Twelve Website Pages Every Growing Church Should Publish
Church websites often feel thin not because the team lacks information, but because it is not organized around the questions people actually ask. A clear page map gives the church a better digital front door.
FlexiCHURCH is most useful when the website supports both outreach and member action from the same navigation.
Start with pages that reduce uncertainty
The first group of pages should answer where the church is, what happens there, and how someone can make contact without friction.
- Home
- About
- Contact
- Service times and location
Add pages that turn interest into action
Once visitors understand the church, they should be able to move toward participation, generosity, and next steps easily.
- Giving
- Blog or sermon content
- Events
- Plan your visit or next steps
Publish pages that help existing members too
A strong church website is not only for guests. It should also support regular members who need information quickly during the week.
- Ministries
- Children or youth information
- Leadership or pastoral contacts
- Member portal or request workflows
Quick checklist
- Publish the pages people search for first.
- Make giving, events, and blog easy to find.
- Support members as well as guests.
- Review navigation each quarter as the church grows.
The best church websites are not the ones with the most pages. They are the ones where the right pages are easy to find and easy to trust.