Use case · Alternatives
Framer makes beautiful sites, if you're willing to learn a design canvas. Frontpage gets you the same polish without the layers, breakpoints, and components. You describe the site you want, and it gets built for you.
The problem
Framer is a genuinely capable tool. But it's a design canvas first, which means there's a real piece of software to learn: frames and layers, auto-layout and breakpoints, components and variants, a CMS to model. If you're a designer, that power is the whole point. If you just need a sharp marketing site, it's a tax you pay before you ship anything at all.
Most people evaluating Framer don't want to become Framer experts. They want a site that looks like it was made by one. That's the gap Frontpage fills: the output of a pro tool, reached through a conversation instead of a canvas.
How Frontpage solves it
Frontpage isn't a canvas you operate; it's an agent you instruct. You describe the page, it writes the copy, picks the layout, and builds production-ready pages. When you want a change, you say so.
How it works
Side by side
FAQ
Yes: clean typography, generous spacing, and modern layouts are the defaults. The difference is how you get there: a conversation instead of a canvas.
No. Frontpage makes the design decisions and you steer with plain-language feedback. You bring the taste; it does the production work.
Frontpage is focused: fast, beautiful marketing sites: landing pages, launches, portfolios. It doesn't build web apps or complex canvas interactions. Within that lane, it's faster and far easier than a design tool.
Yes. Connect a custom domain in one click and SSL is handled automatically.
Every page ships lean with clean titles and metadata, loads in under a second, and Autopilot keeps tuning both over time.
Keep exploring
Describe the site you'd have made in Framer and watch Frontpage build it live. Free to start, no credit card, on your own domain.
Free forever plan · No credit card required