For councils & public sector

Built for public
money and public trust.

Website design for community and town councils, and the advice and third-sector organisations that work alongside them.

Why councils choose Webjects

Councils, town and community councils, and the advice and third-sector organisations that support them aren't a side project for us — they're a core part of who we build for. As our own "Wales is the brief" pillar puts it: small business, councils and the third sector, accessible by default, procurement-ready, priced for the organisations we actually serve.

That's not a claim we're making for the first time on this page — it's the client wall. We've built and maintain sites for Bridgend Town Council, Penarth Town Council, Pontypool Community Council, Cwmbran Community Council, Radyr and Morganstown Community Council and Laleston Community Council, alongside Citizens Advice bureaus across Rhondda Cynon Taf, Caerphilly Blaenau Gwent, Torfaen, Bridgend, Neath Port Talbot, Merthyr Tydfil, Cardiff and Vale, Monmouthshire and Newport, plus the Advicelink Cymru hub site for Wales' six Regional Advice Networks.

That volume of public-facing, public-money work means accessibility isn't an afterthought bolted on before launch — we build accessible by default across every site we ship, council or otherwise. It's the same discipline behind everything on our client wall, which is worth a proper look if you want to see the range of organisations we already work alongside.

On the client wall

FAQ

Do you work with councils and public-sector organisations?

Yes. We build and maintain sites for community and town councils and third-sector and advice organisations across Wales, built accessible and procurement-ready.

What does the procurement process look like for a council website?

We scope the work properly first — what the site needs to do, who it's for, what content and structure already exists — then come back with a clear, itemised proposal you can take through your own approval process. No published price list, because every council's starting point is different, but nothing vague either.

Do council websites need to meet accessibility standards?

Yes — public-sector websites in the UK are legally required to meet WCAG 2.2 AA. It's the same standard we build to by default across every site we ship, council or otherwise, so it's not an extra phase of work bolted on at the end.

How long does a typical council website project take?

It depends on the scope — a straightforward community council site is a matter of weeks, a larger site with bilingual content or bespoke features takes longer. We'll give you a realistic timeline once we've scoped the work, not a generic estimate.

See all FAQs →

Next

Tell us about the work.

Whether it's a full rebuild, a bilingual site, or bringing an existing council site up to standard — get in touch and we'll come back to you within a day.

See who we work with