Ecommerce website development price in Khulna
You asked koto taka. The real question hiding inside it is who actually owns and runs the store after it ships.
Talk to enough Khulna sellers and a pattern shows up that has nothing to do with how a store looks. Someone, often a part-timer working remotely from Dhaka, builds them an ecommerce site for a low number. It launches, it looks fine, and then the small things start: a bKash payment lands but the order still reads unpaid, stock does not drop so they oversell a jersey they had one of, the courier address is one free-text box so every evening is spent retyping forty addresses for Steadfast, and the one person who can fix any of it lives three hundred kilometres away and answers slower each week until the replies stop. The login to their own shop sits on someone else's laptop. That is the part nobody put a price on, and it is exactly what an honest ecommerce website development price in Khulna has to account for.
So when you ask koto taka, the honest answer separates two jobs that get sold as one. Design is what your buyer sees: the homepage, the product page, the colours, how it sits on a phone. Development is what the buyer never sees but always feels: the checkout that ties a bKash or Nagad transaction back to the right order, the stock that updates across two staff phones so you never sell the same item twice, the courier-ready address data, the return and exchange flow Khulna shoppers expect, and an admin your staff actually operate without calling the developer. My 50,000 BDT floor exists because that second list is real engineering hours, and because the store is built to be handed over completely, in your name, the day it launches.
I am RH Fardin, a solo website developer based in Bangladesh with around five years of full-time work behind me. I do not just design your Khulna store, I build and ship the code, wire the payments, structure the courier data, and hand you an admin panel you can run yourself. There is no account manager between us and no junior practising on your build while a senior signs the invoice. For a development price specifically that matters, because a one-person studio carries no office rent and no sales desk, so the figure you pay is buying engineering time on your store and almost nothing else. The person quoting you is the person writing the code, start to finish, and the person who picks up when you message after launch.
The development price climbs only when the engineering genuinely climbs, never because a sales target said so. A focused store, the Khan Jahan Ali Road clothing seller, the seafood or honey brand shipping out of the southwest, the KU or KUET student label selling through Facebook comments, sits comfortably in the 50,000 BDT tier. More products, more payment methods, bulk import, automated courier push and heavier admin move you up the 90,000 and 1,50,000 BDT ladder, and a fully custom platform that behaves like a small ERP starts at 3,00,000 BDT. Terms are simple and the same for everyone: 50% advance, 50% on launch, and a design-approval guarantee, so you sign off on the look before the final payment is ever due.
See pricing in BDT