Homeowners replacing siding want to understand the difference between standard and insulated vinyl, how D4 vs D5 profiles look on a house, and whether fiber cement is worth the price premium. A website with a color and profile gallery earns the quote call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Siding Installation in KC
Web Design for Vinyl Siding Installation Companies in Kansas City
Vinyl siding customers are homeowners replacing aged, faded, or damaged siding — either full replacements or re-siding after storm damage insurance claims. The first decision is material: vinyl is the dominant choice for cost, color retention, and no-paint maintenance, but fiber cement (James Hardie being the dominant brand) offers a premium wood-grain aesthetic and superior impact resistance at a meaningfully higher price point and more demanding installation requirements (Hardie installers require specific certification). Within vinyl, the key differentiators are panel profile (D4 — four-inch exposure, traditional horizontal look; D5 — five-inch, contemporary; Dutch lap — beveled shadow line; beaded — rounded groove for a cottage look) and insulated vs. standard: insulated vinyl has a foam backing laminated to the panel that adds R-2 to R-4 insulation, reduces denting and hollow sound, and provides a more solid feel. Thickness matters: .040 gauge is builder grade, .044 and .046 are better grades, .050 and above are premium. Color selection drives most of the buying decision — customers want to see panels on real houses, not chips on a board. Soffit and fascia replacement is typically done at the same time. A vinyl siding website with a profile and color gallery, an insulated vs. standard comparison, and a James Hardie vs. vinyl breakdown earns the homeowner who is making a decision that will last twenty to forty years.
What homeowners research before choosing a siding company
- Vinyl vs. fiber cement — James Hardie cost premium, impact resistance, paint requirement, appearance
- Panel profiles — D4 vs. D5 vs. Dutch lap vs. beaded — what each looks like on a finished house
- Insulated vs. standard — foam-backed panels, R-value difference, dent resistance, energy impact
- Thickness and grade — what .040 vs. .046 vs. .050 gauge means for durability and warranty
- Color selection — fade resistance, warranty terms, popular KC neighborhood colors, before and after photos
What your vinyl siding website would include
- Profile gallery — D4, D5, Dutch lap, beaded, shakes — photos on real KC homes showing each style
- Color selector — full color palette, fade warranty comparison, popular combinations with trim and accents
- Insulated vs. standard — foam backing explained, R-value, dent resistance, when the upgrade is worth it
- Vinyl vs. Hardie — honest comparison, cost difference, when fiber cement is the right choice
- Soffit and fascia — why replacing at the same time makes sense, what seamless aluminum looks like
- Quote form with home size, current siding material, profile preference, color ideas, timeline
What clients say
“Siding is a twenty-year decision and customers want to get it right. The hardest part was helping people visualize the color and profile on their actual house — chip boards do not do it. The website with our gallery of real KC homes, the insulated vs. standard comparison, and photos of different profiles side by side meant customers came to estimates already knowing what they wanted and why. We closed more jobs at higher ticket sizes because the website did the education work first.”
— P. Sorensen, siding installation contractor, Independence, MO
Simple pricing
A siding site with profile gallery, color options, and quote form starts at $225. A full site with insulated vs. standard guide, vinyl vs. fiber cement comparison, and soffit and fascia section is $425–$850. One full siding job covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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