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 five-minute review is the same review regardless of zip code.
Get my free review →Ready when you are
Send your URL and we'll review it through the eyes of a first-time guest in about five minutes. 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.