Wegic is the AI website builder I point someone at when they want a site but would rather describe it than drag boxes around a canvas. You tell it what you are building in plain language, and an AI designer generates the pages, writes the copy, picks the layout, and hands you a working site that you keep shaping by chatting with it. For a small business owner, a creator, or anyone who has stalled on a blank builder before, that conversational front door is the whole appeal.
Building a site by talking to it
The core move is a conversation, not a canvas. You describe the business, the AI asks a couple of follow-up questions, and it returns a multi-page site with structure, text, and images already in place. From there you keep editing the same way you started, by telling it what to change: make the hero shorter, add a services page, warm up the tone. It updates the live preview as you go. The people who get the most out of it are the ones who freeze in front of a traditional builder, because there is never an empty template staring back. You are reacting to something that already exists instead of building from nothing.
What it does well, and where the credits bite
Beyond generation, Wegic covers the parts that usually need a second tool: hosting, a custom domain on paid plans, multilingual versions of a site, and ongoing edits through the same chat. The catch to understand before you commit is the credit model. Every generation and every batch of edits spends credits, and they do not roll over from month to month. The free plan gives you enough to build one site and make a handful of changes, which is genuinely useful for judging the output quality, but a free or trial site goes offline unless you move to a paid plan. Treat the free tier as a test drive rather than a home.
Pricing and what you actually get
There is a free plan (70 credits, one site, up to three pages, a wegic.app subdomain) that lets you see exactly what the AI produces before paying anything. Paid plans start at $39.90/month billed monthly, or $23.90/month billed annually, on the Starter tier, which raises you to 600 credits, ten pages, ten thousand monthly visitors, and removes the Wegic badge. Premium runs $69.90/month billed monthly, or $41.90/month billed annually, and swaps the credit cap for unlimited generation and edits. There is also a one-time $2.99 trial that buys a single full site generation, which is the cheapest honest way to judge the output on your own idea. Annual billing takes about 40 percent off across the paid plans. The number to plan around is credits against how often you expect to regenerate, because a site you keep tweaking on Starter can run the 600 down quickly.
Where it falls short
Wegic trades control for speed, and you feel it if you have a precise design in mind. The output looks clean and professional for a brochure site or a simple storefront, but pixel-level layout control is thinner than a traditional builder like Webflow, and heavy ecommerce or complex custom logic is not its strength. The credit model also ties your cost to how much you iterate rather than a flat monthly rate, so an indecisive first week can burn through a tier. It is at its best when you want a good site fast and are willing to let the AI make most of the design calls.
Who it fits
Reach for Wegic if you are a solo operator, a creator, or a small business that needs a real site this week and has stalled every time you opened a blank builder. The conversational flow removes the part that stops most people, which is knowing where to start. If you need fine design control, a large ecommerce catalog, or a flat predictable bill regardless of how much you edit, a traditional builder will serve you better. For everyone else, the $2.99 trial is the low-risk way to see whether the AI writes a site you would actually publish.