are real cases where Wix or Squarespace is the right answer:
A wellness clinic with five practitioners, each with their own bio, photo, services, and reviews → a multi-page website lets each practitioner have a real landing page that Google can rank separately.
A photographer who books shoots and sells prints → Squarespace handles the dual model better than a booking page.
A coach with a serious content strategy — weekly newsletters, podcast notes, a free guide — needs a CMS. Wix and Squarespace handle that. EchoSlam and Setmore don't.
A business with strong brand-design ambitions that go beyond "logo, photos, services list" → Squarespace and Carrd will out-design any booking page.
If none of those describe you, the booking page wins.
When a Booking Page Wins
For the majority of solo service businesses, the booking page is the right call:
You're one person, or a small team in one location. You have under ten services. You want customers to book and pay in the same flow. You'll publish a blog post roughly never. You'd like to be live this week, not this quarter.
That's the profile. If it fits, the question "do you need a website or just a booking page" has already answered itself.
The Common Mistake: Buying Both
The trap that costs service businesses the most money in 2026 is buying both — a Wix site for the homepage and a Calendly account for the bookings and a Stripe account for payments — and then maintaining three tools that mostly do the same job.
A single booking page from EchoSlam, Setmore, or Acuity replaces that whole stack. One URL, one login, one bill. The website is a nice-to-have that turns into a maintenance tax once the novelty wears off.
If you're truly torn, do this: launch the booking page now, this week, and revisit the "should I also build a website?" question in three months. By then you'll have real customers, real questions they keep asking, and real data on whether a content strategy would actually pay off. Most of you will discover the booking page was enough.
The Bottom Line
The question isn't really "do you need a website or just a booking page." It's "are you informing visitors or converting them?" If you sell appointments, you're converting them, and a booking page does that job faster, cheaper, and with less ongoing maintenance than a full website. Wix and Squarespace are excellent tools for the businesses that genuinely need them — and overkill for everyone else.
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