Physical Therapy Web Design
When someone is recovering, the site has to make the next step feel easy.
People looking for rehab are comparing credibility, treatment fit, and convenience before they book an evaluation.
We build physical therapy websites that answer the questions patients ask before they commit, so more visitors turn into appointments.

Why Us
Why physical therapy practices work with us
Visitors need to understand the process
If the site does not explain what happens next, people stall out before they schedule.
Trust should feel immediate
Provider bios, treatment focus, and proof need to show up quickly so the practice feels credible right away.
Booking should be obvious
The visitor should never have to hunt for the evaluation request or call button.
Who We Serve
Physical therapy practices we build for
From independent clinics to multi-provider rehab groups, we focus on sites that need more evaluation requests, not just more traffic.
The Difference
Most rehab sites explain the clinic but not the decision
If the site makes someone work to understand the care, the timeline, or how to get started, it is costing you appointments.
We fix that by putting the decision cues up front and removing the friction from booking.
The page should help someone move from curious to ready without getting overwhelmed.
Questions
Physical therapy web design FAQ
How much does physical therapy web design cost?
Projects start at $5,500 and scale with the number of service pages, locations, and scheduling needs.
Can you help us get more evaluation bookings?
Yes. We build the site around the care questions and search intent that bring in the right patients.
Do you build treatment or condition pages?
Yes. Those pages are often the backbone of local search visibility for rehab practices.
Can you make the site feel less clinical and more human?
Yes. We use copy, structure, and proof to make the practice feel credible and approachable at the same time.
Ready to turn more local searches into booked evaluations?
Run a free diagnostic. We'll show you where the current site is creating friction and what to fix first.
