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Landing pages and home pages serve different purposes. Learn when to use each one, how they differ structurally, and which one your business actually needs.
Most people use “landing page” and “home page” interchangeably. They shouldn’t.
These are fundamentally different tools with different jobs. Understanding the distinction helps you build the right page for your actual business goals.
A home page welcomes all visitors and directs them to different parts of your site. A landing page focuses on one specific action and nothing else.
Let’s break down exactly when to use each one.
Your home page is the front door of your website. It’s where people land when they type your domain into a browser or click a general link to your site.
A home page is a gateway, not a sales pitch. It acknowledges that visitors arrive with different intentions and guides them to the right place.
Good home pages are welcoming but purposeful. They don’t try to do everything at once, but they don’t force everyone down a single path either.
A landing page is built for one specific goal: to convert visitors into leads, customers or subscribers.
Unlike a home page, a landing page deliberately removes distractions. No navigation menu. No links to other pages. Just the message and the conversion goal.
Landing pages aren’t browsing experiences. They’re conversion tools.
The entire page is structured around persuading visitors to take that one action. Everything else is stripped away.
Let’s compare them side by side.
| Aspect | Home Page | Landing Page |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Welcome and direct visitors | Drive one specific conversion |
| Audience | Multiple types of visitors | One targeted segment |
| Navigation | Full site navigation menu | No navigation (removes exits) |
| Links | Multiple internal links | Minimal or no links |
| Goals | Brand awareness, exploration | Single conversion goal |
| Content | Broad overview of business | Focused on one offer or solution |
| Use case | General traffic, brand building | Campaigns, ads, specific promotions |
| Lifespan | Permanent site fixture | Often temporary or campaign-specific |
The structural difference is significant. Home pages are designed for exploration. Landing pages are designed for conversion.
Use a home page when:
Your business serves multiple customer types. If you’re a plumber who handles both residential and commercial work, your home page can branch visitors to relevant sections.
You want to build brand authority. Home pages establish who you are, showcase your work, and build trust over time.
Traffic comes from various sources. When people find you through search, social media, word of mouth or direct visits, a home page handles that variety.
You offer multiple services or products. A design studio offering branding, web design and consulting needs a home page to explain everything.
You’re building a long-term online presence. Your home page is the permanent foundation of your site. It evolves slowly.
Most small businesses need a clear, purposeful home page that explains what they do and guides visitors toward booking, contacting or learning more.
Use a landing page when:
You’re running paid ads. If you’re paying for Google Ads or Facebook clicks, send traffic to a focused landing page, not your home page.
You have a specific offer or promotion. “20% off first service” or “Free consultation this month” deserves its own landing page.
You’re launching a new product or service. A dedicated landing page lets you test messaging and gather sign-ups before a full launch.
You want to capture leads. A landing page with a simple form (name, email, phone) converts better than sending people to your general contact page.
You’re targeting one audience segment. If you’re running a campaign specifically for electricians, build a landing page that speaks directly to electricians.
You need to measure campaign performance. Landing pages let you track exactly how many visitors took the desired action, making it easy to calculate ROI.
Landing pages work because they remove distractions and focus visitors on the one thing you want them to do.
Sending paid ad traffic to your home page wastes money. Visitors who clicked an ad about “affordable website design for plumbers” don’t want to explore your site. They want the thing the ad promised.
A focused landing page that matches the ad converts significantly better.
The moment you add a navigation menu to a landing page, you give visitors an excuse to leave without converting.
Navigation is useful on home pages because exploration is part of the goal. On landing pages, it’s a leak in your conversion funnel.
Generic landing pages don’t convert. “We build great websites” isn’t compelling.
Effective landing pages are specific: “Fast, mobile-friendly websites for tradespeople in Derby. Built in 14 days. £479.”
Specificity builds trust and attracts the right audience.
Some businesses cram everything onto their home page: every service, every testimonial, every case study, six different CTAs.
The result is overwhelming. Visitors don’t know where to look or what to do next.
A good home page is clear and focused, even if it links to multiple areas of your site. Prioritise the most important message and action.
If your ad says “Free website audit”, your landing page headline better say “Free website audit”. Don’t send people to a generic contact page and expect them to figure it out.
Message match is critical. The landing page must continue the exact conversation the ad started.
Most small businesses don’t need complex multi-page websites. They need one clear, focused page that does the job.
This is where the line between home page and landing page gets interesting.
A well-built one-page website serves as:
The key difference is that Mapletree’s one-page sites don’t try to serve every possible audience. They’re built for your primary customer with your primary offer.
If you’re a local electrician, your one-page site isn’t trying to attract commercial contracts, residential clients, job seekers and industry partners all at once. It’s built to convert your core customer: homeowners who need an electrician.
That focus makes it perform like a landing page while functioning as your main site.
Even with a one-page website, you might need dedicated landing pages for:
Landing pages are temporary and campaign-specific. Your one-page site is permanent and general (within your niche).
Many businesses overcomplicate things from the start. They build multi-page sites with separate service pages, case study sections, blog archives and resource libraries, when what they actually need is one clear page that converts visitors.
You can always add complexity later. But you can’t simplify a messy site without starting over.
Our Launch Package gives you a clean, focused one-page site that works immediately. If you later need dedicated landing pages for campaigns, we can build those too. But you start with something that actually works.
Let’s look at real-world scenarios.
Home page approach:
Landing page approach (for Google Ads campaign):
The landing page converts better for emergency calls because it’s laser-focused on one specific need.
Home page approach:
Landing page approach (for Facebook ad promoting Launch Package):
The landing page is built specifically for people who clicked an ad about affordable websites. The home page serves a broader audience discovering the studio through various channels.
Home page approach:
Landing page approach (for email campaign launching new course):
The landing page converts email subscribers into course buyers. The home page nurtures visitors who aren’t ready to buy yet.
Ask yourself these questions:
1. What’s my primary goal?
2. Where is my traffic coming from?
3. What action do I want visitors to take?
4. Who is my audience?
5. How long will this page exist?
Most small businesses start with a home page (or a one-page site that functions as one). You add landing pages later when you’re running targeted campaigns.
Both types of pages benefit from fast load times, mobile-first design and clear, purposeful copy.
Home pages and landing pages aren’t interchangeable. They’re different tools for different jobs.
Your home page is the permanent foundation of your online presence. It welcomes diverse visitors and directs them to the right place.
Your landing pages are temporary, focused conversion tools. They strip away distractions and guide visitors toward one specific action.
Most small businesses start with a strong home page (or one-page site). You add landing pages later when you’re ready to run campaigns, promotions or targeted ads.
The mistake is trying to make one page do both jobs. A home page cluttered with aggressive conversion tactics feels pushy. A landing page with too much navigation fails to convert.
Build the right tool for the job.
If you’re not sure where to start, our Launch Package delivers a clean, focused one-page website that functions as both your home base and your conversion tool. It’s simple, fast and purposeful.
No navigation clutter. No confusing structure. Just one clear page that works.
Need a website that actually converts visitors? Let’s build something focused and effective.
Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
Mapletree Studio specialises in minimal, high-performance websites that convert. Based in the Midlands, serving businesses across the UK.
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