From the Oceanfront to Town Center — websites built for the shops, restaurants, contractors, and service businesses riding Virginia Beach's seasonal rhythm.
Virginia Beach lives two lives. From spring through Labor Day, the Oceanfront fills with tourists, the resort strip runs at full tilt, and seasonal businesses make most of their year in a few months. The other eight months, it's a different city entirely — locals, Town Center's professional crowd, the dense neighborhoods around Kempsville and Princess Anne, and the quieter rural stretch of Pungo with its farms and wineries. A website that only speaks to one of those audiences is leaving money on the table.
Add in NAS Oceana and the steady churn of Navy and Air Force families discovering the area for the first time, and you've got a market where a huge share of your future customers don't know you exist yet — and they're searching for you on a phone, usually while comparing you to two other options in the same tab.
A website built for Virginia Beach has to do double duty: look sharp enough to win a tourist's quick decision in July, and clear enough to earn a local's trust in January. That's the balance we build for — not a generic template, something that actually fits how this city works.
If you're doing real work in this city and your website isn't pulling its weight, this is for you.
Roofers, HVAC, landscapers, and remodelers serving the dense neighborhoods around Kempsville, Princess Anne, and the Hilltop corridor — built to turn searches into booked jobs.
Oceanfront and Town Center businesses that need to win over tourists in season and locals year-round — menus, hours, booking, and atmosphere that travel well online.
Congregations and community organizations across Virginia Beach that need a site newcomers can actually find — service times, giving, events, and a way to plug in.
Yes — Virginia Beach is one of the core cities in the Hampton Roads area we work with regularly, from the Oceanfront and Town Center to Kempsville, Princess Anne, and Pungo. Most meetings happen by phone, email, or video, so location is never a barrier.
Most Virginia Beach small-business websites fall in the $750–$2,500 range depending on size and features. A simple one-page site for a shop or contractor starts around $750; a full multi-page business site with services, gallery, and contact form is usually $1,200+. You'll get a clear, written quote before anything starts. See full pricing →
Absolutely — that's one of the biggest reasons to have a strong site here. A good website keeps working in the off-season: showing up in local searches, answering questions, and booking appointments or reservations even when foot traffic slows down at the Oceanfront.
Fill out the form and you'll hear back within one business day — no pitch, no pressure.
Request a Free Quote →Hampton Roads, VA · hello@eateswebco.com · (757) 392-9411