
You have heard of Wix Studio. You probably already know what regular Wix is. And you are sitting with one of these questions: Is Wix Studio just a shinier version of Wix, or is it genuinely different? Is it worth learning if you already use Webflow or WordPress? Can someone at your skill level actually build something professional with it, or will it eat your afternoon and leave you with nothing to show for it?
I had all three questions going in. I am going to answer them in order, as I actually encountered them, walking you through the experience from the first login to a published site with animations and responsive layouts across desktop, tablet, and mobile.
By the end of this Wix Studio Review, you will know exactly whether Wix Studio is the right tool for you. Not in a vague “it depends on your needs” way. In a specific, honest, this-is-what-I-found way.
Wix Studio is best for freelancers and agencies who want design precision and client management in one platform.
To ensure consistency and fairness across all our website builder reviews, we have developed a rating methodology that guides our evaluation process.
This framework examines the critical aspects of website building platforms: ease of use, editor and AI capabilities, eCommerce, design flexibility, SEO and performance, pricing transparency, and customer support.
| Category | Score | Why We Gave This Score |
|---|---|---|
| Ease of Use | 7.5 | No progressive onboarding, four-panel editor with no in-context tooltips or guidance. |
| Editor and AI Tools | 8.7 | AI text generation, responsive AI layout adjustments, and deep inspector panel controls. |
| eCommerce | 8.5 | Native store exists but transaction fees reach 4% on lower plans. |
| Design and Templates | 9.1 | Typographically strong templates with fluid responsive system and production-quality animations. |
| SEO and Performance | 8.3 | Built-in meta editor with live search preview, SEO checklist, and Google Search Console connection. |
| Pricing | 7.9 | CMS on every plan is unusual, but Basic at $12/month is too limited for real use. |
| Help and Support | 9.2 | AI search resolved a technical question in seconds, live chat connected in under a minute, but the Helpmate chatbot made reaching a human harder than it should be. |
| Overall Score | 8.7/10 | Strong design and CMS tools are held back by a steep learning curve and limited onboarding. |
| Plan | Price/mo (annual) | Storage | CMS Items | Collaborators | eCommerce Transaction Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | $12 | 10 GB | 1,500 | 3 | 4% |
| Standard | $20 | 50 GB | 4,000 | 5 | 4% |
| Plus | $32 | 120 GB | 20,000 | 10 | 2% |
| Elite | $149 | Unlimited | 10,000,000 | 100 | 0% |
Watch for hidden costs. The 4% transaction fee on Basic and Standard plans adds up quickly for any client taking payments.
Event ticketing carries a separate 2.5% service fee on Standard and Plus. If your client runs a store or ticketed events, the Plus plan at $32/month with its 2% transaction fee is the more honest starting point. For client work, removing the “Created with Wix Studio” badge requires at least the Basic paid plan, so budget that into your project pricing from day one.
When you use the standard Wix editor, Wix is making a lot of decisions for you. You pick a template, you drag and drop your content, and Wix handles the responsive layout automatically.
When you switch to mobile view, your sections stack neatly. When you publish, it looks decent on most screens. You gave up some control to get that convenience, and for most personal sites and small business sites, that is a completely reasonable trade.
Wix Studio does not make those decisions for you.
When I first opened the editor after choosing the Creative Agency template, I was not greeted with a simplified “let’s get started” flow.
I was handed a four-panel professional design environment. Canvas in the center, element panel on the left, inspector panel on the right, breakpoint controls at the top, and pointed at a “Browse Tutorials” button.

The platform assumes you know what you are doing, or that you are willing to learn.
The clearest way I can frame the difference is this: the standard Wix editor is like a furnished apartment. Wix Studio is an empty space with professional tools and no furniture. The potential of the empty space is higher. But you have to know how to use the tools.
When I logged into Wix Studio for the first time, I did not land in a site editor. I landed in what Wix calls the workspace, and I want to spend some time here because most reviews skip straight to the editor and miss something important.
The Discover page is the front page of your Wix Studio account. It is an agency operations hub. Not a personal dashboard. An agency hub.

The left sidebar alone tells you exactly who this product is for: Sites, Mobile Apps, Templates, Custom Apps, Client Experience, Billing and Subscriptions, Customer Care Tickets, Agency Profile, Earnings, Team, Settings.
That is a lot of infrastructure for someone building their first website. But for a freelancer managing five client projects simultaneously, or a small agency with a team, this is exactly what you need.
Let me walk you through the parts that actually matter.
The workspace also shows your Wix Partner status and points if you are in the program.
Partners get priority support, community access, dedicated learning resources, and eventually revenue share on client premium plans.
For freelancers building a sustainable client business, the partner program is worth knowing about from day one.
I spent about 20 minutes in the workspace before I even opened the editor. That time was not wasted. Understanding the operations layer first meant that when I eventually started building, I understood where everything I created would live and how it would be managed.
When I was ready to build, Wix Studio gave me three starting options:

I want to flag this because it is actually a meaningful choice, not just a formality. The blank canvas is the most powerful option, but the most demanding. You are making every decision from scratch, which is great when you know exactly what you want and terrible when you do not.
The AI structure generator is interesting for planning purposes, but still requires you to do the actual design work afterward.
I chose the template route because I wanted to see how well the starting point held up in real editing and whether the design quality would survive as I replaced placeholder content with real material.
I searched “Creative Agency” in the template library. The results page is clean and well organized, with filter rows at the top for Type, Industry, Features, and Style

The templates themselves are noticeably higher quality than what you find in the standard Wix editor: editorial, typographically strong, and visually coherent. The kind of design that signals to a client “yes, this person knows what they are doing.”
Hovering over any template gives you two options: Edit and View. I always recommend clicking View first. It opens the template in a preview mode with the responsive breakpoint switcher visible at the top: desktop, tablet, and mobile icons.

Toggle through all three before you commit. The structural logic of a template is much easier to evaluate in preview than after you have already started editing it.
I clicked “Edit Template” on the WeDo Creative Agency template, and the editor began loading.
What came up was not just a spinner. The loading screen split the window in two: on the left, the Wix Studio logo with a progress bar. On the right, a live preview of an example site called “Stick Around”.

The editor then opened with a “Welcome to Wix Studio” modal in the center, offering to browse tutorials. I closed it and took a moment to look at what I was actually working with.

Here is what the interface showed me:

My first honest reaction was: this is a lot. Not in a bad way. In the way that a professional kitchen is a lot the first time you stand in one.
Everything has a place and a purpose. The interface is not trying to hide its depth from you. You just need to learn where things are before the depth starts working in your favor rather than against you.
Before I describe what I actually built, I want to explain the four concepts that unlocked the editor for me.
If you understand these four things, the rest of Wix Studio starts to make sense. If you do not understand them, you will spend hours confused.
Click any element in the editor and look at the Size fields in the right inspector panel. You will see values like “290 px*” or “1003 px*.” The asterisk is the most important character in Wix Studio, and the editor never explains it.
The px* value means: this element is this many pixels wide at the current editing screen width (by default 1280px).
If you change the editing size to 1440px, the value changes proportionally to represent the element’s size at that wider screen. It is not a fixed pixel value. It is a proportional, screen-relative pixel value.

This is what makes Wix Studio’s layouts fluid rather than fixed. Once I understood the asterisk, the responsive behavior made complete sense. Before I understood it, I kept wondering why my “pixel” values were not doing what pixel values normally do.
The px system is Wix Studio’s biggest conceptual hurdle, and it is never explained in context.* There is no tooltip on the asterisk, no onboarding moment where the editor says “by the way, here is how responsive sizing works.”
You have to find this in a tutorial or, like I did initially, through confusion.
Most layouts in Wix Studio are built using Stacks. A Stack is a group of elements arranged horizontally or vertically, with shared spacing and alignment controls.
If you have worked with CSS flexbox, Stacks will feel immediately familiar. If you have not, think of them as a container that keeps its children organized.
When I selected the hero text block in the template, the action bar showed “Vertical” with an “Unstack” option, confirming it was a Stack.

The inspector panel showed alignment options, item spacing, and size controls that applied to the group as a whole. I could align all children to the left in one click.
I could set 10% margin on the top and bottom of the entire group without touching each element individually.
The breadcrumb at the bottom of the canvas (Page, Section (Welcome), Stack, Text) showed exactly where I was in the hierarchy.

When I was editing text deep inside a nested Stack inside a grid cell inside a section, clicking through the breadcrumb to select the parent section was far faster than trying to click the right layer on the canvas.
Sections highlighted in green are global sections. Any change you make to a green section affects that section across every page on the site.
This is how headers and footers work, and it is also a feature you can apply to any section you want to reuse across pages.

I learned this by noticing that the header in my template was highlighted differently from the other sections.
The moment I understood global sections, I understood how to maintain design consistency across a multi-page site without manually updating every page when a client asks to change the navigation color.
The inspector panel on the right controls everything about a selected element. For any element you click, it shows Size (width, height, position, responsive behavior), Design (fill color, background, border, corners, shadow, custom CSS), and Layout/Position (margin, padding, alignment).
For text elements it also shows font, size, line spacing, and HTML tag.

The HTML tag dropdown is a detail I appreciated. Selecting a heading and being able to switch it from H2 to H1 directly in the inspector, without going into text editing mode, is the kind of small thing that adds up to a faster workflow over the course of a full build.
With those four concepts understood, I got into the actual work. Here is what the experience was like section by section.
Double-clicking any text on the canvas opens inline text editing. Standard behavior. What I found more useful was the “Generate Text with AI” option in the action bar above the selected text element.

Clicking it opens an AI Text Creator panel that asks for your business type, business name, text type (title or paragraph), and topic, then generates copy accordingly.

I tested it for a services section heading. The result was usable as a starting point. The platform is honest about its limitations. A disclaimer at the bottom of the panel reads “AI can make mistakes, double-check the results are accurate before using them.”
This is the right tone. The AI text tool is a draft generator, not a copywriter. Use it to get unstuck, not to finish the job.
The more interesting AI text feature is what I found by right-clicking a text element. The context menu showed an option called “Add Custom Behavior with AI” alongside the standard options (Cut, Copy, Paste, Copy Element Design, Duplicate, Hide, Delete, Detach from Stack, Use on All Breakpoints, Align to, Rotate, Add Anchor, Add a Comment, Save as Asset).
That context menu alone tells you the depth of this editor. Every one of those options is useful to a professional builder.
Changing a background image is one of the most common tasks in any web editor, and in Wix Studio it is genuinely smooth.
I selected the hero section background, clicked “Change Background” in the floating action bar, and the media manager opened. I could upload from my computer, choose from Wix’s free image library, or connect to other sources.

The upload bar moved fast. Once the image was uploaded and applied, the section updated immediately on the canvas. No reload, no lag. The media manager is snappy in a way that editing-heavy tools sometimes are not.
For images within the layout, I found the stretch option particularly useful. Selecting an image and clicking the stretch icon in the action bar fills the image to its parent container, whether that is a section, a grid cell, or a Stack. Combined with the corner radius controls in the inspector (I set rounded corners to 48px on the portfolio images in the template), it is easy to achieve clean, modern image treatments without touching CSS.
After I had made several content edits, I clicked the mobile breakpoint icon in the top bar.
What I saw confirmed everything the px* system had suggested: the layout reflowed properly. Typography scaled. The navigation collapsed to a hamburger menu. The hero section reorganized itself into a single column.

But it was not perfect. One image had padding that felt slightly off on mobile. This is where the Responsive AI feature comes in.
I selected the section (not an element inside it, the whole section), and in the action bar appeared a small twinkling purple icon. That is the Responsive AI button. I clicked it, a prompt appeared saying “We’ll do the work for you. Generate now,” and in about 30 seconds it generated adjusted mobile and tablet layouts for the section.
The result was approximately 85% correct. The main elements were well-positioned. I needed to manually adjust one image’s left and right margin (I added 5% on each side) and increase the section height slightly. Those adjustments took less than two minutes. Generating the breakpoints from scratch would have taken significantly longer.
This is the part of Wix Studio that I think gets underplayed in most reviews, so I want to be direct about it: the CMS changes what Wix Studio is capable of.
When I opened the Site Pages panel in the left sidebar, I saw two categories. Main Pages included Home, About Us, and Privacy Policy.

Inside Work Pages were two entries: Work (List) and Work (Item). These are dynamic page templates: one generates the list of portfolio items, one generates the individual item page. The content for both comes from a database collection, not from manually edited pages.
I clicked the Connect to CMS icon in the action bar while a text element was selected. The inspector panel switched to show a “Show dynamic content on this element” prompt with an “Add a Dataset” button.
Adding a dataset wires that text element to a field in a CMS collection. Once connected, the text on the page is no longer static content you edit directly. It is pulled from the database, and your client can update it from the content manager without ever opening the editor.

For an agency, this is transformative. A portfolio site for a photographer with 80 projects does not require 80 manually built pages. A restaurant with a changing menu does not need the designer involved every time a dish is added. A blog with multiple authors does not need everyone trained on the editor. The CMS handles all of it.
Before I published, I explored the animations panel. Selecting any element and switching to the Animations tab in the inspector reveals entrance animations (Float, Fade, Slide, Expand, Spin, and more) and scroll effects (move to its design position as the user scrolls, scale to size, fade in).
I added a Float entrance animation to the hero section image. The effect previewed immediately in the editor.

I added a scroll effect to the left-side content stack: starting from 270 degrees off-axis, moving to its design position over a defined scroll distance and timing. In the editor’s preview mode, as I scrolled, the elements came in from opposite directions and settled into their final positions.
Before publishing, I checked the SEO setup. In the Site Pages panel, right-clicking any page shows a settings menu with a dedicated SEO section.

Here I could set the URL slug, add a meta description, set a meta title, and see a live preview of what the page would look like in Google search results. Title, URL, and description formatted as a real search result snippet.

That preview is a small feature that many builders skip, and it is genuinely useful for writers and business owners who are not SEO specialists. Seeing your metadata rendered as a real search result makes it immediately obvious whether your title is too long or your description gets cut off.
Wix Studio also includes an SEO checklist accessible through the Marketing section of the dashboard. It walks you through tasks like setting homepage titles, writing meta descriptions, and connecting to Google Search Console.
Each incomplete item is flagged, and completing it updates the checklist in real time.
Publishing in Wix Studio is a single click on the blue Publish button in the top right corner. A modal appears asking you to name your site (for the free subdomain: yourname.wixstudio.com/sitename).
Press Save & Continue, and the site goes live.

Connecting a custom domain requires an upgraded plan. The process is handled inside the workspace under Settings, with step-by-step guidance for both purchasing a domain through Wix and connecting an existing domain from GoDaddy, Namecheap, or another registrar.
One thing worth knowing: connecting a domain and removing the Wix Studio branding from the site (the small “Created with Wix Studio” badge on free sites) both require at least the Basic plan at $12/month.
For client work, removing that badge is non-negotiable, so budget the plan cost into your project pricing from the start.
The fluid responsive system is the best reason to choose Wix Studio over the standard editor.
The px* system is confusing at first, but it enables a level of control over cross-device layout that the standard editor cannot match. Once it clicks, designing for all screen sizes feels like designing once with rules, not designing three separate layouts.

The client workspace makes agency operations genuinely manageable.
The combination of client kits, role-based access, custom templates, monthly reports, and team collaboration in one workspace removes a layer of operational overhead that most agencies manage through a patchwork of separate tools. Agencies using Studio consistently report faster project delivery and the ability to take on more clients without proportionally more overhead.

CMS at the entry plan level is unusual and valuable.
Dynamic pages, content collections, and database-driven layouts starting at $12/month is not the norm in professional website builders. Most platforms price CMS as a premium tier feature. Wix Studio includes it from the bottom of the pricing table.

The Wix Studio animation system is production-quality without code.
Entrance animations, scroll effects, animation path timelines, and responsive behavior for effects are all accessible through the inspector panel. The results look professional. I have seen freelancers charge premium rates for scroll animation work that Wix Studio makes accessible in an afternoon.
Low-level code control is restricted. Custom CSS and Dev Mode exist, but they feel added-on rather than core to the platform. You cannot inspect or edit CSS directly in the way Webflow allows.
The editor is physically demanding on small screens. The canvas at 1280px with both sidebars open leaves almost no working room on a 13-inch laptop. I found myself constantly toggling the right panel open and closed to see the full canvas. This is a tool designed for large monitors, and it shows. Working comfortably in Wix Studio on a smaller screen requires either a second monitor or a lot of patience with the panel toggles.
I wanted to see how well Wix actually supports you when something goes wrong, so I tested the live chat and AI channels from the dashboard.
Clicking “Help” in the top navigation opens a pop-up with several options:

I started with the AI search. I typed a specific troubleshooting question about a scheduling feature: clients could not see available time slots even though the schedule had been configured.
The AI returned a structured seven-step answer within seconds, covering staff working hours, service assignments, location matching, synced calendar conflicts, time slot intervals, booking window settings, and resource availability.

It also linked to four relevant help articles and a video tutorial, and included a disclaimer that results should be double-checked. For a technical configuration issue, this was a genuinely useful answer I could act on without contacting anyone.
I also wanted to see how good the human support is, so I clicked “Chat With Us” with a billing question about upgrading plans.
Before reaching a person, I had to get through Wix’s AI chatbot called Helpmate. When I asked to speak to a human agent, the bot pushed back and requested more details first. I had to ask for a human twice before Helpmate offered the handoff. That added unnecessary friction to what should be a simple request.

Once past the bot, the connection to a live agent was fast, under a minute. The agent was friendly and thorough.

On my question about whether there is a way to try a higher-tier plan before committing to the annual price, the agent needed a few minutes to research, then came back with something the AI chatbot had missed entirely: Wix offers a 14-day money-back guarantee on new premium plans, so you can upgrade, test the features, and cancel for a full refund if it does not fit your needs.

That is exactly the kind of detail that justifies pushing through to a human agent. The chatbot had given a vague answer about managing your subscription. Only the live agent surfaced the specific refund window.
The bottom line on Wix support
For most day-to-day questions, the help center and AI search will resolve things without a wait. For billing, upgrades, or anything where you need a definitive policy answer, push through to the live chat. The agent quality in my test was solid once I got there.
Use Wix Studio if:
Going in, I expected Wix Studio to feel like a marketing repositioning of the standard Wix editor. What I found was a genuinely different product built for a genuinely different user.
The weaknesses are real, but they are not fatal. The learning curve is steep because the editor does not explain itself. The px* system is confusing because there is no in-context guidance. These are onboarding problems, not design problems. They cost you time upfront and stop mattering once the logic clicks.
What surprised me most was how complete the package is at the Standard and Plus price tiers. For $20 to $32 per month, you get:
| Nombre del Plan | Espacio | Ancho de banda | Precio | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free Plan | 524.29 MB | 524.29 MB | 0 $ | Detalles |
| WIX Harmony | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| Wix Booking | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| Wix Restaurant WB | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| Wix Hotels WB | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| Logo Maker | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| Wix Payments | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| Wix AI Website Builder | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 0 $ | Detalles |
| WIX Studio Basic | 10 GB | Ilimitado | 17.260 $ | Detalles |
| Light | 2 GB | 2.05 GB | 24.450 $ | Detalles |
| WIX Studio Standard | 50 GB | Ilimitado | 28.770 $ | Detalles |
| Core | 50 GB | Ilimitado | 41.710 $ | Detalles |
| WIX Studio Plus | 120 GB | Ilimitado | 46.020 $ | Detalles |
| Business Elite | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 50.340 $ | Detalles |
| Business | 100 GB | Ilimitado | 51.770 $ | Detalles |
| WIX Studio Standard | Ilimitado | Ilimitado | 214.270 $ | Detalles |
| Description | Expert Review |
|---|---|
| AI-powered website builder that creates and customizes a complete website based on yo... | Read AI Website Builder Review |
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| Comprehensive event management tool with ticketing, RSVPs, and seamless Wix integrati... | Read Events Review |
| AI-powered website builder that helps generate and design websites quickly with smart... | Read Harmony Review |
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| Easy logo creation tool that helps design professional logos for brands and websites. | Read Logo Maker Review |
| Secure payment processing solution to accept online payments and manage transactions. | Read Payments Review |
| Restaurant management platform for online ordering, reservations, and menu management... | Read Restaurants Review |
No. The standard Wix editor makes responsive layout decisions for you automatically. Wix Studio gives you a professional four-panel design environment where you control every responsive behavior yourself using the px* fluid sizing system.
Template switching after publishing is not available. The template you start with is your structural foundation. You can replace every section and change the look completely, but you cannot apply a new template to a live site.
Yes. CMS, dynamic pages, and content collections are included starting at the $12/month Basic plan. Most competing platforms treat CMS as a premium-tier feature, so this is genuinely unusual at that price point.
Expect to invest a day or two of focused study before using it on a live client project. The Sandboxes on the Discover page offer five to ten-minute interactive exercises that build specific skills like scroll animations and CMS integration without risking a live site.
Wix Studio has no import tool. Moving a site from another platform means rebuilding it manually. If you have a large existing site, factor the full rebuild time into your decision before committing.

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