Web design is about how a site looks: colours, typography, layout, and overall aesthetic. UX design is about how it works and how it feels to use: the journey, the structure, and the path to action. They solve different problems, and most good websites need both working together.
Key takeaways
- Web design is primarily about how a site looks. UX design is about how it works.
- Most good websites need both. They’re not competitors, they’re partners.
- If your site looks great but doesn’t convert, you have a UX problem.
- If your site functions well but feels dated or untrustworthy, you have a web design problem.
- Many designers do both, but not all of them are equally strong at each.
If you’ve ever tried to hire someone for a website project and ended up more confused after reading their service page than before, you’re not alone.
“UX design” and “web design” are often used interchangeably. Sometimes by clients who aren’t sure what they need. Sometimes by designers who aren’t sure what they offer. The result is a lot of mismatched expectations, unclear briefs, and projects that drift off course before they even start.
Here’s a clear breakdown of what each discipline actually means, how they overlap, and how to figure out which one your business needs right now.
What is web design?
Web design covers the visual layer of a website. It’s the decisions that determine what you see when a page loads: the colours, typography, layout, imagery, spacing, and overall aesthetic.
A web designer’s job is to create something that looks professional, matches the brand, and makes a strong first impression. They work with design tools (Figma is the industry standard right now), translate ideas into visual mockups, and hand those off to be built, or build them directly, depending on the designer.
Good web design does more than look nice. It establishes trust, communicates brand values, and guides the eye toward what matters. But it’s still primarily a visual discipline.
What web design typically covers
- Visual layout and composition
- Colour palette and typography
- Brand consistency across pages
- Imagery and iconography choices
- Responsive design (how the layout adapts to different screen sizes)
- Style guides and design systems
What is UX design?
UX stands for user experience. Where web design focuses on how a site looks, UX design focuses on how it works, and more specifically, how it feels to use.
UX designers think about the journey a visitor takes through a site. They ask questions like: Can users find what they’re looking for quickly? Do they understand what action to take next? Where are they dropping off, and why? What’s frustrating them?
UX design is research-driven. It involves mapping user journeys, building wireframes (structural blueprints of pages before any visual design is applied), conducting usability testing, and making decisions based on behaviour rather than aesthetics.
What UX design typically covers
- User research and persona development
- Information architecture (how content is organised and structured)
- User journey mapping
- Wireframing and prototyping
- Usability testing
- Conversion rate optimisation
- Accessibility
Where they overlap
In practice, the line between web design and UX design is blurry, and that’s fine.
Most web designers think about usability to some degree. Most UX designers have opinions about visual hierarchy. The best digital projects have both disciplines working together, because a site that looks beautiful but confuses users is just as broken as a site that’s logically structured but visually off-putting.
The overlap zone includes things like:
- Navigation design (logical structure and visual clarity)
- Call-to-action placement (UX thinking and visual emphasis)
- Mobile responsiveness (technical requirement and design challenge)
- Page layout (information hierarchy and visual composition)
If you’re working with a good designer, they’ll be thinking about both sides even if they lead with one.
A practical example
Imagine two versions of the same homepage.
Version A looks stunning. The photography is sharp, the colours are on-brand, the typography is elegant. But the navigation is buried, there’s no clear call to action above the fold, and it takes three clicks to find the contact page.
Version B is clean and simple. Nothing flashy, but every element has a purpose. The headline immediately explains what the business does. There’s a clear button to book a call. The navigation is obvious. It loads in under two seconds on mobile.
Version A has good web design and poor UX. Version B has solid UX and adequate web design. Which converts better? Almost always Version B. Visitors don’t need to be wowed. They need to find what they’re looking for and trust that you can help them.
The goal is a site that does both. That’s what separates an average website from one that actually works for your business.
Which one does your business need?
This depends on what problem you’re trying to solve.
| Choose web design work if… | Choose UX work if… |
|---|---|
| Your site looks outdated or off-brand | Traffic is decent but enquiries are low |
| You’ve recently rebranded and the website hasn’t caught up | People visit but don’t convert |
| Your visual identity is inconsistent across pages | You’re getting feedback that the site is hard to navigate |
| First impressions feel weak even if the site technically functions | You’re not sure why your current site isn’t performing |
You probably need both if you’re doing a full redesign, building something from scratch, or your site has problems on multiple levels, both visual and functional. Whichever camp you’re in, it pays to know how to choose the right web designer so you hire someone who covers the side your project actually needs.
Not sure which one your site needs? A UX audit pinpoints exactly where the experience is breaking down.
Book a free consultationHow Dat Design Lab approaches this
On every project, I work across both disciplines. The visual design and the user experience aren’t treated as separate phases. They inform each other throughout the process.
That means before any mockup gets designed, the information architecture gets thought through. Before any page goes live, it gets checked against the user journey. And the design decisions aren’t made for aesthetics alone. They’re made because they serve the person using the site.
The bottom line
Web design and UX design are related disciplines that solve different problems. Web design makes your site look credible and on-brand. UX design makes it easy and intuitive to use. A great website needs both.
If your site looks great but isn’t converting, focus on UX. If it’s functional but feels dated, focus on design. If you’re starting from scratch or doing a full rebuild, bring both into the picture from day one. Not sure where your site stands? Get in touch for a straight answer.
Frequently asked questions
Is UX design the same as UI design?
Not quite. UX (user experience) covers the overall journey and logic of how a site works. UI (user interface) refers to the specific visual and interactive elements: buttons, forms, menus, icons. UI is a subset of the broader UX discipline. In practice, many designers work across both, and the terms are often combined as “UX/UI design.”
Do I need a UX designer or a web designer for my small business website?
For most small business websites, you need someone who thinks about both. A pure UX designer without visual design skills will deliver wireframes but not a finished site. A pure visual designer without UX thinking may deliver something beautiful that doesn’t convert. Look for a designer who explicitly covers both, or a studio where the two disciplines work together.
How much does UX design cost separately from web design?
It depends on the scope. A standalone UX audit for a small business site typically costs €200-600 in the Polish market and €350-700 across Western Europe. Full UX design work as part of a site build is usually integrated into the overall project cost rather than billed separately.
What is a wireframe and do I need one?
A wireframe is a structural blueprint of a page. It maps out where content, navigation, and calls to action will sit, without any visual design applied. It’s a planning tool. For straightforward small business sites, experienced designers often move straight to design. For larger or more complex projects, wireframes are worth the time, because they catch structural problems early, before any visual work begins.
Can my existing website be improved with UX changes without a full redesign?
Often, yes. Many conversion problems can be fixed with targeted changes (restructuring navigation, adding clearer calls to action, improving page flow) without touching the visual design at all. A UX audit identifies exactly which changes will have the most impact so you’re not guessing.