Are You Charging Enough? Updated Hourly, In-House, and Emergency Rates
- •
- 4 min read
Your pricing strategies for hosting and maintenance are just as important as for web design projects. An agency owner told us she was charging a client $29/month for WordPress maintenance. Then we asked how much time she spent on each client. “Yeah, I’m basically paying them to let me work.”
Sound familiar? We have this conversation with a lot of service providers. Pricing, hosting, and maintenance feels impossible because the stakes are real: price too low and you’re working for free, price too high and clients disappear, price without clarity and you’ll drown in scope creep by month three.
Here’s what you need to know to get your pricing right.
Nobody wakes up excited about disk space. Okay, maybe you do? Your clients just want to know their site won’t crash during a launch, their checkout won’t break on Black Friday, and they have someone to text when things explode at 9 PM.
Start here: Write down every single thing you actually do. Backups, updates, uptime monitoring, security scanning, monthly reports, and those “quick fixes” that take 15 minutes. Put this list in your sales materials, contracts, and website.
Clarity isn’t just professional – it’s self-defense. When a client can see exactly what they’re paying for, those surprise 11 PM requests about font colors suddenly feel different.
Pro tip: List what’s not included. Major redesigns, custom features, that “quick” integration that’s never actually quick. This one addition will save you more headaches than anything else in this article. And prevent scope creep.
“How much should your clients pay for website management? That depends. Maintenance costs vary based on how much attention your website requires. Just like your car.”
Rocket.net – How Much Should You Pay Someone To Maintain Your Website?
We used to think there was one “right” way to price. There isn’t. What matters is matching the model to your clients and your sanity.
Build 3-4 fixed monthly plans. Starter, Growth, Premium, Enterprise — whatever you want to call them. Each tier adds clear value: more reports, more dev hours, faster response times.
Why this works: Clients self-select based on their needs, and upselling feels natural because you’re not convincing them to spend more – you’re showing them what the next level unlocks.
Here’s the math that changed how we think about pricing: An eCommerce client makes $47K during Black Friday weekend. Their site going down for two hours costs them roughly $8,000. What’s keeping that site online worth?
Not $99/month.
Value-based pricing means charging based on business outcomes. A $5,000/month retainer to guarantee uptime for a site doing $1M in annual revenue isn’t expensive. In context of the cost of doing business it’s as much as a routine rounding error.
The catch? This only works when clients directly tie website performance to revenue. SaaS companies, eCommerce stores, membership sites. Not your cousin’s plumbing blog.
Add up your hosting costs, software licenses, and labor hours. Tack on 20–50% margin. Done.
This is the easiest model to calculate and the fastest way to commoditize yourself. If clients can compare your costs line-by-line with someone else’s costs, you’re competing on price. And somebody’s always willing to go cheaper. Don’t make your hosting a commodity item.
Use this when you’re starting out and need simple math. Graduate from it as fast as you can.
Charge based on visitors, bandwidth, or resources consumed. Publish your overage fees upfront ($x per 1,000 visitors). Offer an automatic upgrade path so clients don’t get surprise bills.
The upside: Total transparency. Clients pay for what they use.
The downside: Your revenue becomes unpredictable, and explaining tiered bandwidth costs to a bakery owner who just wants her site to work is mentally exhausting. Trust me, you don’t want to go there.
Keep an emergency hourly rate and a menu for migrations, redesigns, or extra dev work. Publish your rate card somewhere visible.
This isn’t your primary pricing model; it’s your safety net. When scope creep shows up (and it will) you’ve already established that extra work costs extra money.
Your move: Pick tiered packages as your foundation, then layer in add-ons for flexibility. Structure keeps you sane, flexibility keeps clients happy.
Every plan you offer should include the non-negotiables:
These aren’t upsells. They’re table stakes. If you’re not doing these things, you’re not really managing the site.
Then add premium options that clients will happily pay extra for:
Try this: Track which add-ons clients actually buy over six months. If 70% of your clients purchase the same add-on, move it into your mid-tier plan. You’ll simplify your sales process and increase perceived value in one move.
“One-off projects are feast-or-famine. Retainers mean stability. Make this your new favorite formula: Hosting + Maintenance + Growth Services = Win, Win, Win”
Rocket.net – Top 8 Ways to Make Your WordPress Agency Stand Out
Spell out visitor, bandwidth, and storage limits in plain English. Not “fair use policy” vagueness – actual numbers. Then publish your exact overage rates: $x per 1,000 additional visitors, $y per 10GB bandwidth.
Offer spike protection: temporary auto-upgrade during traffic surges or one-click scaling for predictable events like product launches.
Real example: A WooCommerce client spikes 5x during Black Friday. Without a clear overage policy, you spend the weekend firefighting and the following week arguing about surprise charges. With a clear policy and auto-upgrade? The site scales, you get paid fairly, and the client sends a thank-you email instead of a complaint.
Add an “Overage Policy” section to every pricing page and service level agreement (SLA). Spell this out once, avoid a dozen awkward conversations later.
These numbers come from surveying agencies in our network last quarter. Your mileage will vary – adjust for your market, expertise, and whether you want to compete on price or positioning.
| Plan | Price | Key Deliverables |
| Starter Care | $39–$79/mo | Basic hosting, daily backups, plugin updates, uptime monitoring |
| Growth Care | $99–$199/mo | Adds staging site, monthly reporting, security hardening, 1–3 dev hours |
| Premium Care | $299+/mo | Performance tuning, advanced monitoring, priority support, 5–20 dev hours |
Pricing psychology tip: We price our top tier at $999 even though most clients pick the $299 plan. Why? Because $299 feels reasonable next to $999. It feels expensive next to $99. Always anchor high; your mid-tier becomes the “sweet spot” clients talk themselves into.
Add a “Recommended” badge to your mid-tier. People love being told what to pick.
We learned this the expensive way: “I’ll just do this one quick thing” turns into 40 hours of unbilled work faster than you can say “pricing strategies.”
Include “x hours of support” in each plan. Track those hours. Bill overages at your published hourly rate. Use change-order agreements for requests that smell like mini-projects.
Your move: Add a scope creep clause to your contracts. Something like: “Additional work beyond included hours will be billed at $150/hour in 30-minute increments, invoiced monthly.”
Clients respect clear boundaries. Unclear ones earn you 11 PM Slack messages about whether you can “just quickly” rebuild their entire navigation.
Bonus tip: Automate time tracking. Tools like Trello, ClickUp, or Freshdesk can log tasks and alert you when clients approach their limit. You’ll catch scope creep early instead of discovering it at month-end.
Most agencies skip SLAs until a client relationship goes sideways. Don’t be most agencies. A good SLA takes 30 minutes to write and saves you from months of “but I thought you’d handle that” conversations.
Your SLA should cover:
Start here: Create a simple one-page SLA template. Use bullet points and plain English. The goal is a document clients actually read, not a 12-page legal contract they sign without looking.
Before you publish your pricing page, run through this:
If you can check all seven, you’re ahead of 80% of agencies.
Look, you can keep charging $29/month and wondering why you’re burned out. Or you can treat your expertise like what it is: the difference between a client’s site thriving or tanking.
Pricing hosting and maintenance isn’t just about numbers; it’s about trust, transparency, and positioning yourself as the long-term partner clients can rely on. At Rocket.net, we’ve watched this play out thousands of times: When you combine performance, support, and clear pricing, you don’t just sell websites. You sell peace of mind.
And peace of mind? That’s worth paying for.
Grow your business with lightning-fast, secure, and optimized websites that are easy to set up & manage. Top-tier agencies and online businesses choose Rocket.net as their trusted managed WordPress hosting provider – why shouldn’t you, too?