The Numbers Tell a Different Story
The global web development market is projected to reach $89 billion by 2027, up from around $56 billion in 2023. That is not the trajectory of an industry in decline. Developer job postings have held steady, and in specialisms touching AI integration and custom platform builds, they have grown. GitHub reported that developers using AI coding tools were completing certain tasks up to 55% faster. The output is going up, not the redundancy notices.
What has changed is what gets built, and what businesses now expect from it.
The Bar Has Moved, and That Changes Everything
A few years ago, a clean website with decent copy and a working contact form was enough for most businesses to look credible. That window has closed. Research from Google found that visitors form a judgement within around 50 milliseconds of landing on a page. If something feels slow, generic or like it was assembled from a shared template, they do not complain. They leave.
AI tools have made it easier to produce something passable. That is precisely the problem. Everyone now has access to passable. The businesses pulling ahead online are the ones investing in experiences built around their specific customers, their specific product and the specific action they need people to take. Custom development, considered UX and genuine brand thinking are not becoming less relevant. They are becoming the things that actually separate one business from the next.
What AI Has Actually Changed
AI has changed the workflow more than it has changed the outcome. Developers are moving faster through repetitive tasks, boilerplate code, initial builds, debugging cycles. That means more time and budget goes into the harder work: the architecture, the logic, the experience design that determines whether a product works for real people under real conditions.
For business owners, that shift has real upside. Projects that once took six months are hitting the market in three. Automation that was previously out of reach for mid-sized businesses is now within budget. The entry point has come down without the ceiling dropping.
The agencies and developers who are genuinely integrating AI into how they work, rather than using it as a talking point, can now offer something substantially better than what was available two years ago. The gap between a good build and a rushed one is wider than ever, and easier to spot.
So Is Web Development Actually Dying?
It is a question we get asked often enough that we wrote about it in depth. The short version: no. But the version of it that stays exactly the same certainly is. The full breakdown is here.
The businesses struggling online right now are not the ones who invested in their digital presence. They are the ones who put it off, assumed a DIY platform would hold things together, or decided to wait and see how the AI situation settled. The ones growing are the ones treating their website and their platforms as infrastructure, not as something to sort out later.
What This Means If You Run a Business
You do not need to understand how large language models work. What matters is whether your website is converting visitors, whether your platform is creating friction or removing it, and whether what someone sees online reflects the quality of what you actually do.
AI has not made those questions easier to sidestep. It has made the gap between businesses who take them seriously and those who do not considerably harder to close.
