Framer has four paid plans in 2026: Basic at $10/month, Pro at $30/month, Scale starting at $100/month, and Enterprise at custom pricing. All prices are billed annually. Editor seats are $20/month extra on every plan, and a new Content Editor seat at $10/month was introduced in May 2026 for teams who only need CMS access.
The pricing itself is straightforward. What is less obvious is what the limits on each plan mean in practice - and whether those limits make Framer the right platform for a B2B SaaS marketing site or whether you are better served by Webflow. This breakdown covers both.
We are a Webflow Enterprise Partner - that context is worth knowing. We will give you an accurate picture of Framer's pricing and a direct view on when Webflow is the better call.
Framer Plans at a Glance
Editor seat: +$20/month per person on any paid plan. Content Editor (CMS-only access): +$10/month.
Free Plan
The Framer free plan is for testing Framer or building non-commercial projects. Your site runs on a .framer.appsubdomain with Framer branding visible to visitors. You cannot connect a custom domain. Until you upgrade to a paid plan, the site stays on a Framer subdomain and cannot use your own domain. Despite the generous-looking 1,000 page limit, you are limited to 5 MB of file uploads - which becomes a constraint quickly for any site with real images or assets.
Who it is actually for: Designers exploring the platform. It still includes Framer’s design and AI tools for learning and testing, but it is not appropriate for commercial publishing.
Basic Plan - $10/month
Basic is the entry-level Framer plan for a simple Framer site: it removes Framer branding and gives you a free .com domain. The constraints that matter: 30 pages, 1 CMS collection, and 10 GB of monthly bandwidth.
The 30-page limit sounds adequate until you account for what a real B2B marketing site needs: homepage, pricing, about, blog index, individual blog posts (each a page), use case or solution pages, case study pages, legal pages. For a SaaS company with an active content program, 30 pages is a constraint you will hit within the first few months.
The 1 CMS collection limit is the more significant issue. A CMS collection in Framer is the equivalent of a collection list in Webflow - blog posts, case studies, team members, job listings are all separate collections. With one, you can have a blog or a case study library, not both, so Basic works for static pages but becomes limiting once dynamic content is involved. Most B2B SaaS sites need at least four to five collections.
No staging environment means any change you publish goes live immediately. For a solo creator updating a personal site, that is acceptable. For a team reviewing changes before they go live, it is not.
Honest assessment: Basic is appropriate for a personal portfolio or a very simple single-page marketing site. Not for a B2B SaaS company with any meaningful content program.
Pro Plan - $30/month
Pro is where Framer becomes a viable platform for client and business sites. You get 150 pages, 10 CMS collections, 2,500 CMS items, 100 GB of monthly bandwidth, a staging environment, advanced analytics, roles and permissions, site redirects, and relational CMS.
For most small to mid-size B2B marketing sites - a homepage, solution pages, a blog with up to 2,500 posts, and a few CMS-driven content types - Pro covers the functional requirements. The 10 CMS collection limit is sufficient for most content structures. The staging environment makes it manageable for teams.
The gap between Pro and what a growth-stage SaaS company actually needs is where things get interesting. A/B testing is not available on Pro - it is a Scale feature. Advanced CDN performance (300+ edge locations vs. 20 on Basic and Pro) is Scale-only. Teams that need A/B testing, better global performance, or more than 150 pages need to step up to Scale. Framer alerts users as they approach page, CMS, or bandwidth limits, and that is usually the point where they need to upgrade.
Honest assessment: Pro is the right starting plan for most professional Framer sites. For B2B SaaS companies running active campaign programs - where landing page velocity and A/B testing matter - it is a ceiling you reach quickly.
Scale Plan - $100+/month
Scale starts at $100/month and adds usage-based pricing on top: you pay for what you use beyond the baseline limits. The baseline includes 300 pages, 20 CMS collections, 10,000 CMS items, and 200 GB bandwidth. Beyond that, costs scale with usage.
The meaningful additions at this tier are the premium CDN (300+ global edge locations vs. 20 on lower plans), A/B testing, events and funnels tracking, priority support, and the ability to request a custom proxy setup. These are features that advanced teams and high-traffic site operators actually need, with Scale covering those needs below the enterprise plan, while Enterprise pricing is custom and requires a conversation with Framer.
The usage-based pricing model warrants attention. For a B2B SaaS site with 50,000 monthly visitors and a content program generating traffic, bandwidth consumption is real. The baseline 200 GB is generous for most sites at that scale, but it is worth understanding what you pay beyond it before committing, since overages and optional add-ons can increase the extra cost beyond the base Scale price.
Honest assessment: Scale is appropriate for high-traffic B2B sites where premium CDN performance is genuinely required. At $100+/month plus usage, plus editor seat costs for a team, the total cost starts to close the gap with what a professional Webflow build costs - with more capabilities on the Webflow side.
Editor Seat Pricing: The Hidden Cost
Framer's current pricing for seats is the most commonly overlooked part of total cost, and it was significantly restructured in May 2026.
Before May 2026:
- Basic: $20/month per editor seat
- Pro: $40/month per editor seat
- Scale: $40/month per editor seat
After May 2026 (current pricing):
- All plans: $20/month per editor seat - same price regardless of plan
- New: Content Editor seat at $10/month - CMS editing, Localization, and On-Page Editing only, no canvas access
The reduction from $40 to $20 on Pro and Scale was a direct response to community feedback about cost. At $20/month per seat, a three-person marketing team on the Pro plan is paying $30 (plan) + $60 (three editor seats) = $90/month per billing cycle, with those seat charges recurring alongside the main subscription. That is before any custom domain add on or optional expenses for other tools that can raise total spend.
For an agency building on behalf of a client, Framer's Pro Expert certification allows the agency to receive a free editor seat on the project - client does not consume an extra seat for agency access, though each client site still needs its own framer subscription.
The Content Editor seat at $10/month is a useful addition for marketing teams where only some members need CMS access. A content writer who publishes blog posts does not need canvas access to the entire site; the Content Editor seat gives them CMS-only access at half the price of a full editor seat.
What Framer Does Well
Framer's primary advantage is design-to-live velocity for designers comfortable in Figma. As a visual builder for designers, the design workflow maps closely to Figma's interface, the canvas is intuitive, and the component library and community resources are strong. For a solo designer building a polished portfolio or a small agency building marketing sites quickly, Framer removes a lot of the learning overhead that Webflow requires.
Framer's animation capabilities are also genuinely strong. Scroll-linked animations, physics-based interactions, and component-level motion design are all first-class features. For sites where animation is a significant part of the design - creative agencies, AI product launches, design-forward SaaS - Framer can produce results that rival custom development, which is why many users find it efficient for fast launch work.
The platform has moved quickly: Framer AI, CMS improvements, AI features, the Apps integrations, and the May 2026 editor pricing restructure all reflect active product development.
Where Framer Falls Short for B2B SaaS
For a B2B SaaS company treating their website as a demand generation asset - not a portfolio piece - Framer has meaningful gaps.
No native A/B testing below Scale. Conversion rate optimization on landing pages requires the ability to test variants. Framer puts A/B testing behind the $100+/month Scale plan. On Webflow, Optibase - built specifically for Webflow - makes A/B testing available at any plan level without requiring Scale-equivalent spend.
CMS architecture is less flexible. Webflow's CMS supports reference and multi-reference fields, CMS-driven component variants, and deep relational content structures that support complex content programs. Framer's CMS has improved but remains more limited for teams managing large content libraries with complex relationships.
No equivalent to Webflow Interactions' depth. Framer's animations are excellent for motion design. Webflow's Interactions are excellent for product demonstration - the scroll-triggered animations, element-triggered sequences, and multi-step timelines that communicate what a product does. These are different use cases and Webflow's implementation is more deliberate for the B2B SaaS context.
Enterprise compliance is limited. Webflow Enterprise includes SOC 2 Type II certification, HIPAA-compatible configuration with a Business Associate Agreement, and enterprise-grade security posture that clears procurement reviews at large companies. Framer Enterprise exists but is a less mature offering for organizations with formal security review requirements.
Team workflows are more constrained. On a Webflow enterprise site, you can manage granular permissions, set up staging environments, and use Webflow Libraries to maintain design consistency across multiple sites from a single component source. Framer's team features are functional but lighter.
Framer vs. Webflow: Total Cost for a B2B SaaS Build
The platform pricing comparison is only part of the picture. What a B2B SaaS company actually pays depends on total cost of ownership: platform fees + design and development cost + ongoing maintenance.
Framer Pro ($30/month) + 3 editor seats ($60/month) = $90/month annually
For a site that stays within Pro's limits, this is genuinely cost-effective. The question is what you get for it - a site built by a Framer specialist on Pro covers the basics of a B2B marketing site.
Framer Scale ($100+/month) + 3 editor seats ($60/month) = $160+/month annually
At this price point, you are within range of Webflow's CMS Business plan, and the capability gap narrows significantly - Webflow's CMS, component system, Interactions, and enterprise features come with that comparable investment.
The development cost also factors in. A Framer specialist and a Webflow specialist have different skill sets and the market for each is different in depth and availability. For B2B SaaS companies that need ongoing landing page production, migration support, or enterprise-grade builds, Webflow's talent ecosystem is deeper. Lower-cost options often come from freelancers, who commonly charge $50-$200 per hour for Framer work. As example project pricing, a small framer website often runs $1,000-$4,000, medium projects usually land around $15,000-$35,000, and large builds can range from $36,000 to $126,000. The main pricing structure options are hourly, fixed-price project pricing for defined deliverables, and monthly retainers with predetermined hours at reduced rates.
When Framer Makes Sense
Framer is a strong choice for:
- Design-led companies where the visual impression of the site is the primary goal and animation quality is a key signal - AI product launches, creative agencies, design tools marketing to designers
- Solo or small teams where one designer owns the site and the page count and CMS needs stay within Pro's limits
- Fast launch scenarios where a Figma designer needs to go from mockup to live site quickly without a development handoff, and the cheapest way to launch is usually starting with a template on a simple Framer website rather than a custom build
- Portfolio sites where Basic or Pro covers everything needed at low cost
For lower-complexity projects, agencies may quote roughly $500 to $10,000 for a Framer website, while small business agency sites often land around $3,000 to $10,000, and using your own domain typically adds about $10 to $20 per year.
When Webflow Is the Better Call
Webflow is the stronger choice when:
- Your site is a primary demand generation asset where conversion rate has direct pipeline impact
- You need A/B testing without paying $100+/month in platform fees to access it
- Your content program needs complex CMS architecture - multiple collection types with relational content, deep filtering, or more than 2,500 CMS items
- You are in a regulated industry where security certifications (SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA) matter for vendor review
- You are running multiple sites that need to share design components and stay visually consistent via Webflow Libraries
- Your team needs enterprise-grade permissions and workflows that go beyond what Framer's team features currently support
If you are already on Framer and finding yourself pushing against its limits - page counts, CMS structure, A/B testing access - a migration to Webflow is a well-trodden path. Flowout has handled 110+ platform migrations and the process is more predictable than most teams expect. Browse our portfolio or get in touch if you want a specific view on what the right platform is for where your site needs to go.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does Framer cost per month?
This is the full breakdown of Framer pricing per month: $10/month for Basic (billed annually), $30/month for Pro, and $100+/month for Scale. Monthly billing is available at a higher per-month rate than annual billing, and each paid Framer subscription can also increase in cost with added editor seats at $20/month per person, while a Content Editor seat for CMS-only access costs $10/month.
What is Framer's free plan?
Framer's free plan hosts your site on a .framer.app subdomain with visible Framer branding. You cannot connect a custom domain. It includes 1,000 pages, 10 CMS collections, and 1,000 CMS items, but is limited to 5 MB of file uploads. It is suitable for testing or non-commercial projects only.
Does Framer charge for editor seats?
Yes. As of May 2026, Framer charges $20/month per editor seat on every paid plan (Basic, Pro, and Scale). Previously $40/month on Pro and Scale. A new Content Editor role at $10/month gives CMS-only access without canvas editing rights. These are in addition to the base plan cost. Also, extra editors are billed per seat per month, so larger teams should include them in total pricing.
What is included in Framer Pro?
Framer Pro ($30/month, billed annually) is typically the paid starting point for a professional Framer website and includes a custom domain, 150 pages, 10 CMS collections, 2,500 CMS items, 100 GB monthly bandwidth, a staging environment, advanced analytics, roles and permissions, site redirects, and relational CMS, while password protection sits on higher tiers. A/B testing and premium CDN (300+ edge locations) require the Scale plan.
Is Framer cheaper than Webflow?
At the Basic tier ($10/month), Framer is cheaper than Webflow's comparable paid plans. At the Pro and Scale tiers - once editor seats are added for a team - the total cost becomes comparable. The more relevant comparison for B2B companies is total cost of ownership, including what capabilities each platform provides for that spend.
Can Framer handle a large B2B SaaS site?
For sites with complex CMS requirements, enterprise compliance needs, or significant A/B testing programs, Framer has meaningful limitations compared to Webflow. The Scale plan ($100+/month) removes most page and CMS constraints, but advanced hosting and dedicated support are generally part of enterprise-level discussions rather than standard Scale usage, while enterprise security certifications, deep CMS architecture, and Webflow's Interactions system remain differentiators for larger B2B SaaS and enterprise builds. For large teams, unlimited editors are typically associated with enterprise setups.
When should I migrate from Framer to Webflow?
Consider switching when you can cancel a higher Framer plan or agency retainer after short-term launch work if ongoing needs drop, before deciding whether a full migration is necessary, are consistently pushing against Framer's CMS limits, need A/B testing without Scale-tier spend, require enterprise security certifications for procurement reviews, or your site's content program has grown beyond what Framer's architecture handles cleanly. Flowout has completed 110+ platform migrations - the process is predictable and worth scoping before assuming it is complicated.




