12 best Webflow agency templates in 2026
Twelve Webflow agency templates for design studios, consultancies, and small creative teams — dark, minimal, editorial, and premium multi-page builds. Every pick handles team, services, and case studies.
Twelve Webflow agency templates for design studios, consultancies, and small creative teams — dark, minimal, editorial, and premium multi-page builds. Every pick handles team, services, and case studies.
Agency sites sell credibility before anything else. A prospect lands on the homepage, scans the work, and decides in under a minute whether you’re worth a reply. The template you pick either carries that weight or gets in the way.
Here are twelve Webflow templates built for agencies — studios, design agencies, consultancies, and small creative teams. Multi-page, CMS-driven, with real room for team, services, and detailed case studies. I’ve used most of these myself or watched clients ship on them.
Four things matter. A multi-page structure that handles Home, Work, Work post, About, Services, and Contact without feeling forced. CMS support for case studies and blog posts, so you can add work without touching the layout. A service or process section, because agencies sell offerings as much as projects. And enough visual personality to be remembered — without the template doing so much that it competes with the work.
Price range on this list runs from $29 to $129. A $49 Webflow template is already premium-built. The difference between $49 and $129 is page count, component depth, and how much the designer has thought about the agency pitch — not production quality.
Someday is the most characterful agency template I’ve put out. Playful grid, expressive type, editorial structure — it reads like a magazine spread rather than a directory. Multi-page with CMS for projects and case studies, and a team-sized about page that doesn’t feel like filler. Works for a two-person studio or a ten-person agency without swapping templates when the team grows. The trade-off: the bolder layout takes a full day of setup rather than an afternoon. If you want to launch by tonight, pick something simpler.
Creative directors, brand agencies, and small design studios who want a site that signals a point of view before anyone reads a word.
$49 · Single site licence
Awake is the dark agency pick. Clean grid, strong image presentation, full-bleed project layouts. The dark canvas lets work lead, and the multi-page structure covers team, about, and detailed case studies without clutter. More controlled than Someday and quieter than the heavier premium builds — the one to choose if you want the site to feel calm and considered rather than loud.
Agency leads and UX studios whose work looks strongest on dark backgrounds — motion, interaction, or brand-led projects.
$49 · Single site licence
&Fold by BYQ Supply is the premium consultancy pick. Three homepage variations, an Offerings page for service packages, a Journal CMS for essays, and three about and contact layouts. Quieter than the BYQ flagship builds — more studio than showroom. The right template for a solo consultant, small coaching practice, or service-led studio that wants the site to read intentional rather than loud. A full Figma file ships with purchase, which speeds up rebranding if the team works there first. $129 puts it at the top of the budget — fair for the page count and the design polish.
Solo consultants, coaches, and small service-led studios that want a calm, intentional site that holds space for the work rather than shouting over it.
$129 · Single site licence
Lucide is the only template on this list with a proper blog built in alongside the agency pages. One Webflow editor handles both case studies and writing — no Ghost, no Medium, no third-party integration. If content marketing is part of how the agency pulls leads, this is the straightforward choice. Editorial design, generous whitespace, strong typographic rhythm.
Agencies who write — whether that’s thought leadership, case study deep-dives, or SEO-led content. Also good for consultancies that treat writing as a lead channel.
$49 · Single site licence
Esme is the entry-level premium pick. Clean, minimal, professional — and $49. CMS for work and projects, reusable symbols for nav and footer, a tight page set (Home, Work, Project, About, Contact). No services page, no blog, no team section out of the box. This is the template for a two-to-four-person studio that wants to launch fast with minimal decisions. Not the one if the agency needs services, pricing, or team pages on day one — Two (next on this list) is better suited there.
Small agencies and freelancers that want a fast, good-looking launch without paying premium-tier prices — and are happy to add services or team sections later.
$49 · Single site licence
Darkfolio is the most restrained dark template on this list. High-contrast, sparse layout, every element earning its space. Where Awake has warmth, Darkfolio is cooler — the right choice if the work is the only thing that should draw attention. No blog, no events. Just work presented well in a multi-page structure.
Brand studios and visual agencies whose work looks its best on a dark, high-contrast background. Not the one to pick if you want a blog alongside the agency pages — grab Lucide for that.
$49 · Single site licence
Irene is a simpler dark agency option — lighter on features than Awake, warmer in feel than Darkfolio. Home, Work, About, Contact, with CMS-driven project pages. The one to pick if a dark site is the goal but Darkfolio feels too restrained and Awake too heavy. Fast to set up, easy to maintain, no surprises.
Independent agencies and small studios who want a dark site that’s quick to launch and easy to hand to a part-time editor.
$49 · Single site licence
Andersen by Medium Rare is the portfolio-led agency pick. Built around the idea that the work should lead and the template should step back. Minimal design, comprehensive page set, CMS for projects. Flexible enough to fit a boutique studio, a PR consultancy, a solo UI/UX designer, or a full creative agency. Medium Rare are one of the longer-running Webflow template shops — build quality is consistent, which matters when you pay $129. Pick this one if the case studies are the pitch and you want a minimal frame around them rather than a designed-to-impress container.
Boutique design studios, creative agencies, consulting agencies, PR consultancies, and solo UI/UX designers whose work is the pitch — minimal frame, strong case studies.
$129 · Single site licence
Landon is the minimal light-mode agency pick. Generous whitespace, restrained colour palette, classic multi-page structure. Nothing competes with the work. No blog, no services page, no event module — just a clean project grid and a straightforward about page. The most "professional-looking" template on this list, in the best sense.
Consultancies, product-led studios, and agencies whose clients are enterprise or corporate. Also works as a design studio site where the work is the entire pitch.
$49 · Single site licence
Two is the full-featured budget pick — same designer as Esme, twice the page count. Home, Work, Project, Services, About, Team, Journal, Post, Contact, and the utility pages, all for $49. CMS on Work, Team, and Journal. This is the list’s best value: it hits the price point of Esme but ships with the pages a growing agency actually needs (services, team, journal) without forcing you to build them. Design language is clean and modern rather than distinctive — so the rebrand work lies in colour, type, and imagery, not structural decisions.
Growing agencies that want services, team, and a journal built in from day one, at a budget that matches a one-person studio.
$49 · Single site licence
Accent is the colourful budget pick. A simple layout with a pastel or vivid accent that gives it personality without going loud. Sits between a minimal one-pager and a fully featured multi-page agency site. Good value at $29 — the honest limitation is the component depth is thinner than the $49 templates above, so you’ll outgrow it faster if the agency scales.
Solo consultants and new agencies on a small budget who need a site with personality today. Good for freelancers positioning themselves as a micro-studio.
$29 · Single site licence
Format is the most stripped-back light-mode one-pager in the budget range. Card grid layout, minimal type, nothing extra. Cheaper than Landon, simpler than Accent. If the agency is brand-new and you want a live site by tomorrow morning without template decisions, Format does the job at $29. No CMS beyond a basic work collection, no blog, no services page — this is a placeholder-to-real-site template, not a long-term home.
$29 · Single site licence
Someday for character and editorial personality — the best all-rounder at $49. Awake for a dark agency with room for detailed case studies. Lucide if a blog needs to sit alongside the agency pages. Darkfolio for the most restrained dark pick; Irene if Darkfolio feels too stripped back. Landon for a clean, minimal, light-mode site that reads as professional in any audience. Accent and Format cover the $29 tier — Accent if you want colour, Format if you want minimal-and-fast.
From the wider marketplace: &Fold for a quiet, considered consultancy site. Esme as a $49 fast-launch pick if you don’t need services or team pages on day one. Andersen if the case studies are the whole pitch and you want a minimal frame around them. Two for the best $49 value on the list — services, team, and journal built in.
Browse the full set on the Webflow agency templates page.
Quick setup checklist:
Yes. Every one is built with Webflow global styles — colour, typography, and component tokens — so a rebrand is a handful of changes across the whole site rather than page-by-page. CMS-driven templates let you add new case studies or blog posts without touching the design.
Lucide has a full blog built in, sharing CMS collections with the portfolio pages. Two ships with a Journal CMS that works the same way. &Fold includes a Journal collection for essays or case studies. Someday, Awake, Darkfolio, Irene, Landon, Accent, Format, Esme, and Andersen are agency and portfolio-focused — no blog by default, though you can add one via Webflow CMS if needed.
Two ships with a dedicated Services page, and &Fold includes an Offerings page built for service packages. Someday, Awake, and Lucide have about and contact structures that accommodate a services section without redesign. For the minimal templates (Landon, Format, Accent, Esme, Andersen), you’ll want to build a services section into the existing layout or add a new CMS collection.
Awake and Darkfolio lead the dark picks. Awake has more structure and warmth; Darkfolio is the most restrained and minimal. Irene sits in the middle — dark but simpler than either. Lucide supports dark mode as well, alongside light.
Webflow templates include CMS by default on the standard plan, and every template on this list uses it for projects and case studies. You’d only move off CMS if you wanted to plug the site into a headless setup like Sanity or Contentful — worth considering for larger agencies, but out of scope for most.
Accent, Format, Someday, and Esme are the best solo/micro-agency picks — fast to populate, no empty page slots that make a small agency look hollow. &Fold is purpose-built for solo consultants and small coaching practices, so it sits in the same tier. Landon works too if the consultant positions as enterprise-facing. Andersen fits solo UI/UX designers who want a portfolio-led site. The bigger premium builds are more than a one-person practice needs on day one.
If productising templates alongside client work is part of the agency plan, selling Webflow templates covers the pricing, delivery, and marketplace side.
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