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Build a Photographer Website in 30 Minutes

You're a wedding photographer in Austin. Your Instagram has 12K followers, gorgeous shots, and a bio that says "DM for bookings." You're also drowning in DMs asking "what do you charge?" — from people who ghost you the moment you

0xMinds Team
0xMinds Team
·7 min read
Build a Photographer Website in 30 Minutes - Featured Image

You're a wedding photographer in Austin. Your Instagram has 12K followers, gorgeous shots, and a bio that says "DM for bookings." You're also drowning in DMs asking "what do you charge?" — from people who ghost you the moment you reply.

Here's the uncomfortable truth: Instagram is a discovery engine. It's not a website. When someone is seriously ready to book a photographer for their wedding or brand shoot, they Google your name. What do they find right now?

If the answer is "a Facebook page from 2021" — you're losing clients to photographers with half your skill and twice their online presence.

Let's fix that today. No code, no developers, no month-long project. This is the exact approach we cover in The Small Business Website Playbook, applied specifically to photographers.

Key Takeaways:

  • ~80% of visitors leave photographer sites without pricing and book whoever shows their rates
  • Your site needs exactly 4 things: gallery, pricing, booking form, and social proof
  • A masonry gallery of 12–15 shots converts better than a 200-photo archive
  • The right booking form pre-qualifies clients and saves you 2+ hours of back-and-forth per inquiry

In This Article

What Your Photographer Site Actually Needs

Before we build anything, let's be honest about what goes on it.

In This Article

Most photographer websites make two mistakes: too many pages (nobody clicks "About > Philosophy > My Journey") and not enough information on the pages that actually exist.

Clients look at four things, in this exact order:

  1. Gallery — Is this photographer's style right for me?
  2. Pricing — Can I afford this? (They leave if there's no answer)
  3. Contact/Booking — How do I actually hire them?
  4. About — Do I trust this person?

That's it. No blog, no "What to Wear" guide, no client portal — not yet. Get these four sections right first.

This is the hill I'll die on: 12 shots beats 200. Every time.

Most photographers upload everything because they're proud of their work (fair) and afraid to edit down (understandable). But a visitor clicking through 200 photos loses momentum. Your best 12–15 images in a fast-loading masonry grid will convert better than a bloated archive.

What makes a gallery that actually works:

  • Masonry layout — shows different crop ratios naturally, feels editorial
  • Fast loading — compressed images with lazy-load. Slower than 2 seconds on mobile? You're losing people
  • One style, clearly owned — if you shoot weddings and portraits, lead with one. Let visitors know immediately what you specialize in
  • No watermarks on your main gallery — they make your images look like stock photos

What to cut: auto-playing slideshows, background music, hover effects that obscure the photos, and galleries that force visitors to click through one image at a time.

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Step 2: The Booking Inquiry Form

Here's what nobody talks about: a vague contact form wastes your time.

What Your Photographer Site Actually Needs

"Name + email + message" gives you inquiries like "Hi, I need a photographer, what's your availability?" — which kicks off 3 or more emails before you even know if you're a fit. Add these five questions and you'll know from a single read whether to follow up:

  1. What's your event date? (If you're already booked, you know immediately)
  2. What type of session? (Wedding / Engagement / Family / Commercial / Other)
  3. Location or venue? (Travel fees become clear upfront)
  4. What's your approximate budget? Give ranges: Under $800 / $800–$1,500 / $1,500–$2,500 / $2,500+
  5. How did you hear about me? (Track this — after 6 months you'll know which channel actually books clients)

That last question sounds trivial. It isn't. After a year, you'll know whether Instagram, Google, or word-of-mouth is generating real revenue — and you'll stop wasting energy on the channels that aren't.

Step 3: A Pricing Page That Converts

Let's settle the debate: yes, list your prices.

About 80% of visitors leave photography sites that don't show pricing — and they book a photographer who does. Hiding your rates isn't protecting your brand. It's losing inquiries to someone more transparent.

The format that works best: three tiers.

PackageStarting PriceWhat's Included
Essentialfrom $8002-hr session, 60 edited photos, digital gallery
Standardfrom $1,5004-hr session, 150 edited photos, 1 print credit
Premiumfrom $2,800Full day (8 hrs), 300+ photos, album, 2nd shooter

Three things that make pricing pages actually convert:

  • "From $X" anchors expectations without locking you into a price before you know the shoot details
  • List what's included — not just a number. Session duration, photo count, turnaround time. These are the questions clients always ask
  • One line on who each package is for — "ideal for engagement sessions and small family portraits" removes doubt and speeds up the decision

Most photographers find their middle tier becomes the most popular once clients can compare. The premium tier exists to make Standard feel reasonable by contrast.

Step 4: Testimonials and Your About Section

Testimonials don't need to be long. They need to be specific.

"She was amazing and the photos were beautiful!" — nice, but meaningless.

"Sarah photographed our courthouse wedding in October 2025 and captured every quiet moment without us even noticing she was there. Gallery was ready in 9 days. We've already sent her name to four friends." — that one converts skeptics.

The best testimonials include a name, event type, and one specific detail about the experience. When you ask clients for a review, ask them: "Can you mention what you hired me for and one thing that surprised you?"

Your About section: three sentences max. Who you are, what you specialize in, why clients trust you. Not your camera gear. Not how you "started with a passion for light." Just: who, what, why.

Going Live: The Last 10 Minutes

Your site is built. Before sharing it anywhere, do these three things:

Step 1: Test It On Your Phone

Open it on mobile and scroll through every section. If the gallery is slow or the text is tiny, fix it before sharing. Most AI builders have a mobile preview mode — use it.

Step 2: Connect a Domain

yourname.com or yournamephotography.com. If taken, try [city]photographer.com. Domains cost around $12/year and your site immediately looks 10x more professional.

Step 3: Add a Google Business Profile

Go to Google Business Profile (free), add your website URL, and verify your business. This is what gets you showing up in "[your city] wedding photographer" local searches — and it matters far more than most SEO work you could do at this stage.

That's your photographer portfolio website. Live in 30 minutes.


Written by the 0xMinds Team — we test AI tools so you don't have to. Build a website with AI →

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Frequently Asked Questions

Do photographers really need a website, or is Instagram enough?

Instagram gets people interested. A website gets them to book. Serious clients — especially for weddings and corporate work — will Google you before committing to a conversation. If there's no website, or a bad one, most don't come back.

What should a photographer website include?

The essentials for launch: a portfolio gallery (12–15 of your best images in a masonry layout), a pricing page with 2–3 package tiers, an inquiry form with 5 qualifying questions, and a short About section with a couple of testimonials. That's everything you need to start taking inquiries.

Should I list my photography prices on my website?

Yes. About 80% of visitors leave sites without pricing and book whoever shows their rates. Use "from $X" if you want flexibility, but give clients a number to anchor to — otherwise they're shopping blind and they'll just move on.

How long does it take to build a photographer website?

With an AI builder and a clear description of what you want, the initial build takes under 5 minutes. Add your 12 gallery images, write your pricing tiers, and connect your domain: total time around 30 minutes.

Can I build a photographer website without coding?

Yes. AI website builders let you describe what you want in plain language — masonry gallery, 3-tier pricing, booking form — and generate the entire site. No templates to wrestle with, no code.

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