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August 27, 2026

Framer Pricing Explained (2026): Free vs Basic vs Pro

A plain-language breakdown of Framer's 2026 pricing — Free, Basic, Pro, and Enterprise plans, editor costs, CMS limits, and which plan actually fits your site.

Framer's pricing page is genuinely clear once you know what to look for, but the plan names alone (Free, Basic, Pro, Enterprise) don't tell you which one actually fits your site. This breakdown walks through what each plan includes as of Framer's current official pricing page, plus the add-on costs that catch people off guard. Prices and limits change — Framer has adjusted plans before and will again — so treat the numbers here as a snapshot and always confirm on the official page before you commit.

The four plans, in plain language

Framer's pricing runs in four tiers: Free, Basic, Pro, and Enterprise. Each one is built around a different stage of site — from personal experimentation through to mission-critical business infrastructure.

Free: $0

The Free plan is Framer's on-ramp. You get:

  • A free Framer subdomain (no custom domain support)
  • A limited daily credit allotment for AI features, capped at roughly 1,000 credits per month for workspaces with no active subscription
  • 1 GB of bandwidth
  • Access to design tools and CMS collections for building and previewing, with up to 1,000 pages and one free locale to try
  • A "Made in Framer" banner displayed when published

This plan is genuinely useful for learning Framer, prototyping an idea, or building templates — but it's not meant for a live business site, mainly because you can't connect a custom domain without upgrading. Framer's own guidance describes Free as ideal for non-commercial use.

Basic: $10/month

Basic is the plan most personal sites, freelancers, and small studios should look at first. It includes:

  • A free custom domain (including a free .com on yearly billing, per Framer's current offer)
  • 2 CMS collections and 1,000 CMS items
  • 50 GB of monthly bandwidth
  • Up to 30 custom-designed site pages
  • Built-in SEO tooling
  • Localization available as an add-on
  • Collaboration with one additional editor included

Framer's own plan guidance is direct about this tier: Basic suits individuals or small teams building personal sites, where the content demands are modest and a single collaborator is usually enough.

Pro: $30/month

Pro is where things scale for a growing business. On top of everything in Basic, Pro adds:

  • 10 CMS collections and 2,500 CMS items (extendable via add-ons up to 40 collections and 40,000 items)
  • 100 GB of monthly bandwidth (extendable up to 2 TB via add-on)
  • Up to 150 site pages (extendable up to 700 via add-on)
  • Site redirects, so you can restructure URLs without losing search rankings
  • A staging environment to test changes before they go live
  • Branching with previews, so you can explore larger changes on a separate branch and review them before applying to your main site
  • Advanced hosting and A/B testing available as add-ons
  • A larger monthly AI credit pool than Basic

Framer positions Pro for teams at agencies, startups, and scale-ups running their full marketing stack on the platform — and the feature set backs that up. Staging and branching in particular matter once more than one person is touching a live site regularly; without them, every edit is a live edit, which gets risky fast as a team grows.

Enterprise: custom pricing

Enterprise is built for mission-critical sites with requirements that don't fit a standard plan: custom limits, unlimited editors, enterprise-grade security, uptime guarantees, and support for SCIM and SSO. Pricing is custom and requires contacting Framer directly through a trial request. If your organization has procurement, compliance, or scale requirements beyond what Pro offers, this is the tier to talk to Framer about directly rather than trying to approximate from the public pricing page.

Editors and content editors: the cost people forget

Plan pricing covers the site subscription, but adding people to your workspace has its own cost structure:

  • Additional editors — full design, content, and publishing access — are $20 per month per seat on Basic and Pro (custom on Enterprise).
  • Content editors — access limited to updating CMS content, localization, and on-page editing, without full design access — are $10 per month per seat.
  • Viewers, who can view pages and leave comments, are free.
  • The workspace owner seat, who manages billing and editors, is included at no extra cost.

This matters most for growing teams: a five-person marketing team on Pro isn't just paying $30/month — it's paying $30 plus whatever combination of editor and content editor seats the team actually needs. Work out your real team shape before comparing the base plan price against a competitor's, since seat costs are where the real monthly bill usually lands.

Add-ons worth knowing about

Beyond the base plans, several add-ons extend specific limits:

  • Translation locales — up to 20 locales, $20 per locale, available on both Basic and Pro, with AI-assisted translation for multi-language sites.
  • Advanced hosting — $200/month, supports multiple sites and custom headers under one domain, up to 6 rewrites, and custom values for security-related headers. Included at higher tiers on Enterprise.
  • A/B testing, funnels, and Convert triggers — billed at $50 per 500,000 analytics events, letting you run experiments and track conversions directly through Framer.
  • Extra CMS collections and items, bandwidth, and pages — each has its own per-unit add-on pricing on Pro, letting you scale past the included limits without jumping straight to Enterprise.

CMS limits, explained simply

CMS limits are one of the most misunderstood parts of Framer pricing. Two numbers matter: how many collections (content types, like "Blog Posts" or "Team Members") you can create, and how many items (individual entries within those collections) you can store in total.

Free includes access to CMS collections for building and previewing. Basic supports 2 collections and 1,000 items — enough for something like a blog plus a simple team directory, but not much more. Pro jumps to 10 collections and 2,500 items, with add-ons extending both further. If your site plan involves more than two or three genuinely distinct content types, map them out before choosing between Basic and Pro — running out of collections mid-build is a frustrating reason to upgrade.

Bandwidth and what happens if you exceed it

Bandwidth is metered monthly: 1 GB on Free, 50 GB on Basic, 100 GB on Pro, extendable to 2 TB via add-on on Pro. According to Framer's own pricing FAQ, for limits like bandwidth specifically, you're allowed to exceed it for one month with an email notification, giving you a grace period to upgrade rather than an immediate hard stop. Other limits, like page count or CMS collections, will prompt an upgrade more directly when you hit them.

Who actually needs which plan

  • Choose Free if you're learning Framer, prototyping an idea before committing, or building something genuinely non-commercial with no need for a custom domain.
  • Choose Basic if you're an individual, freelancer, or small studio building a personal site, portfolio, or simple one-person business site with modest content needs.
  • Choose Pro if you're a startup, agency, or scale-up with a team touching the site regularly, a growing CMS-backed content operation, or a need for staging and branching to avoid risky live edits.
  • Choose Enterprise if you have compliance, security, or scale requirements — SSO, SCIM, custom uptime guarantees — that go beyond what a standard plan offers, or you need unlimited editor seats under one contract.

Real companies in our gallery illustrate the range: a payments company like Razorpay or a large collaboration platform like Miro clearly operates in Pro-or-above territory given their content and team scale, while a leaner startup like MyHubble Money is a plausible fit for a Basic-to-Pro site depending on team size — proof that the "right" plan really does depend on where a company sits, not a fixed rule.

Common pricing mistakes to avoid

  • Comparing sticker prices without counting seats. The base plan price is rarely the full monthly cost once editors and content editors are added.
  • Under-planning CMS collections. If you're not sure how many content types you'll need, sketch them out before picking Basic over Pro — migrating a live CMS structure later is more work than upgrading early.
  • Ignoring the yearly billing distinction. Framer's headline prices are typically shown on yearly billing; monthly billing usually costs more per month, so check which billing cycle a quoted price assumes.
  • Assuming Enterprise is only for huge companies. If your real blocker is SSO or SCIM for a security review, it's worth a conversation with Framer directly rather than assuming it's out of reach.

Check before you commit

Every number in this article reflects Framer's pricing page as of writing, and Framer has changed plans before. Before you subscribe, confirm current pricing, limits, and add-on costs directly on Framer's official pricing page — it's the only source that's guaranteed current.

If you're still deciding whether Framer is the right platform at all, browse real, live examples across company stages in the BuildinFramer gallery, get hands-on help scoping the right plan for your project through our services page, or explore Premium listing options if you're the one being featured rather than the one hiring.

Frequently asked questions

As of Framer's current pricing page, Basic is $10/month and Pro is $30/month on yearly billing, with a Free plan at $0 and custom Enterprise pricing for large organizations. Prices and limits change periodically, so confirm current numbers on Framer's official pricing page.

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