What Tools Do You Need to Start a Niche Website?
To start a niche website, you need a domain name, web hosting, a content management system (WordPress is the standard choice), and a handful of free tools for keyword research, writing, and basic SEO. Most of the essential tools cost nothing — your main upfront expense is hosting and a domain, which together typically run $30–$80 for the first year. Beyond that, free tools from Google and the open-source WordPress ecosystem cover almost everything a beginner needs to build a site that earns with AdSense.
Why Your Tool Stack Actually Matters
A lot of beginners either overcomplicate this — buying $500 worth of software before they publish a single post — or undercomplicate it, trying to start with a free website builder that locks them out of AdSense approval. Neither extreme works.
The right tool stack is lean, mostly free, and built on platforms that Google actually respects. Here’s what that looks like in practice, broken into the four jobs your tools need to do: set up your site, research keywords, write content, and monitor performance.
Step 1: Setting Up Your Site — The Non-Negotiables
These are the only tools you genuinely have to pay for. Everything else on this list is free.
A Domain Name
Your domain is your site’s address on the internet. Choose something short, memorable, and relevant to your niche. Namecheap and Google Domains are both reliable registrars, and a .com domain typically costs around $10–$15 per year. Avoid hyphens and anything that’s hard to spell out loud.
Web Hosting
You need a host to actually put your site on the internet. For a new niche site, shared hosting is perfectly adequate. Providers like SiteGround, Hostinger, or Bluehost offer starter plans in the range of $2–$5 per month when paid annually. Don’t obsess over this — you can migrate later if you need to scale up.
WordPress.org (Free CMS)
Install WordPress through your host’s one-click installer. WordPress powers a significant share of the web for good reason: it’s free, flexible, and fully compatible with AdSense. Most hosts install it in under five minutes. Avoid Wix, Squarespace, or Blogger if AdSense monetization is your goal — WordPress gives you far more control over the ad placements and site structure that Google looks for during AdSense review.
A Lightweight Free Theme
You don’t need a premium theme to start. The GeneratePress free version or the default Twenty Twenty-Four theme both load fast and look clean. Page speed is a real ranking factor, so a bloated theme hurts you twice — once in search and once in ad earnings, since slow-loading pages serve fewer impressions.
Step 2: Keyword Research Tools — Find What People Are Actually Searching For
Publishing content without keyword research is guesswork. These free tools help you find topics your target audience is searching for, so your articles have a real chance of ranking.
- Google Search Console (free) — After your site is live, this is the first thing you connect. It shows you which queries bring visitors to your site, which pages are indexed, and what technical issues need fixing. Non-negotiable.
- Google Keyword Planner (free) — Technically built for Google Ads, but it shows real search volume data and gives you a sense of advertiser demand in your niche. High advertiser demand in a niche generally correlates with higher CPC bids, which matters for AdSense earnings — though your actual publisher earnings are a share of those bids and vary by keyword, traffic quality, and competition.
- Ahrefs Webmaster Tools (free tier) — Connect your own site for free to see your backlink profile and keyword rankings. Valuable once you have some content published.
- Google Trends (free) — Use it to gut-check whether a niche is growing, shrinking, or seasonal before you commit months of work to it.
For a deeper walkthrough of how to actually use these tools together, see our guide on how to do keyword research for free and our roundup of the best free keyword research tools for niche site builders.
Step 3: Writing and Content Tools — Publish Faster Without Sacrificing Quality
Content is the product. These tools help you produce it more efficiently.
- Google Docs (free) — Write your drafts here before pasting into WordPress. It saves automatically, lets you share with collaborators, and keeps your work safe if something goes wrong with your site.
- Hemingway Editor (free web version) — Paste your draft in and it flags overly complex sentences, passive voice, and readability issues. Niche site content should be clear and easy to skim — this tool enforces that.
- ChatGPT or Google Gemini (free tiers) — Useful for brainstorming outlines, generating FAQ sections, or rephrasing clunky sentences. Use AI as a drafting aid, not a content factory — thin, unoriginal AI content performs poorly in search and can put your AdSense account at risk under Google’s spam policies. Add your own expertise and real-world perspective to every post.
- Grammarly (free tier) — Catches spelling and grammar errors before they go live. A small thing that matters for credibility and E-E-A-T signals.
Step 4: SEO and Performance Plugins — The WordPress Essentials
These free WordPress plugins handle the technical SEO layer so you’re not doing it manually.
- Rank Math SEO (free) — Lets you set meta titles, meta descriptions, and canonical URLs for every post. It also runs a basic on-page SEO check as you write. The free version is more than enough for a new site.
- WP Rocket or LiteSpeed Cache (free options available) — Page speed directly affects your rankings and how many ad impressions load before a visitor bounces. A caching plugin is one of the highest-leverage free upgrades you can make.
- Google Analytics via Site Kit (free) — Google’s own Site Kit plugin connects Analytics and Search Console directly inside your WordPress dashboard. Know your traffic sources, top pages, and bounce rates without leaving WordPress.
- UpdraftPlus (free) — Automatic backups. You only forget this until the moment you need it.
What About AdSense Itself?
Google AdSense is free to apply for at adsense.google.com. You’ll need a live site with original content before applying — Google reviews it manually. The review process can take anywhere from a few days to a few weeks, and approval is not guaranteed. Read the AdSense Program Policies carefully before you apply so you understand what content is and isn’t permitted.
Once approved, AdSense gives you a small snippet of code to place on your site. Auto ads handle placement automatically, but many publishers find that manually placing ad units in high-visibility spots performs better over time. You’ll learn what works for your specific niche by testing.
The Honest Cost Breakdown
Here’s a realistic picture of what starting a niche site costs in year one, using only free tools where possible:
- Domain: ~$10–$15
- Hosting (shared, paid annually): ~$25–$60
- WordPress, themes, plugins: Free
- Keyword research tools: Free
- Writing and SEO tools: Free
- AdSense: Free
Your realistic total upfront cost is roughly $35–$75. The real investment is time — writing, publishing, and waiting for Google to index and rank your content. Most niche sites take several months before they generate meaningful search traffic, so set your expectations accordingly.
What If You’d Rather Skip the Setup?
If the technical setup — hosting, WordPress, theme configuration, plugin install, and AdSense optimization — feels like a barrier, there’s a shortcut worth knowing about. We’ve built and sold niche sites ourselves, including PainBalance.org (sold for $4,200), QuoteDB.org (sold for $3,500), and DayToDayRecipes.com (sold for $8,000) on Flippa. Those results took real work and aren’t typical, but they gave us a clear picture of what an AdSense-ready site actually needs under the hood.
If you’d rather have that infrastructure built for you from day one, you can check out MoneyManifest’s done-for-you niche website service — they handle the domain, hosting setup, WordPress installation, and AdSense-ready configuration so you can focus on content from day one.
Key takeaways
- Your only real upfront costs are a domain (~$10–$15) and hosting (~$25–$60/year) — nearly every other essential tool is free.
- WordPress.org is the standard CMS for AdSense sites; free website builders like Wix or Blogger limit your control and monetization options.
- Use Google Search Console, Google Keyword Planner, and Google Trends together for a fully free keyword research workflow.
- Free WordPress plugins — Rank Math for SEO, a caching plugin for speed, and Site Kit for analytics — handle the technical layer without any cost.
- Expect several months before a new niche site generates meaningful search traffic; the tools are cheap, but the timeline requires patience.
Frequently asked questions
Can I start a niche website for free?
Almost, but not entirely. WordPress, most plugins, and all the key research tools are free, but you'll need to pay for a domain and hosting — typically $35–$75 for the first year combined. Truly free platforms like Blogger don't give you the control you need for a serious AdSense setup.
Do I need coding skills to build a niche website?
No. WordPress with a lightweight free theme like GeneratePress handles the design without any code. Free plugins like Rank Math cover your SEO settings through a simple interface. Most beginners publish their first post within a day of setting up hosting.
Which keyword research tool is best for a brand-new niche site?
Start with Google Keyword Planner and Google Trends — both are free and pull data directly from Google. Once your site has content indexed, add Google Search Console to see exactly which queries are driving (or could drive) your traffic.
How long does it take to get AdSense approved after setting up a niche site?
Google's review typically takes a few days to a few weeks, but there's no fixed timeline. You'll need original, policy-compliant content and a functioning site before applying. Some applications are rejected on the first attempt and can be resubmitted after addressing the issues Google flags.
Helpful resources
- Google AdSense Help Center
- Google AdSense Program Policies
- Google Search Central — How Google Search Works
- Google Search Console
- Google Keyword Planner
- WordPress.org
Want a site like this built for you?
We build done-for-you AdSense sites — domain, 50 articles, SEO, and approval help — for a one-time $499. We’ll first send you 3 real sites we built and sold on Flippa.
This article is general educational information about websites and Google AdSense, not financial advice or a guarantee of income. AdSense earnings depend on your niche, traffic, and effort, and vary widely. CPC figures are advertiser bid estimates that change over time. Always review Google's current AdSense program policies before building.
See 3 real sites we built & sold
Enter your email and we'll send you three AdSense sites we built and flipped on Flippa — plus the simple model behind them.
No spam — just the 3 examples and the breakdown.