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Carrd Alternative: 4 Options for Simple One-Page Sites

The HTML Pub Team
Comparisons
Web Publishing
Tools
Free Tools
One-Page Sites

If you need a dead-simple one-page site and $19 a year works for you, Carrd still does the job. If you want a more generous free tier, full HTML control, or lower-friction publishing, there are better options. Here's how four tools compare.

At a Glance

ToolFree tierPaid fromCustom domainBest for
Carrd3 sites, no custom domain$19/yearPro planSimple no-code one-pagers
HTMLPubUnlimited pages, HTMLPub subdomain$10/monthAll paid plansAI-generated HTML, quick publishing
StrikinglyUnlimited sites, Strikingly subdomain$16/monthPro planMarketing one-pagers with built-in features
Neocities1 site, 1 GB storage$5/monthSupporter planDevelopers managing files directly

Pricing verified April 2026. Verify current prices at each tool's site before committing.

Where Carrd Still Wins

Carrd has the cleanest visual editor for non-technical users who want a simple about page or link-in-bio site. The $19/year Pro price is genuinely cheap for what it includes: custom domain with SSL, contact and signup forms, Google Analytics, and no "Made with Carrd" footer branding. If you already know Carrd and your use case fits, there's no compelling reason to switch.

The catch: Carrd builds sites in its own format. You don't get raw HTML output you can take elsewhere, and the free tier blocks custom domains entirely, so you're locked into carrd.co subdomains until you pay.

Where HTMLPub Wins

HTMLPub's free tier is more useful for one specific workflow: you generated HTML in Claude, ChatGPT, or Cursor, and you need it live immediately. Paste the HTML, get a public URL. No drag-and-drop editor to learn, no template constraints, no waiting.

For people running marketing experiments or testing landing page ideas, the publish-anything approach means you can ship a new variation in under a minute. The free tier supports that workflow at no cost. Paid plans start at $10/month and add custom domains.

Clean minimal desk with laptop open

The AI website builder approach also means you're not locked into a template format. Whatever HTML you generate with AI tools, HTMLPub publishes it. For teams using the MCP connector, it's possible to publish directly from a Claude conversation without touching a dashboard at all.

The catch: HTMLPub doesn't have a visual editor. If you want to design a site without touching code (even AI-generated code), this isn't the right tool.

Where Strikingly Wins

Strikingly has the most feature-rich free plan for marketing-oriented one-pagers. The free tier allows unlimited sites on a Strikingly subdomain, 500 MB storage per site, 5 GB monthly bandwidth, and even basic ecommerce (one product, 5% transaction fee). The Pro plan at $16/month billed annually adds a custom domain, 20 GB storage per site, and up to 300 products.

The catch: Strikingly sites look like Strikingly sites. The templates are polished but visually identifiable. If you want something that feels fully custom, you'll hit the ceiling of what their editor can produce.

Where Neocities Wins

Neocities gives the most control for developers who want to host raw HTML, CSS, and JavaScript with no framework overhead. The free tier includes 1 GB storage and 200 GB monthly bandwidth. The Supporter plan at $5/month adds custom domains, a global CDN, SSL certificates, and the ability to manage multiple sites.

The catch: Neocities is intentionally minimal. There's no visual editor, no built-in forms, no analytics dashboard. You're managing files. That's the point for the audience it serves, but it's not a Carrd replacement for non-technical users.

Pricing Side by Side

ToolFreeEntry paidWhat you get
Carrd3 sites, no custom domain$19/yearCustom domain, forms, analytics, no branding
HTMLPubUnlimited pages$10/monthCustom domain, all paid plans
StrikinglyUnlimited sites, limited storage$16/month (billed yearly)3 sites, custom domain, 20 GB storage
Neocities1 site, 1 GB$5/monthCustom domain, CDN, SSL, multiple sites

Who Should Use Each

Use Carrd if you want a no-code visual editor for personal one-pagers and the $19/year price point works.

Use HTMLPub if your workflow starts with AI-generated HTML and you want the fastest path from code to live URL. Also the right choice for running multiple landing pages or publishing directly from Claude.

Use Strikingly if you want a polished marketing page with ecommerce, forms, and analytics built in, and you're comfortable working within their template system.

Use Neocities if you're comfortable managing files directly and want the most control for the lowest price.

The Honest Take

Carrd became popular because it solved a real problem: simple one-page sites with minimal friction. It still solves that problem. The alternatives here aren't better across the board; they're better for specific workflows.

If you're generating sites with AI tools, Carrd's visual editor doesn't fit your workflow. HTMLPub is a more direct answer. If you want marketing features and forms without writing code, Strikingly covers more ground. If you want file-level control and low cost, Neocities at $5/month is hard to match.

See also: Free HTML Hosting: 5 Options Compared and Best Static Site Hosting in 2026.

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