Questions, answered
Everything you need to know about project scope, source code handover, warranty, maintenance costs, and how we price future feature development.
Do we receive the full source code?
Yes. After final payment, you receive the full source code, deployment/config files, and handover documentation so your team can independently update, edit, or remove content, and continue building new features in the future if needed.
Is there a warranty after launch?
Yes. We provide a post-launch warranty for bug fixes within the delivered scope. If issues are caused by third-party or client-side changes after handover, they are not covered under warranty, but we can still fix them at a reasonable service rate.
Are maintenance fees required?
Lifetime licenses included: Bricks Builder, BricksForge, Advanced Themer, JetEngine.
What is the annual website maintenance/hosting cost?
You do not need to pay annual maintenance fees to us. We set up a dedicated VPS configuration and hand it over to your team, so you only pay the infrastructure provider directly. Typical cost is around USD 40–200/year, which is often around 50% more cost-efficient than many managed platforms.
Are there extra or hidden fees?
No hidden fees. Any additional cost (for scope changes or third-party services like domain, email, plugins, or APIs) is shared clearly and approved before implementation.
How do you calculate project pricing?
Pricing is tailored to your goals, requirements, and available budget. After a discovery meeting, we provide a detailed proposal with clear scope, timeline, and costs.
How are additional costs handled if we add new features later?
Any additional feature request is estimated based on your specific requirements and implementation time. We provide a clear quote first, then proceed only after your approval.
Why should we build the website through proposal → wireframe → design first?
This process reduces risk, aligns expectations early, and prevents costly rework during development. The proposal defines scope and priorities, the wireframe validates structure and user flow, and the design finalizes visual direction before coding starts, which saves time and budget in execution.