Canesta Pricing & Cost

How much does Canesta cost? Here is everything we could verify about Canesta's pricing model, what's included, and the terms — with the sources each figure was traced from.

  • Pricing model: Hybrid custom-quote agency pricing with multiple published structures: (1) hourly billing at $100/hr on Canesta's own site terms, (2) fixed-price website / e-commerce project packages published on Clutch, and (3) monthly SEO retainer packages published on Clutch. In practice, Canesta appears to sell mostly custom-scoped engagements rather than a single universal price sheet.
  • Starting price: $100/hr
  • Typical range: $1,500-$5,000 / month
  • Billing: Hourly on the agency's terms page; also published as fixed-price per project for website builds ($5,000/$10,000/$25,000 total) and monthly retainer for SEO ($1,500/$3,000/$5,000 per month). Custom quotes are encouraged for scoped engagements.

What's included

  • Research and planning aligned to business goals
  • Website design and development
  • E-commerce store design / build
  • Information architecture
  • Desktop and mobile design prototypes / mockups
  • Quality assurance
  • Data migration
  • Third-party integrations
  • SEO
  • PPC / Google Ads
  • Social media marketing
  • Email marketing / Klaviyo services
  • Monthly reporting
  • Keyword research
  • Landing page creation
  • Competition analysis
  • Google Search Console warning fixes
  • Monthly meetings
  • Backlink building

Concrete pricing is publicly available. On Canesta's own website, the Terms & Conditions page states: 'Labor is calculated on a per hour basis. Canesta hourly rate is $100 per hour.' Separately, Clutch publishes package pricing for this exact agency/domain: SEO retainers at $1,500, $3,000, and $5,000 per month, plus website/e-commerce projects at $5,000, $10,000, and $25,000 total. DesignRush and MarketingMonk also reinforce that Canesta commonly works on custom-scoped engagements; however, their budget bands/minimums should be treated as directory data rather than first-party pricing.

Sources (5)

Where this pricing information was traced from.