Sanity CMS + Next.js website cost in 2026: a straight breakdown
Jun 15, 2026 · 6 min read
The most common question I get before a project kicks off is some version of: 'What's this going to cost?' After scoping more than fifteen Sanity CMS + Next.js projects — from lean marketing sites to multi-locale headless rebuilds — I can give you real numbers instead of the usual 'it depends' non-answer. The sanity cms nextjs website cost in 2026 varies a lot, but the variables are predictable once you know what to look for.
The two-minute version
For a straightforward marketing site with Sanity as the CMS and Next.js on the front end, expect to pay somewhere between $8,000 and $18,000 for a freelancer or small specialist studio. A mid-size agency will add 30–50% on top of that for account management and process overhead. For a more complex headless rebuild — migrating an existing WordPress or Webflow site, adding custom integrations, multilingual content — the range shifts to $22,000–$60,000+, and that upper end moves higher fast if you add bespoke animations or a design system built from scratch.
Those are project totals, not monthly retainers. I'll break each piece down below.
Discovery and scoping (before any code is written)
A good scoping process — content audit, sitemap, data model sketch, technical constraints — takes three to eight hours depending on project complexity. Some freelancers roll this into the project cost; others charge a flat scoping fee of $500–$1,500 that gets credited to the project if you proceed. Either model is fine, but be cautious of any proposal that skips this phase entirely. The discovery output is what the project estimate is actually based on — without it, numbers are guesses.
Development time by project type
Marketing site (3–5 weeks) Typically five to ten pages: homepage, about, services, blog listing + post, contact. Sanity handles the content; Next.js renders it with ISR or full static generation. This is the most common engagement I take on. The timeline assumes a design file (Figma) is handed over at the start — if design is included, add two to four weeks and $3,000–$8,000 depending on the designer.
Headless rebuild (6–12 weeks) This is a migration from an existing platform — WordPress, Webflow, Squarespace — plus a new Sanity schema, content migration scripts, and often more complex page structures: resource libraries, gated content, multi-author blogs, product pages. The wide range reflects how messy legacy content can be. If your WordPress site has five years of unstructured post content, budget toward the higher end.
Custom application or large e-commerce (12–20 weeks) If Sanity is powering a product catalogue, a learning platform, or anything with user roles and complex data relationships, you're in custom application territory. This is typically a team engagement rather than a solo freelancer job.
Sanity plan costs
Sanity's pricing in 2026 is genuinely friendly for small projects. The free plan (Sanity calls it the Developer plan) supports up to three users and 10 GB of asset storage — enough to launch and run a small marketing site indefinitely. There is no feature lock-down on the free tier that would block a production site; it's a real option, not a bait-and-switch.
The Growth plan runs around $15 per user per month, with higher API request limits and more storage. For a five-person marketing team editing content daily, that's $75/month. If you need custom roles, private datasets, or higher bandwidth, the Growth plan is where you'll land.
Enterprise is negotiated annually and is only relevant if you're running a high-traffic media property or need SLAs. Most of my clients never need to discuss it.
Vercel hosting
For Next.js, Vercel is the obvious deployment target. The Hobby plan is free but blocks commercial projects in Vercel's terms of service — don't use it for a client site. The Pro plan is $20/month per member. For a typical two-seat setup (you + one developer or editor accessing the dashboard), that's $40/month. Most client sites I hand off run comfortably on Pro. Edge functions, preview deployments, and analytics are included.
If your site is very high traffic or you need SOC 2 compliance, Vercel Enterprise applies — but that's a separate conversation and a separate budget.
What drives cost up
- Custom animations: GSAP scroll sequences or complex Framer Motion transitions can add one to two weeks of development time and introduce testing overhead across devices. Budget $2,000–$5,000 extra for serious motion work.
- Third-party integrations: Connecting Sanity to Algolia search, a CRM like HubSpot, SendGrid email triggers, or Mux video adds scope. Each integration is typically $800–$2,500 depending on complexity.
- Multilingual content: Adding a second language in Sanity and Next.js is not just translation — it's a different data model, routing structure, and editorial workflow. Add 20–40% to project cost for each additional locale.
- E-commerce: Connecting to Shopify or a custom product catalogue adds significant back-end work. Not a typical add-on.
What keeps it lean
- Sanity's free tier handles small-team sites with no monthly cost.
- Vercel Pro at $20/month is predictable and scales without surprises for mid-traffic sites.
- Starting with Sanity's out-of-the-box Studio (no custom plugins) saves a week of development.
- Using Tailwind CSS v4 utility classes instead of a fully custom design system cuts front-end build time substantially.
- Handing off a Figma design with well-organised components means less back-and-forth during build.
Retainer vs. clean handoff
Some clients want a clean handoff: I build, train the team on Sanity Studio (usually two hours is enough for editors), and step away. That works well for stable marketing sites where the content team handles day-to-day edits and changes are infrequent.
Others prefer a monthly retainer covering bug fixes, small feature additions, dependency updates, and CMS schema changes. Retainers for a site of this complexity typically run $800–$2,500/month depending on the expected volume of work. I cap retainer scope clearly so there are no surprises on either side.
If you're deciding between the two: handoff makes sense if your team is technically comfortable and the site structure is unlikely to change. Retainer makes sense if you're planning ongoing campaign landing pages, new content types, or integrations in the coming year.
The honest summary
| Project type | Typical budget range | |---|---| | Marketing site (freelancer, design provided) | $8,000–$18,000 | | Marketing site (design included) | $12,000–$26,000 | | Headless rebuild from WordPress/Webflow | $22,000–$60,000 | | Sanity hosting (free tier) | $0/month | | Sanity Growth plan | ~$15/user/month | | Vercel Pro | $20/member/month | | Monthly retainer | $800–$2,500/month |
These numbers assume a senior freelancer in 2026. Agency rates will be higher; offshore dev shops will quote lower but typically require more oversight and revision cycles, which erodes the savings.
If you're evaluating whether this stack is the right investment for your project, the decision usually comes down to one question: how often does your team need to update content, and how long do you need the site to scale without a rebuild? If the answer is 'often' and 'years', the Sanity + Next.js combination pays back quickly compared to maintaining a WordPress theme through major version cycles.
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