1 Week Sites builds bespoke Next.js websites for UK counsellors, psychotherapists, and BACP-, UKCP- or BPC-registered private practitioners — £1,000 flat, paid upfront, live in seven days, full refund within 48 hours if I miss day seven. Most therapists I meet are paying £15–£25 a month for a directory listing and a Wix or Squarespace site that looks like every other therapist's site. A bespoke build gives you a calm, confidential, professionally-coded private-practice site that loads in under a second, ranks on your own name, and routes enquiries to a private email — no third-party platform between you and the client. Over five years the total sits around £1,300: £1,000 build plus roughly £60 a year for your own domain and email. You own the code, the hosting, the domain, and the client list. Seven days from brief to live, one revision round, no retainer.
What a therapy-site visitor actually wants
The person reading your site is often in a quiet crisis. They want to know three things in the first ten seconds: that you are accredited and safe, that you work with what they are dealing with, and exactly how to take the next step without speaking to anyone yet. They do not want a homepage carousel, an animated 'hero' video, or a Brené Brown quote. They want plain language about modality, fees, availability, and the physical or online format of the session. Confidentiality cues matter — a private email (not a shared contact form that bcc's your partner), a booking flow that does not reveal the subject, and no third-party trackers firing on sensitive pages. The best therapy sites I see are deliberately plain: a first-person photo, a short biography, a fees page, a location or remote note, and a single way to make first contact.
What most therapy sites get wrong
- Generic stock imagery of 'therapy hands' and pebble cairns — instantly untrusted.
- No fees page. Forces a discovery call on someone who is not ready to speak.
- Accreditation buried in the footer instead of named on the homepage.
- Marketing-speak ('heal your inner child') instead of plain modality names.
- Contact form feeding a WordPress plugin with no confidentiality statement.
- GDPR / privacy page missing or copy-pasted from a template generator.
What a good therapy brief includes
Four things locked on Monday save the week. One, your accreditation body and membership number, exactly as registered. Two, your modality and the three presenting issues you feel genuinely confident working with. Three, a fees decision — published rate, sliding scale, or first-session discount. Four, how you want enquiries to land: private email, a proper booking tool, or both. Photography is often the slow step — if you have a recent headshot, ship it; if not, a simple duotone placeholder works and can be replaced in week two. The brief template on the resources page covers the rest.
The seven-day week
Same week, same shape, whoever you are. Brief Monday, design Tuesday, build Wednesday to Friday, revisions Saturday, launch Sunday. One site a week, one client at a time.
- Monday — sixty-minute video-call brief, scope and copy locked.
- Tuesday — design in Figma, one route shown to sign-off.
- Wednesday–Friday — build in Next.js, Tailwind, TypeScript.
- Saturday — one round of revisions, real copy and imagery.
- Sunday — launch to your Vercel, DNS on your registrar, full handover.
Therapists-specific questions
Will the site be GDPR-compliant for a private practice?
Yes. Minimal cookie policy, no third-party analytics firing before consent, contact form data stays on your own email — not Squarespace, not HubSpot. A plain-English privacy page is written for your practice and reviewed before launch.
Can you add a secure booking or enquiry form?
Yes. A form that routes to a private email address you control, with optional reCAPTCHA, and no data stored on a third-party server. Bookings via Cal.com, Calendly, or a custom flow if you prefer.
Do you include a fees page and sliding scale?
If you want one. Published fees filter out wrong-fit enquiries; a 'from £X' works almost as well. Sliding-scale copy is handled carefully — honest but not performative.
Common questions
Is £1,000 really all-in, or do I pay extra later?
£1,000 is all-in for a five-to-seven-page bespoke marketing site: brief, design, build, one revision round, launch. No monthly fee, no retainer, no kill fee. You pay for your own domain (≈£12/year) and email hosting (≈£4/month). Nothing goes through me.
What happens if you miss day seven?
Full refund within 48 hours, no arguments. I take the loss — that's what keeps the deadline real. It has not happened yet and the guarantee is what stops it happening.
Who owns the finished site?
You do, fully. The code lives in a GitHub repo transferred to your account. The Vercel hosting project is on your Vercel account. The domain is on your registrar. You can hire any Next.js developer to take it forward — nothing is locked to me.
Bespoke, live in seven days.
£1,000 flat. Paid upfront. Full refund if I miss day seven. Code, hosting, and domain all in your name — whether you are a therapist in Liverpool or London.