An abstract look at AI web design and technology

Should I Use AI to Build My Website? (An Honest Answer for Perth Business Owners)

houseFern Digital May 30, 2026

Look, AI website tools are genuinely impressive these days.

A few years back, getting a website up meant either learning to code from scratch, hiring a developer, or wrestling with a clunky page builder for weeks. Today, you can type a couple of prompts into an AI generator and have a working website staring back at you in minutes.

That is incredibly handy, and the tech is bloody clever.

The real question isn’t whether AI can build a website. It absolutely can. The actual question you need to ask yourself is: should I use AI to build my website if I am running a small business in Perth?

My honest answer? Sometimes, yeah, absolutely. But probably not for the reasons the marketing hype tells you.

I use AI tools in my own development workflow every single day. They are brilliant for research, mapping out content, getting design inspiration, and speeding up repetitive coding tasks. I am not anti-AI by any stretch.

What I am skeptical about, though, is the idea that a business owner or a teenager thats seen to many hustle culture instagram reels with zero coding knowledge can just hit a "generate" button, launch the site, and expect it to compete with a professionally built asset over the long run. Let alone manage the SEO, hosting, DNS setup, analytics among other lesser known complexities of running a good site.

Let's look at where AI website builders actually do a great job, and where they tend to leave hidden landmines that you won't notice until months down the track.


What AI Website Builders Actually Do

When people talk about AI website builders, they are usually talking about platforms like Wix AI, Squarespace AI, Framer AI, Lovable, or Bolt.

To clarify, these are not advanced coding assistants like Cursor or Claude that developers use to write raw code. These builders are a different beast altogether. They generally follow a simple process:

  • You answer a few basic questions about your business.
  • The AI spits out a template design, some generic copy, and a layout.
  • You make your tweaks using a visual drag-and-drop editor or re-prompt.
  • The site often gets locked into their specific hosting platform.

If you are a Perth sparky, plumber, landscaper, consultant or local service business, this sounds like a dream. Instead of spending weeks trying to figure out web design, you are online by the afternoon.

And look, fair play, that is exactly what happens for a lot of people. The catch is that the AI is optimizing purely for speed of creation, not necessarily for raw performance, clean SEO foundations, or long-term flexibility.


Where AI Builders Genuinely Work

There are plenty of scenarios where taking the AI route makes total sense. If you are:

  • Testing out a brand-new business concept
  • Launching a quick side project
  • Setting up a temporary landing page for a quick campaign
  • Building a basic internal tool for your team
  • Just validating market demand before spending proper cash

If that sounds like you, AI is a fantastic option. If your primary goal is simply "I need a link online by Friday morning," it is hard to beat. You can even use Claude's free tier and host a basic project yourself. Plenty of people do it, and it works fine for what it is.

The headache starts when that quick, temporary fix quietly becomes your permanent business website. Or when you want to modify what you started and start running into free plan limits very quickly.

Your website isn’t just a digital business card anymore. It is your primary salesperson, your ultimate credibility check, and a major engine for generating actual leads. That is exactly where the technical limitations start to bite.


The 4 Problems You Can't See Until It's Too Late

1. Performance Usually Takes a Massive Hit

One of the biggest flaws with AI-generated sites is under-the-hood bloat. Because these builders have to accommodate thousands of different potential layout choices at once, they load massive chunks of unnecessary code in the background.

As a result, it is incredibly common to see mobile Google PageSpeed scores sitting down in the 40 to 65 range.

Some AI sites do okay, but a lot of business owners never actually run a proper performance check. A sluggish site ruins the user experience, tanks your conversion rates, and hurts your visibility on Google. If a local customer searches for a trade service in Perth and your site takes five seconds to load on their phone, they are clicking away.

A recent website I reviewed using my /audit tool for a local tiler was flagging as a 70 page score on mobile and I did notice it was a little slow on mobile. Looking into the performance breakdown of the site I could see they had likely used claude code and supabase to host. Not a bad setup. However, the business owner hadn't resized images to suit mobile, hadn't compressed to an efficient file format like webp, fonts were render blocking, among other small little things that ended up slowing the page down by around 2-3seconds. However, 2-3 seconds is often enough for up to 50% of users to bounce from the site.

Hand-coded websites avoid this completely because we only ship the exact code needed to display the page. We also ensure that the code is responsive to mobile, and all images/fonts/svgs/icons etc are in the right place and optimised to load properly. It’s why our custom builds regularly clock in with PageSpeed scores well into the 90s, ensuring a flawless customer experience.

2. Everything Starts Looking Like a Carbon Copy

AI is trained entirely on existing websites. That is its greatest strength, but it’s also its biggest weakness. The designs it creates are usually clean and modern enough, but they are incredibly forgettable.

Once you’ve looked at a handful of AI-generated sites, the patterns become obvious. You see the same section structures, the same basic layouts, and the same generic copywriting style everywhere. Particularly when the site is loaded with shutterstock or generic images of people for every service and about us, when a handful of good photos of client work and a genuine picture of the owner will instill far more trust.

The major issue here is differentiation. If you are trying to stand out among dozens of competitors, having a generic layout means customers won't remember who you are. AI is brilliant at producing "good enough," but standing out requires a human touch.

3. You Can't Fix What You Don't Understand

This is the real kicker for small business owners. Most people running a business have zero interest in becoming full-time web developers, and why should they? If you are a business owner operating a plumbing business, your hourly rate might be $150, if you spend 2-3 hours messing around re-promting on lovable or claude to fix the formatting of one service card, you've just made that website a lot more expensive. Thats why at Fern digital, we design the site and handle everything so you can stay on the tools doing what you do best.

But when an AI-generated layout suddenly breaks on a specific mobile screen, or starts acting weird after a platform update, you are completely at the mercy of a system you don't control. Most of these platforms lock you into their ecosystem, meaning you keep paying a premium monthly subscription for a generic, automated template.

Over the journey, we have seen AI sites plagued with:

  • Terrible image optimization that slows down the page
  • Broken fonts failing to load on certain browsers
  • Mobile layout elements overlapping and blocking text
  • Messy, inconsistent spacing across devices
  • Even testimonials and reviews sections with garbled nonsense like 'lorem ipsum'

Fixing these bugs is straightforward if you know how to read the code, but it is a massive headache when you are stuck behind a rigid, automated editor.

4. SEO Foundations Are Frequently Missing

AI generators are notorious for getting basic technical SEO fundamentals wrong. The site might look beautiful on the surface, but underneath, the architecture is often a mess.

We constantly see AI builds with duplicate H1 tags, scrambled heading hierarchies, missing canonical links, and messy URL structures. When it comes to local search optimization, generic content just won't cut it against a targeted strategy.

The frustrating part is that these issues are completely invisible. Everything looks fine to you, but six months later, you are wondering why your business isn't showing up anywhere near the top of local search results. For an honest look at what goes into real technical setups, check out our guide on how much a website actually costs in Perth.


What About Using AI With Coding Knowledge?

This is where the conversation completely shifts. A professional developer using AI as a tool is a world away from a business owner relying on an automated website generator.

When I pull up an AI tool, it is helping me prototype layout concepts, write raw code faster, and troubleshoot logic bugs. Crucially, the AI isn't making the final executive decisions. I am reviewing every single line of output, checking the performance metrics, and ensuring the final product matches a high-performance standard.

Trying to build a production-ready business website entirely through raw prompts gets messy fast. Token costs add up, debugging loops take hours, and you still need professional development knowledge to stitch it all together safely. AI is a brilliant co-pilot, but it is a terrible replacement for actual expertise.


A Simple Decision Framework

If you are on the fence about whether to use an AI website builder, use this simple checklist.

Give an AI builder a go if:

  • You need a basic link live on the web immediately.
  • You are just testing a brand-new side hustle.
  • Your current budget is exceptionally tight.
  • The website isn't going to be your primary source of inquiries.

Skip the AI builder if:

  • Your business completely relies on online enquiries and phone calls.
  • Local SEO is crucial for bringing in local customers.
  • You want to look distinctly better and more professional than your competition.
  • High performance, fast load speeds, and clean code matter to you.
  • You want complete, long-term ownership of your site without ongoing platform fees.

Final Thoughts

Look, there isn't one universal "right" way to build a website. A basic, automated DIY site might be the perfect starting point for someone just getting off the ground. For an established business, a high-performance, custom hand-coded website built for SEO is going to deliver a far better return on investment over the years.

Right now, there is a massive wave of people selling cheap websites using AI tools to spin up a layout for next to nothing, handing it over, and walking away. It might look alright on day one, but the real test is what happens down the track when things break or your search rankings slide.

The issue isn't the AI technology itself. The issue is assuming that because a website was easy to generate, it will automatically be easy to rank, maintain, and grow.

If you are trying to weigh up your options and aren't sure where your current online presence sits, I am always happy to take a proper look for you. At Fern Digital, we run comprehensive, free website audits for local Perth businesses. I will give you a straightforward, honest breakdown of exactly how your site is performing under the hood—no pushy sales tactics, just clear, practical advice free of charge from one business owner to another.

Whenever you're ready, feel free to get in touch for a chat.