The best Squarespace templates for videos, blogs, and all other web pages

Struggling to pick a template on Squarespace? We’ve got you covered.
By Haley Henschel  on 
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Overview

Best For Online Stores

Maca

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Best For Blogging

Mérida

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Best For Personal Websites

Noll

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Best For Photographers

Quincy

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Best For Graphic Designers

Novo

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Best For Artists

Wells

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Best For Video

Lange

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Best For Coaches

Growwell

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Best For Podcasts

Sundew

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Best For Parallax Scrolling

Brine

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See 5 More

This content originally appeared on Mashable for a US audience and has been adapted for the UK audience.

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If you’ve listened to any podcast ever, you already know the spiel: Squarespace is an all-in-one website builder that makes it easy to create a professional-looking online presence. Numbers-wise, it’s the second most popular web builder out there (after Wix) and the third most popular hosting service (after Wix and Shopify), supporting more than 3 million live websites across the internet at the time of publication.

One of the primary reasons why Squarespace has seen this success is that you don't need any web design or coding experience to get a beautiful site up and running on its interface. With intuitive drag-and-drop building elements and a vast selection of ultra-modern templates, it's easily one of the most beginner-friendly tools of its kind.

Truthfully, the hardest part about designing a Squarespace site is often just choosing one of those templates — there are over 230 of them across Squarespace versions 7.0 and 7.1, the two iterations of the platform that are currently supported. How do you decide which one to use for your oil painting portfolio, your Taiwanese-American food blog, or the online store for your cool-girl jeans? (Those are all different kinds of websites that have been made with Squarespace, FYI.)

Should you use Squarespace?

After fast and easy site design, the best thing about Squarespace is its all-in-one approach: Your subscription plan includes 24/7 customer support, website metrics, SEO tools, SSL security, unlimited bandwidth, and video storage, all for as low as £13 a month. Squarespace also throws in fully managed cloud hosting at no extra cost, along with a year's worth of a new custom domain if you sign up for an annual membership — no need to set anything else up with another provider or platform. All things considered, its flexibility and convenience make it a stellar pick for first-time website owners.

What is a Squarespace template?

A Squarespace template (or theme) is a pre-designed, ready-to-use demo website that you can customise with different colour schemes, font packs, layouts, pages, and drag-and-drop element blocks like text, images, galleries, buttons, and forms. Squarespace describes them as "a starting point to help inspire your site's design," noting that "[you] can keep the structure of your original design intact by replacing the demo content with your own, or you can completely change the design of your site and start from scratch." You can do as much or as little customising as you'd like; your site will look polished either way.

Each template has been built exclusively for Squarespace, which means you won’t find them on WordPress, Wix, or other site-building platforms.

Are Squarespace templates mobile-friendly?

All Squarespace templates are mobile-optimised from the jump, which is awesome for two reasons: Mobile-friendly sites look great on all devices and get higher priority from Google when it comes to indexing and SEO rankings.

Templates from Squarespace version 7.0 have separate mobile styles that activate on smaller devices, while their version 7.1 counterparts adapt to mobile view automatically.

What's the difference between Squarespace version 7.0 and 7.1?

Launched in 2014, Squarespace version 7.0 categorises its 91 templates into certain template "families," which are groups of similarly coded templates alike in their basic structure and functionality. Each one has its specific rules and style options, so you may need to swap templates (and risk losing content) to access certain functionality. For example, infinite scroll is exclusive to the Farro and Skye template families, while only Wells and Five allow sidebars on all of their pages, not just blogs.

Squarespace scrapped those hard-and-fast classifications with the release of version 7.1 in early 2020. All of its 140-plus templates now belong to the same family with the same underlying structure and design options, which makes it easier to change site styles in seconds.

While neither version of Squarespace is conclusively "better" than the other, version 7.1 is more ideal for people who are new to the platform since it aggressively streamlines the design process, especially since the July 2022 rollout of Fluid Engine. That's Squarespace's next-gen content editor for 7.1 sites, which utilises a grid system and additional block placement options for improved layout flexibility (particularly on mobile).

Users who have built a Squarespace site before may still have good reason to stick with version 7.0 since its templates have some advanced style options that haven't been added to the new ones yet. One especially popular feature of the beloved Brine template family that's missing from version 7.1; people were pretty salty about that one.)

One caveat: While it’s possible to switch between versions 7.0 and 7.1, doing so will usually require a full rebuild and mess with your site's search ranking. On the bright side, Squarespace offers a free 14-day trial so you can noodle around with both before you commit.

What features does Squarespace offer?

Structural and formatting differences aside, all Squarespace templates between both versions of the platform support the same suite of features — including several new tools introduced in the most recent Squarespace Refresh, its annual product update. Highlights include:

  • Blogging tools like commenting systems, post scheduling, podcast integration, and multiple author profile support

  • Portfolio tools like an image editor, image metadata importing, and video hosting/monetisation

  • Ecommerce tools for physical and digital products like on-demand Custom Merch, Member Areas, appointment scheduling, Point of Sale, subscriptions, product merchandising, product reviews, inventory management, USPS shipping label purchasing and printing, and local pick-up options

  • Marketing tools like email campaign integration, mailing lists, promotional banners, form blocks, and social selling on FaceBook and Instagram

  • Universal asset uploading and stock imagery via Unsplash and Getty integrations

It's worth mentioning that Squarespace also maintains three mobile apps that are free with any subscription or trial. They work with both versions of the site, too:

  • The main Squarespace app (available for iOS and Android) supports on-the-go writing, editing, updates, commerce, and analytics

  • The Squarespace Video Studio app (available for iOS) makes it possible to create professional-quality videos with audio narration, animated text, and licensed music — think of it as a TikTok or Instagram Reels alternative

  • The Squarespace Unfold app (available for iOS and Android) is designed for creating sharable content for social media, including stories and Linktree-style Bio Sites

How do you find the right Squarespace template for you?

To get started, head over to the Templates tab on Squarespace's website and filter its library by Type and Topic to narrow down your pool of candidates. You can hit "Preview" on any theme that catches your eye to see what it would look like in the wild.

Squarespace recommends choosing a template based on your favorite colours and layouts rather than the demo content you see there, though you might find it easier to pick one that already looks close-ish to your end vision. For example, a template with a grid of products on its homepage can become your online store in a matter of clicks, whereas a template designed around event RSVPs will take more noodling for ecommerce purposes.

If you're having trouble settling on one, know this: It's basically impossible to make an ugly Squarespace site, and with enough time and experimentation, you can tweak almost any template to fit your exact vision and needs.

What is the best Squarespace template for you?

If Squarespace sounds like the right solution for you, know this: You really can’t go wrong with any of its templates. Like, it’s almost impossible to make an ugly Squarespace site, but just in case you need a little help to get the ball rolling on the site of your dreams, save yourself a Google search and just keep reading.

These are the best Squarespace templates in 2024.

Maca screenshot

Maca

Best For Online Stores

All Squarespace templates support its commerce features, including customised checkout, customer email notifications, and marketing, but you can get your online shop off the ground sooner with a tailor-made template like Maca. (Peep the stockist, FAQ, terms of use, and shipping/return links that are already set up for you in the bottom navigation.) Its layout plays around with colour and negative space in a really smart way — it's visually interesting but not distracting. It also gives you lots of different ways to organise your products, with preset sections for featured collections, bestsellers, and sale items.

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Mérida screenshot

Mérida

Best For Blogging

Mérida is a magazine-style template that does a fantastic job of making a lot of text look interesting, breaking it up with different "featured post" grids and banners so you're not just staring at a huge wall of words. For this reason, it keeps its menus pretty simple — just a couple of navigation links and social icons that don't compete with your content. Anyone who prefers browsing and reading in Dark Mode will appreciate its posts' white-on-black formatting, which looks super elegant and modern.

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Noll screenshot

Noll

Best For Personal Websites

A personal website can make it easier for companies and recruiters to find you, and a template like Noll will add some much-needed "wow" factor. It works really well as a one-page site with a bio, a brief summary of your qualifications, your work experience/skills, and a headshot, but you can also add dedicated pages for testimonials, reviews, and a contact form. Either way, it looks very trendy (dare we say millennial-chic?) with serif fonts and a peach/scarlet colour scheme.

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Quincy screenshot

Quincy

Best For Photographers

Working photographers barely need to make any changes to the demo version of Quincy: It's got a show-stopping landing page, a pretty portfolio page with changing full-bleed background images, and easy-to-find social icons. But the very best part is its contact page: It's got a ready-made Acuity Scheduling block (a premium Squarespace feature) where potential clients can schedule different kinds of sessions and submit their contact information. It'll make scheduling a breeze so you can spend more time doing what you love (actually taking pictures) and less time trying to get booked.

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Novo screenshot

Novo

Best For Graphic Designers

Novo is a newer, bolder black-and-white template that's well-suited for a graphic or product design portfolio. This one also puts your work front and centre in a grid on the home page — we like that there's a hover-over effect for each title — then whisks users away to project-specific pages with brief descriptions and full-bleed banner images. Modern icons for your Dribbble, Vimeo, and Instagram accounts are already in the top and bottom navigation bars, so you just need to add your links.

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Wells screenshot

Wells

Best For Artists

Wells is a light and airy template that's been around since 2012, and it's a true oldie-but-goodie for creative types. Its simple homepage features a scrollable grid-style gallery that presents a nice overview of your work. Users can click on each thumbnail to see the full-size version with a title or caption — feel free to wax poetic about your process or inspiration there. Wells also supports store pages if you want to start selling prints, but it can easily stand on its own as a basic portfolio site.

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Lange screenshot

Lange

Best For Video

Lange is another older template that's stood the test of time thanks to its show-stopping homepage, which makes it easy to weave a compelling narrative into your portfolio. Visitors to your site are welcomed with full-bleed banner images that you can swap for GIFs or clips, which link off to individual pages that dive deeper into each project; hover-over and fade-in animation effects keep things interesting as you scroll. A simple one-column blog and a basic contact page are both found in the top navigation menu.

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Details

Growwell is a bright, cheery template that's capable of handling a lot of text and visuals without looking cluttered. It also comes with a special twist: It's pre-enabled with Squarespace's premium Member Areas feature, which lets you create gated content on your site — think virtual classes, workshops, newsletters, vlogs, and 1:1s. (It can be free to sign up with an email address or locked behind a membership fee; your call). This makes it ridiculously easy to monetise your content and expertise while building a community.

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Sundew screenshot

Sundew

Best For Podcasts

With groovy gradients and matching sunburst accents, Squarespace's Sundew template is on point with recent '70s-inspired design trends. Its demo site eagerly awaits your podcast: There's a spot for your freshest episode right at the top, followed by a banner with your tagline, a grid of recent episodes, a prompt to sign up for your newsletter or email list, and a blurb about the host(s) that directs to a more in-depth bio page. Each individual episode page gets its own audio block so listeners can tune in without having to leave the site, though links to your Spotify, Stitcher, Apple Podcasts, and Google Podcasts pages have been scattered throughout in case they prefer a different platform.

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Brine screenshots

Brine

Best For Parallax Scrolling

We have to give a shout-out to good old Brine, the parent template of the eponymous family from Squarespace version 7.0: It remains a fan favourite to this day for its use of parallax scrolling, a special visual effect on full-bleed banner images that creates an illusion of depth. (As we mentioned earlier, this feature isn't available in version 7.1.) The demo site comes prepped for an online store, but you've got the option to add a blog, an events page, galleries, and much more.

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Haley Henschel
Senior Shopping Reporter

Haley Henschel is a Chicago-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable who reviews and finds deals on popular tech, from laptops to gaming consoles and VPNs. She has years of experience covering shopping holidays and can tell you what’s actually worth buying on Black Friday and Amazon Prime Day. Her work has also explored the driving forces behind digital trends within the shopping sphere, from dupes to 12-foot skeletons.

Haley received a B.A. in Journalism from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and honed her sifting and winnowing skills at The Daily Cardinal. She previously covered politics for The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, investigated exotic pet ownership for Wisconsin Watch, and blogged for some of your favorite reality stars.

In her free time, Haley enjoys playing video games, drawing, taking walks on Lake Michigan, and spending time with her parrot (Melon) and dog (Pierogi). She really, really wants to get back into horseback riding. You can follow her on X at @haleyhenschel or reach her via email at [email protected].


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