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Best ui ux designers in Sydney
Ranked by verified rating, review volume, proximity and profile completeness. Every freelancer joins with an ABN and an Australian mobile.
Miguel M.
Taha S.
Elena M.
Anthony N.
What's the cost of a ui ux designer in Sydney?
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Ui ux designer in Sydney, questions
A design-led website gig usually covers research into how your customers use the site, wireframes that map the pages and flows, the visual design itself (layout, colour, type, components), a mobile-responsive build or a developer-ready design file, and a handover so you can edit content yourself. Bigger gigs add user testing, a design system, or app and dashboard screens beyond the marketing site.
UX (user experience) is how the site works: what pages exist, how a customer gets from landing to enquiring, where the friction is. UI (user interface) is how it looks: the buttons, colours, type and spacing that make it feel polished and trustworthy. Most freelance website designers do both, but it is worth asking, because a beautiful site that confuses people fails at its job.
A visitor should know what you do, where you do it and what to do next within the first screen. Good UX means a navigation with five clear items rather than twelve clever ones, forms that ask only what you need, tap-to-call on mobile, and the booking or enquiry path tested on a real phone. Every step you remove between landing and enquiring shows up in your leads.
A design-led small business site typically takes 4 to 8 weeks from brief to launch: a week or two for research and wireframes, a couple of weeks for visual design and revisions, then the build. Design-only gigs (handing files to your own developer) are faster. Content and decision time on your side are usually the slow parts, so have copy and photos ready.
If your site is a simple brochure (who you are, what you do, how to call), a well-designed template covers you. UX work earns its keep when the site has to do a job: bookings, quotes, an online store, a member area, or anything where visitors currently drop out. If you get traffic but few enquiries, that is a UX problem, not a traffic problem.
Most designers work in Figma, which is handy for you because you can view designs in the browser and comment directly on them. The build then happens in Webflow, Framer, WordPress, Shopify or custom code depending on your needs. The tool matters less than the handover: make sure you get access to the design file and the built site, in accounts you own.
You do. The design files, the website, the domain and the hosting account should all sit in your name, with you holding the master logins. Write it into the gig before work starts. On Unjumble, handover of the design file, site access and any third-party tool logins is a standard stage you sign off before the final payment is released.
Decide the measure before you start: more enquiries, more bookings, fewer abandoned carts, fewer support calls. Get analytics set up before launch so you have a baseline, then compare the months after. A good designer will talk in those terms from the first chat; if the conversation is only ever about how it looks, that is a flag.
A freelance design-led website in Sydney typically costs $3,000 to $7,000. Smaller jobs like a redesign of key pages can start around $1,000, while larger projects with research, user testing and custom builds run up to $25,000. Hourly work usually sits between $50 and $150 an hour depending on experience.
Look at live sites they have designed, not just portfolio mockups, and use them on your phone: can you find the price, the location, the next step? Ask how they decide layout (you want to hear about users and goals, not just aesthetics), how many revision rounds the gig includes, and read their verified reviews on Unjumble.
Post a design gig in under five minutes. Describe the work, set your budget and timeframe, and choose whether it is time-based or outcome-based. Local freelancers send a bid with a quote, you compare their profiles, portfolios and reviews, then pick the one that fits. Posting is free, so you only pay for the work.
Every gig is split into stages you both agree on up front. You fund each stage before the work starts and it is held securely through Stripe, then released once you sign off. No chasing invoices, and no paying for work that is not done.