Divi5Lab

2026-07-08

Best Divi 5 Layouts for Agencies (2026 Picks)

The Divi 5 sections and landing pages that make an agency site convert — heroes, case-study grids, pricing and contact layouts, with validated picks.

Agency websites have a strange brief: the site is the portfolio. A restaurant can serve great food from a mediocre website; an agency selling design and development from a clumsy site contradicts itself before the first call. That raises the bar for any template you import — it has to read as deliberate, current, and fast. Here's how we'd assemble an agency site from the agency layouts in our Divi 5 library, section by section, and what to look for if you assemble your own.

The hero: claim a position, not "welcome"

The best agency heroes on the market share three traits: a positioning statement instead of a greeting ("Brand systems for B2B software companies," not "Welcome to our agency"), a single primary call to action, and typography confident enough to carry the section without a stock photo of people pointing at whiteboards. Our hero sections tagged agency lean this way deliberately — several use large editorial type over restrained backgrounds, which also keeps the section light and fast.

When you customize, resist adding a second CTA. "Book a call" or "See our work" — the hero should make one offer. The other belongs in the navigation.

Proof: the section agencies underbuild

Visitors don't believe adjectives; they believe evidence. The strongest agency pages put proof immediately after the hero — client logos, a results statement, or one flagship case study — before explaining services. In the library, look at testimonial sections with the corporate or minimal style tags: the restrained ones read as more credible precisely because they don't oversell. A three-column testimonial grid with real names and roles beats a carousel of anonymous five-star quotes every time.

Gallery-type sections work as portfolio strips: gallery layouts with consistent aspect ratios make disparate project screenshots look curated rather than dumped.

Services: features sections doing honest work

Agency services sections fail in two directions — vague ("Strategy. Design. Development.") or exhaustive (a 14-item grid nobody reads). The features sections in the library work best trimmed to four to six items, each with a concrete deliverable in the description. Icons should share one visual family; every features layout we publish uses a single icon system per section so the grid doesn't look assembled from three different libraries.

Pricing: yes, even for agencies

Most agencies hide pricing; the ones that publish something — ranges, starting points, productized tiers — filter their leads dramatically. If that's your model, the pricing tables tagged agency or corporate adapt cleanly: rename tiers to engagement types ("Sprint," "Retainer," "Partnership"), keep the feature rows to what a client actually compares, and let the highlighted column do the anchoring. See our notes on middle-column emphasis in Divi 5 Design Tips.

Contact: reduce the form until it stops scaring people

Agency contact pages routinely ask for budget, timeline, company size, and a project description before a visitor knows if you're taking clients. Start with name, email, and one open text field; qualify on the call. The contact sections in the library use Divi's native form module, so trimming fields after import is a two-minute edit — and the split layouts (form beside a photo or office details) keep the page from feeling like a tollbooth.

Or import the whole thing

If you'd rather start from a coherent page than compose sections, the full landing pages tagged agency sequence all of the above — hero, proof, services, engagement CTA — with one palette and typography scale. Import, replace the copy, wire the buttons. The multi-page agency packs on pricing extend the same design system across home, services, and contact pages, which is what keeps a five-page site from feeling like five templates.

What "good" looks like structurally

Whatever source you use — ours or anyone's — an agency layout worth importing has:

  • Real modules, not flattened images. Buttons are button modules; galleries are gallery modules. (Everything in our catalog is validated for exactly this.)
  • Deliberate mobile behavior. Check the mobile screenshot before downloading, not after importing. Column stacking order matters on service grids.
  • Restraint. Agencies sell taste. A layout with four animation styles and three accent colors is spending your credibility.
  • A single design system. Consistent spacing rhythm and one icon family across sections.

Suggested starting stack

For a one-page agency site today: an editorial hero, client-logo strip, four-item features section, one case-study gallery, a three-tier engagement pricing table, a short testimonial grid, and a minimal contact section. Every piece exists as a free download — assemble it in an afternoon, then read How to Import a Divi 5 Layout if any step of the import flow is unfamiliar.

The agency niche rewards subtraction. Import less than you think you need, make what remains flawless, and let the whitespace testify.

Explore free Divi 5 layouts by type, industry and style.

Best Divi 5 Layouts for Agencies (2026 Picks) | Divi5Lab