Brewery Website Design


Nobody browses a brewery website. They check what’s pouring, when you’re open, and how to get there.
Before anyone sets foot in your taproom, they’ve already visited you once — on a phone, deciding whether the drive is worth it. What’s on the board. Whether the kitchen is still open. Where to park. A brewery website has one job: answer those questions fast, and look like your beer while it does.
I design and build brewery websites that stay current without anyone touching a computer. Republic Brewing Company’s tap list pulls from Untappd all day long — a new beer shows up on the site, and on the printable menus, the moment it’s tapped. No stale PDFs. No “is this list current?”
And because I also design the beer can art, the logos, and the print menus, the website isn’t a second project that sort of matches. It’s the same brand, poured into a different glass.









What a brewery website needs
A tap list that updates itself
Nobody wants to edit a website on a Friday night. Your list can sync from Untappd or your POS, so what’s on the site is what’s on the board — and the print menus can build themselves from the same data.
Hours, address, and directions — first
Most visitors want three answers and a map. They get them without scrolling past your founding story. (The story’s there too. It’s just not in the way.)
Events that don’t go stale
Trivia night, live music, can releases, food trucks. An events page you can update yourself in less time than it takes to pour a flight.
A site that looks like your beer
Your cans have a voice. Your taproom has a vibe. A website-builder template has neither. I carry the brand from the shelf to the screen so people recognize you before they read a word.
Questions breweries ask
Can the tap list really update automatically?
Yes. Republic Brewing Company’s site checks Untappd every half hour, all day — beers, styles, ABVs, descriptions. Tap it there, and it’s on the website before the first pour settles. The same data can feed printable taproom menus.
Do you design cans, logos, and menus too?
That’s half the point. I’ve designed logos, can art, posters, shirts, and menus for Republic Brewing Company, Woodstacker Beer Company, and Moon Hill Brewing — so the website matches everything else on the bar.
Do you only work with New Hampshire breweries?
I’m in Manchester, so New Hampshire and New England breweries get me in person — but I design and build for breweries anywhere.
What’s the website built on?
Whatever serves the job. Most brewery sites I build are fast, modern static sites — quick to load, nothing to hack, cheap to host — with editing simple enough to do from behind the bar.
Let’s get people off the couch and onto your barstools.
Tell me about your brewery — where you are, what you’re pouring, and what the website needs to do.
Start the Project