For churches · Service area
29+US metros covered · remote-first
We build church websites for ministries in 29+ metros (and counting). All work is remote, every site is custom, and pricing is flat-rate monthly with no setup fee.
Working together
Busic Digital is a remote-first agency. We don't have offices in any of the metros listed below — and for website work, that has turned out to be a feature, not a bug. Here is what the working relationship actually looks like.
No field offices
We do not have a building in any of the 29 cities listed below. Everything is done remotely — by design, not because it is cheaper.
Why that works for websites
Website work is the most remote-able craft there is. Files, Looms, Slack messages, and shared previews — none of it gets better in a conference room.
Asynchronous by default
The free 5-minute review arrives as a Loom you watch on your own time. The build runs the same way — short Looms, written updates, shared previews.
Communication we use
Email, Slack, Loom, and shared docs throughout the build. Live calls when they actually help; otherwise the async version is faster and clearer.
Timing and terms
A new site usually ships within 5–7 days of approval. Plans are 12-month minimums billed monthly with no setup fee, and your church owns the site after the term.
If you specifically want a vendorwho can drive over and sit in your office on a Tuesday, we're not the right fit and we'd tell you that up front. For everything else, the async setup is usually faster than the alternative — short Looms beat scheduling a meeting most weeks.
The free review itself is the cleanest way to test the relationship. You send your URL, we send back a five-minute video walking through your site like a first-time guest. No call, no pitch. If the review lands, we keep going. If not, you keep the review.
Where we focus
A handful of these — Atlanta, Nashville, Dallas, Charlotte, Los Angeles — are anchor markets we know in depth, where we've studied denominational mix, the local church-tech landscape, and what first-time guests actually search for. The rest are tier-two metros where we work opportunistically and have done enough public-knowledge research to write honestly about the market. None of this is a claim of engagement — it's where the research sits, not where the clients are. If your city isn't on the list, scroll past the grid; we still work with churches anywhere in the country.
Cities · 29 total
Each city page covers the local church scene, the platforms we tend to see in stacks there, what first-time visitors usually look for, and what to prioritize on the site. Same honest framing throughout — we name no churches as clients.
Region
Big-multisite market — your site is read alongside three polished neighbors.
See the Atlanta pageDeep evangelical market where visitors read for tone in the first ten seconds.
See the Nashville pageSteady banking-city growth; visitors are often new-to-town and church-shopping.
See the Charlotte pageResearch Triangle inbound migration keeps creating fresh first-time visitor pools.
See the Raleigh pageUpstate SC market with PCA, SBC, and a notable suburban-growth dynamic.
See the Greenville pageRiver-city market with a long Black church tradition and growing suburban plants.
See the Memphis pageDeep-South market with strong Baptist roots and notable suburban growth.
See the Birmingham pageEast-Tennessee metro with deep Baptist roots and college-town visitor mix.
See the Knoxville pageSmaller TN-GA market with strong evangelical infrastructure and recent growth.
See the Chattanooga pageMid-Atlantic capital with PCA, SBC, and a notable mainline Protestant base.
See the Richmond pageRegion
Florida growth metro where retirees and transplants drive most visitor traffic.
See the Tampa pageTourism + relocation traffic; the site does heavy first-introduction work.
See the Orlando pageNortheast Florida market with steady population growth and varied church mix.
See the Jacksonville pageRegion
Drive-time decides everything; campus and neighborhood framing wins.
See the Dallas pageSprawling, multi-language metro — geographic and language clarity matter most.
See the Houston pageHeavy transplant pool; many visitors are church-curious for the first time.
See the Austin pageRegion
Mid-size Midwestern market where steady, plain-language sites tend to win.
See the Indianapolis pageGrowing university-town market with strong evangelical and mainline mix.
See the Columbus pageCatholic-rooted metro with a steady evangelical and non-denominational layer.
See the Cincinnati pageMid-America market where suburban growth keeps reshaping visitor flows.
See the Kansas City pageTwin Cities — Lutheran-rooted, with a growing evangelical and plant layer.
See the Minneapolis pageBorder-state market with SBC roots and a growing non-denominational layer.
See the Louisville pageRust-Belt city with mainline Protestant roots and recent evangelical growth.
See the Pittsburgh pageRegion
Region
Fast-growing sunbelt metro with a mix of established and new-plant audiences.
See the Phoenix pageHigh-transplant metro where many visitors have no churchgoing background at all.
See the Denver pageEnormous, multi-language metro — geography and language signaling come first.
See the Los Angeles pageLeast-churched major metro — the site does heavy first-introduction work.
See the Seattle pageNot on the list?
If your church is in a metro that isn't listed above, get in touch anyway — we build church websites for ministries anywhere in the US. The list above reflects where we've invested in market understanding, not where we'll consider working. The free homepage demo is the same offer regardless of zip code.
Get my free homepage demo →Ready when you are
Send your URL and we'll rebuild your homepage on a private preview link in 5 to 7 business days. No call, no pitch. Works the same whether your church is in Atlanta, Seattle, or a town we haven't written a page about yet.