£499 once. Optional £49/mo if you want it managed. Real working preview in 24 hours, no card. First lead in 60 days or your money back, and you keep the site.
An extension is a five-figure decision, and nobody hands over five figures to a builder they cannot check up on. Before the first phone call, your customer has already searched your name. If they find nothing, the job quietly goes to the firm with photographs of finished lofts, a real address, and a dozen reviews from streets they recognise. A builder's website is a portfolio with a phone number: before-and-after shots, the trades you manage, your insurance and memberships, and the areas you cover. It does not need to be clever. It needs to make a cautious homeowner feel safe enough to invite you round to quote.
If the site doesn't put a new enquiry in your hands within 60 days of going live, you get the full £499 back. And you keep the site. That is the whole clause; there is no asterisk.
I'm Harry Yule, one developer in Manchester. I write every site by hand, at night mostly, because I watched an agency take a roofer's £1,800 for a WordPress site that never worked. No templates, no page builders, no project managers. One craftsman, your trade, your town.