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GoDaddy Websites + Marketing Website Builder

 & Jeffrey L. Wilson Managing Editor, Apps and Gaming
 & Jordan Minor Principal Writer, Software
Our Experts
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43 YEARS
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GoDaddy Websites + Marketing Website Builder - GoDaddy GoCentral (Credit: GoDaddy)
4.0 Excellent

The Bottom Line

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing is an excellent site builder with attractive templates, AI-powered site design, and generous storage and monthly data transfers.
Best DealFree

Buy It Now

Free

Pros & Cons

    • Good-looking sites on desktop and mobile
    • Unlimited storage and monthly data transfers
    • Great marketing and SEO tools
    • More than 100 templates that you can swap with ease
    • Excellent uptime and customer service
    • AI tools
    • Free tier
    • Limited layout customization
    • E-commerce option not available with all tiers

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing Specs

24/7 Phone Support
Basic Image Editing
Blogging Tool
Download Selling
Drag-and-Drop Site Editor
Free Version Offered
Live Chat
Point of Sale Support
REST API
Site Membership
SSL Certificate Included
Transaction Fees
Unlimited Monthly Data Transfers With All Plans
Unlimited Storage With All Plans
Web Store

The GoDaddy name is synonymous with web hosting. It's the world's biggest domain registrar, and it has held that title for a long time. GoDaddy Websites + Marketing is an expansion of that strength; if you're already getting a domain name from GoDaddy, why not get a website to go along with it? The company's website-building tool is a useful, all-in-one service that includes marketing and tools for promoting and monetizing your site. You get the domain name, the website builder, social media hooks, and email marketing all in one spot. That said, Duda and Wix offer even more robust feature sets, so they remain our Editors' Choice winners for website builders.


Plans and Prices

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing has three paid tiers designed to appeal to people with varying hosting requirements. All plans include an SSL certificate, a mobile-friendly site design, a PayPal button, a free business phone number for a year, 24/7 support, and a handful of other features. It's essentially "unlimited" storage and data transfers. GoDaddy also offers a free plan that includes a single website with hosting, 24/7 customer support, and limited social and email marketing. Not all competitors have free tiers, so that's a nice option for casual users.

(Credit: GoDaddy/PCMag)

The entry-level Basic plan ($16.99 per month) lets you connect one custom domain, gives you an email account that matches your domain (free for one year), and lets you send 100 marketing emails per month. The Premium package ($29.99 per month) is similar to Basic, except it lets you create, launch, and boost social posts, and send 25,000 marketing emails per month.

The Commerce plan is GoDaddy's top-level website builder tiers. Like the Premium plan, Commerce ($34.99 per month) has unlimited social media platforms and posts. It also includes selling unlimited products via an online store (or Amazon, eBay, and Instagram), setting up shipping options, managing promotions and discounts, and sending 100,000 marketing emails per month. If you're serious about selling products online, the Commerce plan is for you. That said, we don't like that online store creation is exclusive to these tiers.

GoDaddy's pricing is comparable with the competition's premium tiers: Wix starts at $17 per month, Duda starts at $19 per month, and Squarespace starts at $16 per month.


Setup Wizard and Templates

Before you can start building or even see any site templates in GoDaddy Websites + Marketing, you must create an account, which can be done via Amazon, Facebook, or by signing up using an email address and password. Before you choose a template, the startup wizard asks you about the site's subject matter, where you would like to sell products, and what name the site should have. The wizard picked a template for our test site that featured a typewriter, based on our desire for a writer-focused site.

The template designs are modern and attractive. The template previews have a button to show the site in desktop and mobile versions, giving you an idea of what your site will look like. Upon choosing one, you see a page showing how a sample site using the template looks both on desktop and mobile. There are more than 100 templates in total. You can change some themes, but these are minor changes to the overall template. However, you can switch entire templates without rebuilding the site, something few website builders offer.


Building an E-Commerce Site

The back-end interface is clear, simple, and uncluttered. The dashboard icon takes you to promotion options like adding a Facebook Page, creating a blog, and implementing SEO settings. Clicking Edit Site lets you tweak the site's name, rearrange site sections, and customize other features. A dedicated social media section lets you add Facebook, Google, Instagram, and Twitter/X accounts. GoDaddy accounts start with a yousitename.goddadysites.com URL, but you can connect a domain name you already own or pick up a custom GoDaddy domain.

(Credit: GoDaddy/PCMag)

Clicking Edit Website takes you to the website builder proper. You're treated to a view of your website, with sections highlighted as you scroll over them. Compared with Duda and Wix, GoDaddy is limited in that it only lets you insert predesigned sections. You can't just drag a new element in from a list; instead, you must scroll over a section and click the big plus icon to add a new section. Then, you're given a searchable list of the content that can be placed in that spot. You can't simply add a photo or text box wherever you like. GoDaddy Websites + Marketing is a good fit for people who don't feel confident controlling the look of their site and would rather have all the design choices made for them.

In fact, simply adding an image or other item feels unintuitive, as you can't do it at all in certain section types. You can upload multiple images at once, and once they're uploaded, you can use them in any photo space on the site. Any uploaded image can be used in photo galleries, too. Unfortunately, there are set positions where the photos live on the live page. As for image editing, GoDaddy lets you zoom images, rotate and crop them, flip them from color to black and white, add shapes, and do other tweaks. Most site builders include at least some of this type of image-editing functionality. Here, GoDaddy's site builder integrates with GoDaddy Studio's design tools.

You add a page via the Website menu icon on the right-side panel. There are dedicated menus for About, Contact Us, Photo Gallery, and other sections. You just give the page a name and then add content sections. The newly created page is empty, save for a header, footer, and center area where you can start adding sections. You can now make individual pages, but not the entire site, private by requiring a membership sign-in.

GoDaddy now offers Airo, a collection of several generative AI tools to help make the building process faster and easier. After you answer a few questions and enter a prompt, the builder generates everything from pages with pictures to products with descriptions to customer service messages to social media ads. It may not be perfect, but it's a good place to start that could save time compared with starting from scratch.

Every edit you make is automatically saved. During editing, you can hit Preview to see the site's current state. The preview shows both desktop and mobile views.

There are a few ways to make your website bring in cash, both in the form of page sections: You can upgrade to the Online Store account level, add a PayPal donation button, enable appointment bookings, or display ads using Google AdSense (which is frowned upon on today's web and doesn't produce much income). GoDaddy also lets you create a Payable Domain, a custom domain that serves as a direct and secure payment link for customer checkouts.

(Credit: GoDaddy/PCMag)

When we upgraded to the Online Store account level, we discovered that a Shop page had been added to our site. You can add products in a simple interface that allows a photo, name, price, sale price, custom categories, SKU, and description. You can also specify color and size options and physical vs. digital goods. In addition, GoDaddy offers excellent help with inventory and shipping options, and UPS and USPS integrations. You can get paid via Apple Pay, PayPal, Square, and Stripe, all excellent services. GoDaddy POS hardware connects your online store with offline sales. You get a professional-looking shopping cart and checkout pages, and you can even have text messages sent to you about incoming orders.

All account levels include a useful email marketing tool. This lets you blast a template-based email to everyone who signed up for a membership on your site. You get choices of sales campaigns, events, and standard newsletters. It's a flexible and customizable tool that tracks responses and schedules mailings.


Mobile Site Editing and SEO

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing creates a functional, good-looking, responsive mobile website based on the desktop site you build, but you have no control over the mobile presentation. Even the responsive-design-focused Squarespace lets you tweak mobile site presentation, and many site builders, such as Wix, let you customize the mobile view considerably. Then again, none of this may matter to you; our test website looked quite good and functioned as expected.

The other side of the mobile coin—editing your site from a mobile device—is a feather in GoDaddy's cap. You can do almost anything in a smartphone browser that you can do in a desktop web browser, including changing the theme and adding sections and images.

A search engine optimization option helps you make your site appealing to web search engines. Simply click SEO from the Marketing drop-down menu, and you're taken through a wizard. The wizard proposes keywords and phrases and populates your page title and metatags. It also proposes content areas into which you should add the keywords. If you're new to site building, be aware that your site won't appear in web search results until you've verified the site with the search engines.


Customer Service and Uptime

For such a huge company, GoDaddy excels in terms of support. It has 24/7 phone support and an online chat option if you need personal help, but there's also a huge Help Center knowledge base, how-to videos, and a full community forum. We jumped on chat to ask a question and were connected to an agent in under a minute. The reply was a little slower than some services; it took approximately two minutes to get an answer, but we did get a suitable solution.

Website uptime is one of the most important aspects of a hosting service. If your site is down, clients or customers cannot find your products or services, and you do not want that. GoDaddy promises a 99.9% uptime rate, so your store should be available to customers at all hours.


Verdict: A Well-Rounded Site Builder

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing is one of the simpler site-building options on the market, but it delivers good-looking sites for desktop and mobile viewing. In addition, GoDaddy gives you lots of room to grow by offering unlimited storage and monthly data transfers with all plans. That said, it only gives you limited control over your site's appearance, which may put off some would-be site creators. Though GoDaddy is excellent, Duda (for SaaS integration) and Wix (for free use) are richer offerings with more customizability, so they are our Editors' Choice winners.

Final Thoughts

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing Website Builder - GoDaddy GoCentral (Credit: GoDaddy)

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing Website Builder

4.0 Excellent

GoDaddy Websites + Marketing is an excellent site builder with attractive templates, AI-powered site design, and generous storage and monthly data transfers.

Get It Now
Best DealFree

Buy It Now

Free

About Our Experts

Jeffrey L. Wilson

Jeffrey L. Wilson

Managing Editor, Apps and Gaming

Since 2004, I've written about consumer tech for many publications, including 1UP, Laptop, Parenting, Sync, Wise Bread, and WWE. I now apply that knowledge and skill set as the managing editor of PCMag's apps and gaming team.

The Technology I Use

As a member of the App & Gaming team, I use a wide variety of apps and services. Google Drive is an essential file-syncing service for moving documents between team members in this work-from-home era. Scrivener has been an invaluable writing tool as I rework my fiction manuscript. YouTube Premium and YouTube TV deliver hours of entertainment (though I only use the latter service during the F1 and NBA playoff seasons).

In terms of hardware, I use a Lenovo Thinkpad Carbon X1 laptop for work and an Origin PC tower for playing PC games. I also have a Steam Deck, which lets me play my favorite titles under a shade tree. Of course, I have a smartphone, and the Google Pixel 9a is my handset of choice.

My main input devices are the Das Keyboard 4 Professional and Logitech MX Vertical Ergonomic Mouse, though I bust out the Hori Fighting Commander Octa or Hori Fight Stick Alpha when mixing it up in fighting games. I have a thing for arcade sticks. I collect Neo Geo AES games, too, but only if I can find the carts on the (relative) cheap.

For video and music consumption, I fire up my Lenovo Tab P11; it has a sharp screen and great Dolby Atmos-powered speakers. My Kindle Paperwhite has received much use, too. I have a standalone, Sony Blu-ray player connected to a TCL television when it's time to go full cinephile. I'm also a vinyl guy, so the Bluetooth-enabled Audio-Technica AT-LP60XBT keeps the wax spinning.

My first computer was a Commodore 64. Long live BASIC and retro computers!

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Jordan Minor

Jordan Minor

Principal Writer, Software

My PCMag career began in 2013 as an intern. Now, I'm a senior writer, using the skills I acquired at Northwestern University to write about dating apps, meal kits, programming software, website builders, video streaming services, and video games. I was previously a senior editor at Geek.com and have written for The A.V. Club, Kotaku, and Paste Magazine. I'm the author of the gaming history book Video Game of the Year: A Year-by-Year Guide to the Best, Boldest, and Most Bizarre Games from Every Year Since 1977, and the reason everything you know about Street Sharks is a lie.

The Technology I Use

I use the newest Android and iOS smartphones for testing, but I currently use an iPhone 14 as my personal phone. I just hate that we gave up headphone jacks.

I've always favored gaming laptops over desktops. On that note, I have a 16-inch HP Envy with an Intel Core i9-13900H CPU and Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 GPU. No matter what machine I’m working on, an alarming amount of my personal and professional life revolves around cloud-synced Google Drive files.

For food subscriptions, my household sticks with CookUnity and HelloFresh for meals. Video streaming is a bit more complicated. While there are too many services to list, we're subscribed to most of the major ones. These days, I find myself drawn to HBO Max's movies and shows, as well as Peacock's reality trash.

I've been a lifelong Nintendo fan, and I sincerely believe the Nintendo Switch will go down as one of the best gaming consoles of all time. It has an unbelievable library of new and old games from Nintendo and third-party companies. The handheld/console hybrid approach makes playing games so much more flexible, a legacy that continues with the Nintendo Switch 2 and Valve’s Steam Deck.

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