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Website design for caterers

A $50,000-grade website for a catering company, built for you, not by you.

A catering website sells an experience and qualifies leads. It shows real event work, frames packages as experiences rather than line items, captures enquiry details that pre-qualify (date, headcount, event type), and routes the lead cleanly. AtlasForge builds that site free and live within 48 hours.

Who this is for.

A catering enquiry is the start of a relationship, not a transaction, and the buyer is imagining an event: a wedding, a corporate function, a milestone party. They want to see real events the caterer has done and feel that the company can deliver the experience before they think about price. Most catering sites read like a price list with stock photos and collect enquiries with no detail, so every lead begins with a back-and-forth that wastes hours.

What the old caterer website gets wrong.

These are the patterns we see on most caterers’ sites, and what a proper build fixes.

  • The experience is the product but the site reads like a price list with stock photos
  • Enquiries arrive with no detail, so every lead starts with a back-and-forth
  • Packages are framed as line items, which makes the upsell feel transactional
  • Real event portfolio, the proof that closes, is thin or missing

What a great caterer website includes.

A great catering site sells the experience before the price. It leads with a portfolio of real events, frames packages as experiences illustrated with actual work rather than line items, and captures the detail that pre-qualifies a lead, date, headcount, event type, in the enquiry form. The lead routes cleanly with automatic confirmation and follow-up, occasion and service pages cover the event types catered, and Service and LocalBusiness schema make the company findable for the right enquiries.

  • A portfolio of real events that sells the experience before the price
  • Packages framed as experiences, each illustrated with real work
  • An enquiry form that captures date, headcount, and event type so leads arrive qualified
  • A clean lead route with automatic confirmation and follow-up
  • Occasion and service pages for the event types you cater
  • Service, FAQ, and LocalBusiness schema for local and AI-answer visibility

Every one of these ships in the free build. This is the standard, not an upsell.

What a caterer website actually costs.

A catering site spends its budget on the events portfolio and the qualifying enquiry flow, the two things that turn a vague request into a quotable lead. A price-list template is cheap and produces unqualified enquiries that cost hours in back-and-forth. The value is in the proof that closes and the form that captures date, headcount, and type up front. You are paying for fewer, better-qualified leads and a portfolio that sells the experience.

Real caterer sites we have built.

Live, on their own domains. Each was built before the owner paid anything.

  • Grazeful Creations

    Kitchener-Waterloo

    Charcuterie-catering business in Kitchener-Waterloo built as a 16-page Next.js site with a gallery and 36 geo pages.

See every caterer site in the directory →

Catering website questions

Can the enquiry form pre-qualify my leads?
Yes. The form captures date, headcount, and event type up front, so a lead arrives with the detail you need to quote, instead of starting every conversation from zero. That alone saves hours a week.
Should catering packages be shown as prices or as experiences?
As experiences, illustrated with real events. A price list reads as transactional and invites comparison on cost alone. Packages framed as experiences, each shown with actual work you have delivered, start the conversation on what the client will get rather than what it costs.
How do I sell the experience and not just the price?
By leading with a portfolio of real events and framing packages as experiences illustrated with actual work. When the buyer sees what you have delivered before they see a number, the conversation starts on value rather than cost.

Want a finished caterer website to look at first?

Enter your website or describe your business. We build the entire site, the kind an agency would charge $50,000 for, free, and show it to you within 48 hours. You only pay $149 a month when you decide to publish it on your domain.

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