We’ve just launched a brand new redesign of our website, and it’s looking better than ever! Check it out and let us know what you think! https://divhunt.com/
We’ve also made a small adjustment to our free plan. New websites on the free plan will now have a 2-page limit. Don’t worry—existing free websites will stay the same with up to 10 pages.
The free plan is still one of the strongest out there:
Connect your own custom domain
No Divhunt branding on your website
Very good limits
Additionally, we’re excited to announce that premium websites will now start to incur charges, allowing us to continue improving Divhunt and delivering the best tools for our users.
Speaking of improvements, we’re gearing up to release new updates we’ve been working hard on over the past few months. Stay tuned for exciting features and improvements!
Hey @Melissa, until now, we’ve been offering all premium (paid) plans for free so users could fully test Divhunt during a free period. Starting now, premium websites will require payment as we transition out of that free phase.
This will sound weird but it’s good move to decrease number of sites with free plan. This will free your resources and move some free sites to paid plan(or remove the costa of free users with regular small Pages).
Hey @WojciechK, thanks for understanding! Just to clarify, we’re limiting the number of pages per site on free plans, but you can still create as many free websites as you want.
I would also like to confirm this with. I thought the premium plans that were purchased outside of the LTD period were already being charged for since mid-year?
I like the free plan adjustment, still fine for people who just need a landing page or single-page site but gives more reason to upgrade to the premium tiers
All free websites activated before today will remain unaffected and keep the old limits (10 pages).
Premium (paid) plans were free until today as part of a test period to allow users to fully explore Divhunt’s limits before deciding to switch. Starting now, websites using those premium plans will need to pay to continue.
Hope this clears things up! Let me know if you have any more questions.
In the EU, I can’t think of any law that explicitly requires these two topics to be on separate pages. For example, in Germany, it’s only stipulated that they must be clearly separated. But theoretically, this can also happen on a single page. They just need to be two distinct sections, and they must be easily accessible (for instance, via links in the footer). Due to these circumstances, it’s certainly simplest to do it on two separate pages.
However, if you want to use the website for commercial purposes and present yourself professionally, you should be willing to invest the $8 per month for Divhunt—that’s just about $100 per year. Other providers don’t even offer a free plan to get a website live.