✓For churches · Memphis, TN
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Church website design in Memphis, TN
40+ free church website reviews recorded
Memphis has a strong church tradition spanning many denominations. Visitors there generally want a clear read on what a Sunday looks like and what the church believes before they take time off to visit.
Local context
What the church scene looks like in Memphis
Memphis carries one of the strongest mixed-tradition church cultures in the country — a large historically Black church presence with deep historical roots, a substantial Southern Baptist and Methodist footprint, a meaningful Catholic and Presbyterian base, and a growing layer of newer non-denominational and multisite churches in the suburbs. The Black church tradition in Memphis is particularly visible: gospel music heritage runs through the city, and several long-established historically Black congregations carry significant cultural weight. The metro's economy is shaped heavily by healthcare (St. Jude, Methodist, Baptist Memorial) and logistics (FedEx), which means churches serve a population with a higher than average share of shift workers and medical professionals whose Sunday availability is not always typical. Germantown, Collierville, Bartlett, Cordova, and the Mississippi-side suburbs (Olive Branch, Southaven, Hernando) each carry their own distinct church identities, and the metro functionally spans three states. The practical effect for a Memphis church is that the visitor pool is more denominationally varied than in many comparably sized metros, and the website often has to communicate tradition, music style, and theological tone clearly enough that visitors can tell whether they are walking into a fit.
Stack snapshot
What we tend to see in stacks here
- Planning Center
- Tithe.ly
- Pushpay
- Subsplash
- Squarespace
- WordPress
Memphis-area church stacks reflect the metro's split between large established congregations and a smaller but growing multisite layer. Larger Memphis churches are publicly visible Pushpay, Subsplash, or in-house custom users; mid-sized and smaller congregations more often run Tithe.ly or Planning Center Giving, with Planning Center common as a ChMS at all sizes. CMS choices skew WordPress and Squarespace at the smaller end. Historically Black congregations sometimes have a different platform mix that includes more direct-processor giving and older custom sites — read this as a market observation rather than a vendor recommendation.
Visitor flow
How first-time visitors find your church here
- 1
Search
- 2
Click
- 3
Read
- 4
Decide
- 5
Visit
Memphis visitors are usually arriving with strong category expectations and are filtering on tradition early — the difference between a Baptist service, a Methodist service, a Black church service, and a non-denominational service matters here in a way it does not in some newer Sun Belt metros. Drive-time across the metro is a real constraint, especially for visitors crossing the state line. Shift work in healthcare and logistics also means a meaningful share of visitors are weighing whether service times realistically work for them — clear, accurate service times do unusually heavy lifting.
Memphis's public-facing church web presence is anchored by churches like Bellevue Baptist, Hope Presbyterian, and Brown Missionary Baptist — each with established online footprints across different segments of the metro's church culture. Those sites are commonly referenced when newcomers form a baseline for what a Memphis church website should feel like.
- 01
Tone and tradition signaled in the first scroll — Memphis visitors are usually filtering on this before logistics.
- 02
Service times, address, and one-tap directions above the fold; the metro spans three states and drive-time matters.
- 03
A first-visit section that is honest about service length, music, and dress.
- 04
Recent sermon visible from the homepage.
- 05
A persistent giving link that matches your processor.
How it works
From review to a site you’re proud of
- 1
Free 5-minute video review
Send your current site and we record a Loom walking through what is and is not working from a first-time visitor’s perspective. No sales call, no obligation.
- 2
Optional homepage demo
If you want to see what a redesign would actually look like, we build a free homepage mockup before you commit to anything.
- 3
Pick a plan if it makes sense
If the review and demo land, you pick a monthly plan and we take it from there. If they do not, you keep the review and we part on good terms.
Launch + Train
Self-managed after launch
$57/mo · 12-mo minimum
Full custom redesign, hosting, and a 30-day training and support window. Your team handles routine updates after that.
- Custom-built from scratch (zero templates)
- Hosting for the full 12-month term
- 30-day post-launch training window
- GA4 + conversion tracking on your goals
★ Most commonLaunch + Ongoing Care
Fully managed after launch
$97/mo · 12-mo minimum
Same redesign and hosting. We also handle routine updates — sermons, events, ministries, staff pages, photo refreshes — throughout the term.
- Everything in Launch + Train
- Routine content + photo updates
- Sermons, events, ministry pages
- Monthly GA4 conversion review
About working together
Busic Digital is not based in Memphis and does not have a Tennessee office. All work for a Memphis church would be remote — video reviews, design demos, ongoing updates by email and Loom. If your team specifically wants a local vendor with in-person availability, we are not the right fit.
From the insights
Worth reading before you ship a new Memphis church website
Ready when you are
Want a free review of your Memphis church website?
Send your site and we'll review it through the eyes of a first-time guest in about five minutes.