75+ Web Development Industry Statistics for 2026 (Market Size, Salaries, Trends)

75+ Web Development Industry Statistics for 2026 (Market Size, Salaries, Trends)

The web development industry is evolving faster than ever. AI tools are reshaping workflows, frameworks are shifting in popularity, and businesses are spending more on their digital presence than at any point in history.

Whether you’re a business owner evaluating your next website investment, a developer benchmarking your salary, or a marketer building a case for a redesign — you need current, reliable data.

We’ve compiled 75+ web development industry statistics for 2026, organized into clear categories with every claim linked to its source. Bookmark this page — it’s the only reference you’ll need this year.

Web Development Market Size & Growth

The global web development market is massive and growing rapidly, fueled by digital transformation and the explosion of AI-powered tooling.

  1. The global web development market reached $89.3 billion in 2026, growing 13.7% from 2025. (Affiliate Booster)

  2. The web development market is projected to reach $10.5 billion by 2027 according to some estimates focused on custom development services. (eSparkInfo)

  3. The DIY website builder market is currently worth $24 billion in the US alone, with a 4.9% annual growth rate. (WPBeginner)

  4. The global CMS market reached $30.91 billion in 2025 and is projected to hit $45.71 billion by 2030, growing at 8.14% CAGR. (Landbase)

  5. Tata Consultancy Services — one of the largest web services firms — reported $29.1 billion in annual revenue and retrained 25,000 engineers on AI tooling. (Mordor Intelligence)

  6. Australia has 120,000 web developers with 12% growth projected by 2026. (Gitnux)

  7. Brazil’s web developer employment reached 200,000 with a CAGR of 11%. (Gitnux)

  8. Canada’s web development jobs grew 20% post-pandemic. (Gitnux)

Web Developer Salary Statistics

Developer compensation continues to rise, with significant variation by experience level, specialization, and location.

  1. The average web developer salary in the US is $93,848 per year ($45.12/hour) as of March 2026. (ZipRecruiter)

  2. Glassdoor reports the average web developer salary at $100,211 per year, with top earners reaching $167,308. (Glassdoor)

  3. Indeed reports a slightly lower average of $82,612 per year based on 1,400+ salary submissions. (Indeed)

  4. PayScale reports the average web developer salary at $70,705 — typically reflecting less experienced developers. (PayScale)

  5. Built In reports an average base salary of $110,610 with total compensation (including bonuses and equity) averaging $124,116. (Built In)

  6. The median total pay for web developers is $99,000 per year according to Glassdoor, with additional pay of $13,000–$24,000 per year. (Coursera)

  7. Junior web developers in smaller markets sit at the lower end of $76,000–$130,000, while senior engineers in major hubs land at $111,000–$182,000+. (Nucamp)

  8. A reasonable planning number for an experienced web developer in 2026 is $85,000–$95,000 annually. (The White Label Agency)

  9. WordPress-specific developer salaries average $84,542 annually, with most positions ranging $60,500–$99,500. (The White Label Agency)

  10. Full-stack developers command the highest pay, averaging approximately $121,000 per year. (Kinsta)

  11. The median salary for web developers and digital designers ranges between $94,638 and $142,000. (WPBeginner)

Web Developer Job Market & Outlook

The demand for web development talent remains strong, though AI is reshaping what “web developer” means.

  1. The BLS projects 7.5% employment growth for web developers between 2024 and 2034 — faster than the average for all occupations. (US News)

  2. Web designer employment is projected to grow 8% from 2023 to 2033, nearly twice the average growth rate for all occupations. (Research.com)

  3. Software developer employment is projected to grow 7% from 2024 to 2034 according to BLS. (Research.com)

  4. Entry-level web development jobs decreased 5% due to AI tools in 2023. (Gitnux)

  5. About 17,900 openings for web developers and digital designers are projected each year over the decade. (BLS)

  6. Web developer ranks among the Best Jobs of 2026 according to US News & World Report. (US News)

CMS Market Share Statistics

The CMS landscape is shifting. WordPress still dominates, but its grip is loosening for the first time.

  1. 71.3% of all websites use a content management system as of December 2025. (CMS Conf)

  2. WordPress powers 43.6% of all websites on the internet. (Wpmet)

  3. Among websites with a detectable CMS, WordPress holds a 63.5% CMS market share. (DiviFlash)

  4. WordPress’s market share dipped to 42.6% in early 2026 — the first meaningful decline, though still a fraction of a percentage point. (WPZOOM)

  5. WordPress powers 332 million websites globally. (DiviFlash)

  6. Shopify commands 26% of the global CMS market when measured by e-commerce presence. (Wpmet)

  7. Wix dominates 8% of the global CMS market as of February 2026. (Wpmet)

  8. WordPress’s market share has hovered between 42.6% and 43.5% since 2022, with growth effectively plateaued. (WPZOOM)

  9. WooCommerce powers roughly one-third of all online stores worldwide, with 37% of total e-commerce platform market share and about 6.5 million active stores. (Coalition Technologies)

  10. There are over 65,000 WordPress plugins available. (WordPress.com)

JavaScript Framework & Technology Adoption

The framework wars continue, with React maintaining clear dominance while newer options gain traction.

  1. React leads front-end frameworks at 44.7% popularity, followed by Angular at 18.2%, Vue.js at 17.6%, and Svelte at 7.2%. (GitHub Gist)

  2. Node.js is used by about 48.7% of developers, while React is used by approximately 39.5%. (Nucamp)

  3. Node.js remains the most popular JavaScript runtime with 40.8% usage, though it has dropped from its 2020 peak of 51%. (ZenRows)

  4. 69.9% of developers who use React say they enjoy working with the framework. (TSH.io)

  5. Next.js is the most popular rendering framework, with a 52.9% usage rate among React developers. (TSH.io)

  6. Svelte, Solid, and other newer frameworks remain at sub-10% adoption rates despite growing interest. (Strapi)

AI in Web Development

AI has gone from curiosity to core workflow tool. The adoption numbers are staggering.

  1. 84% of developers are using or planning to use AI tools in their development process, up from 76% in 2024. (Stack Overflow 2025 Survey)

  2. 80% of developers now use AI tools in their day-to-day workflows. (Stack Overflow Blog)

  3. 82% of developers report using AI tools weekly, with 59% running three or more tools in parallel. (NetCorp)

  4. AI tools now write 41% of all code being produced. (Index.dev)

  5. 68% of developers use AI to generate code during development. (Figma)

  6. More than 81% of developers report increased productivity when using AI tools. (DesignRush)

  7. AI adoption in development is growing at a projected rate of 25.2%. (DesignRush)

  8. GitHub Copilot is used by 47% of developers as of February 2026, holding steady from 46% in May 2025. (TechLila)

  9. 25% of Google’s code is now AI-assisted, though CEO Sundar Pichai emphasizes engineering velocity — not replacement — as the real gain (+10% speed). (NetCorp)

  10. Entry-level web dev jobs decreased 5% due to AI tools in 2023. (Gitnux)

Website Cost Statistics for Businesses

Understanding what websites actually cost is critical for budgeting and avoiding overpaying (or underpaying).

  1. A professional small business website typically costs $5,000–$10,000 but can reach $20,000 or more. (Mark Brinker)

  2. The average agency-designed small business website costs $2,000–$9,000. (Marketing LTB)

  3. DIY websites start around $100–$1,600, small business sites range $2,000–$8,000, and enterprise builds run $20,000–$100,000+. (One Little Web)

  4. Most small business websites land between $3,000 and $15,000, while custom or e-commerce builds can exceed that significantly. (Digital Present)

  5. According to Clutch, small business websites average $3,000–$9,000. (Reliqus)

  6. A basic informational site may cost $500–$1,500, while a custom e-commerce site or web app can cost $5,000–$25,000+. (Reliqus)

Website Performance & User Behavior

How people interact with websites directly impacts business outcomes — and the standards keep rising.

  1. 53% of mobile visitors abandon a page that takes longer than 3 seconds to load. (Google/Think with Google)

  2. A 1-second delay in page load time can result in a 7% reduction in conversions. (Akamai)

  3. 88% of online consumers are less likely to return to a site after a bad experience. (Econsultancy)

  4. 75% of users judge a company’s credibility based on its website design. (Stanford Web Credibility Research)

  5. The average website bounce rate across all industries is approximately 47%. (CXL)

  6. Mobile devices account for approximately 60% of all website traffic globally. (Statista)

E-Commerce Web Development

Online retail continues to reshape how businesses think about web development.

  1. Global e-commerce sales are projected to exceed $7 trillion in 2025. (Statista)

  2. 27% of the global population shops online. (Statista)

  3. Shopify powers over 4.8 million online stores globally. (Shopify)

  4. Cart abandonment rates average 70.19% across all industries. (Baymard Institute)

  5. WooCommerce holds 37% of the e-commerce platform market share with 6.5 million active stores. (Coalition Technologies)

Website Security

Security is no longer optional — it’s a ranking factor and a business liability.

  1. 43% of cyberattacks target small businesses. (Verizon DBIR)

  2. The average cost of a data breach reached $4.88 million in 2024. (IBM Cost of a Data Breach Report)

  3. 95% of cybersecurity breaches are caused by human error. (World Economic Forum)

  4. 30,000 websites are hacked daily. (Forbes)

  5. Over 96% of websites now use HTTPS encryption, up from just 40% in 2016. (W3Techs)

Accessibility & Compliance

Web accessibility is becoming a legal requirement, not just a best practice.

  1. 96.3% of home pages have detectable accessibility errors. (WebAIM Million Report)

  2. The average website has 56.8 accessibility errors per page. (WebAIM)

  3. ADA-related website accessibility lawsuits exceeded 4,000 in 2024 in the US alone. (UsableNet)

  4. The global web accessibility market is expected to reach $1.1 billion by 2030. (Grand View Research)

What These Statistics Mean for Your Business

The web development industry in 2026 tells a clear story:

Websites are more expensive — but more important — than ever. With the average professional site costing $5,000–$10,000, businesses need to view their website as an investment, not an expense. The companies that invest in quality web development see measurable returns in leads, conversions, and revenue.

AI is transforming development, not eliminating it. While 84% of developers use AI tools, entry-level jobs are only declining modestly. The real shift is toward AI-augmented developers who build faster and smarter. For businesses, this means your developer’s productivity should be higher — but you still need skilled humans making strategic decisions.

WordPress dominates, but the landscape is shifting. At 43.6% market share, WordPress remains the safe choice. But its first-ever decline signals that alternatives like Shopify, Webflow, and headless CMS platforms are gaining ground. The right platform depends on your business goals, not popularity.

Speed, security, and accessibility aren’t optional. With 53% of visitors leaving after 3 seconds, 43% of cyberattacks targeting small businesses, and 96% of sites failing accessibility checks — the bar for a “good” website keeps rising.

Ready to Build a Website That Actually Performs?

If these statistics tell you anything, it’s that your website is your most important digital asset. Don’t settle for a template that loads slowly, looks generic, and fails basic accessibility standards.

Get a free website consultation → and let’s build something that drives real results for your business.


This article is regularly updated with the latest web development industry data. Last updated: March 2026.

Richard Kastl

Richard Kastl

Founder & Lead Engineer

Richard Kastl has spent 14 years engineering websites that generate revenue. He combines expertise in web development, SEO, digital marketing, and conversion optimization to build sites that make the phone ring. His work has helped generate over $30M in pipeline for clients ranging from industrial manufacturers to SaaS companies.

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