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Webflow's 2026 Pricing Update: Who Pays More, Who Gets More, and What to Check

Category
Webflow Pricing
Author
Muhammad Ukasha
Published
May 13, 2026

Webflow just changed how its plans are packaged. If your website is on Basic, CMS, Business, or you are considering the new Team plan, this is worth checking before your next renewal.

This is not just a pricing update. It is Webflow moving more of the platform into one place: CMS, code components, AI credits, MCP, AEO features, localization, governance, and team workflows.

That sounds useful. It can be. But the practical question is simpler: are you paying for the right Webflow setup, or are you about to renew into a plan that no longer matches how your site works?

The Short Version

  • CMS and Business are being rolled into a new Premium Site plan.
  • Premium is listed at $25/mo billed yearly or $39/mo billed monthly.
  • Premium includes 20,000 CMS items and 40 CMS Collections.
  • Basic moves to $15/mo yearly or $25/mo monthly, with 300 static pages.
  • Some existing Business customers need to watch bandwidth because included bandwidth moves from 100GB to 50GB.
  • Webflow has introduced a Team plan at $2,500/mo on an annual contract.
  • AI credits are now included in Workspace plans, with limits not enforced until June 29, 2026.

Nothing here means every Webflow customer should panic. It does mean every serious marketing site should check usage before renewal.

Premium Is the Main Change

The biggest move is the new Premium Site plan. Webflow is combining the old CMS and Business plan idea into one simpler option for content-rich sites.

For SaaS and marketing teams, this could be good. A lot of teams outgrow the old CMS plan because they need more CMS items, more collections, site search, form file upload, or cleaner technical setup. Premium gives more of that in one plan instead of making teams piece things together.

The headline numbers are clear: Premium is $25/mo when billed yearly or $39/mo when billed monthly, with 20,000 CMS items and 40 CMS Collections included.

That matters if your site has a real content engine: blogs, customer stories, resource hubs, glossary pages, integrations, comparison pages, changelog entries, event pages, location pages, or programmatic landing pages.

If you only have a simple five-page site, Premium is probably not the point. If your site is part of your acquisition engine, it probably is.

The Basic Plan Is More Expensive, But Less Cramped

Basic is moving to $15/mo on yearly billing and $25/mo on monthly billing. The static page limit doubles from 150 to 300.

That is a clean tradeoff. You pay more, but simple static sites get more page room.

For most SaaS teams, Basic only makes sense when the site does not need CMS. Think brochure sites, early MVP landing pages, campaign microsites, or a very simple company site.

The moment your marketing team wants to publish articles, customer stories, comparison pages, resource content, integrations, or feature pages without rebuilding static pages, Basic becomes the wrong place to save money.

Business Customers Need to Check Bandwidth

The one detail I would not ignore: existing Business plan customers may keep or gain many features, but included bandwidth drops from 100GB to 50GB.

That does not matter for every site. It matters a lot for sites with high traffic, heavy media, large images, gated resources, event spikes, paid campaign traffic, or global content hubs.

Before renewal, check your last six to twelve months of bandwidth. Do not guess. A plan that looks cheaper on paper can get expensive once add-ons enter the picture.

Also check Webflow Cloud usage if you are using app hosting. The update includes changes to Webflow Cloud limits, and that can matter for teams using Webflow as more than a static marketing site.

The Team Plan Is Not for Everyone

Webflow also introduced Team at $2,500/mo with an annual contract. It bundles a Site and Workspace, 10 seats, localization, priority support, collaboration features, security features, 30TB bandwidth, and higher CMS API limits.

This is not the plan for a small marketing site that just needs CMS. It is for teams where the website is operationally important and the cost of slow publishing, messy permissions, migration bottlenecks, or governance problems is higher than the plan itself.

Team starts making sense when you have multiple marketers, localization needs, a large CMS migration, strict review workflows, higher traffic, and leadership asking why website changes still move through too many people.

If you do not have those problems, do not buy the story just because the plan exists.

AI Credits Are the Bigger Signal

AI credits are now included in Workspace plans. Webflow says credit limits will not be enforced until June 29, 2026, which gives teams time to test before limits matter.

This is where the update gets more interesting.

Webflow is not positioning AI as a side feature anymore. AI, MCP, code components, AEO agents, Webflow Cloud, and team workflows are becoming part of the same platform story.

For marketing teams, that means the website is moving closer to an operating system for campaigns, content, search visibility, and site operations. That is useful if the site is structured well. It is messy if the CMS, naming, components, permissions, and SEO foundations are weak.

What I Would Check Before Renewal

Before accepting the new pricing blindly, run a quick audit:

  • Current Site plan, Workspace plan, billing frequency, and renewal date.
  • CMS item count and CMS Collection count.
  • Bandwidth for the last six to twelve months.
  • Static page count and whether pages should move into CMS.
  • Seats, roles, and how many people actually publish content.
  • Localization needs for the next twelve months.
  • Optimize, Analyze, Localization, bandwidth, and other add-ons.
  • AI usage and whether the team plans to use Webflow AI in real workflows.
  • Whether a Team plan solves a real operational problem or just sounds cleaner.

If someone else manages billing for your site, ask when your renewal changes apply. Some existing client sites have more runway than brand-new purchases, but you still need to check the billing setup early.

My Take

For serious SaaS and marketing websites, the Premium plan is probably the cleaner direction. More CMS room, more built-in capability, fewer small add-on decisions.

The risk is not Premium. The risk is assuming the new plan automatically fits your site.

A content-heavy SaaS site with 12GB bandwidth and a growing resource hub may benefit. A Business site using 80GB bandwidth may need to recalculate. A team with localization, governance, migration needs, and many collaborators may look at Team. A small static site may stay on Basic and move on.

That is the real answer: the right plan depends on your actual usage, not the plan name.

Bottom Line

Webflow's pricing update is not just a cost change. It is a packaging change around where the platform is going: more CMS capacity, more AI, more team controls, and more website operations inside Webflow.

If your website drives pipeline, this is the time to audit it. Check the plan, renewal date, bandwidth, CMS limits, add-ons, and whether your team is ready to use the AI and workflow features you are paying for.

Do that before renewal, not after the invoice lands.


About the Author

Muhammad Ukasha is the founder of Audax Studio and Head of Development at Veza Agency Network. With 300+ projects delivered and 8 Awwwards-recognized builds, he specializes in enterprise Webflow development, API integrations, and AI automation for Fortune 500 companies and VC-backed startups. Connect on LinkedIn.

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