Figma Sites was released in open beta at Config 2025. Learn more about what’s included in the beta.
Publishing your site is the final step to share your creations with the world! After your site is published, anyone can find, view, and use your website on the web. It’s how you share your work, land your next gig, launch your product, and everything in between.
This quick lesson only scratches the surface when it comes to publishing. After publishing it, you can make incremental changes to your site, add or remove webpages, or remove the entire site from the public web. Check our help center for complete information about how to publish, updates, and unpublish your site →
Note: Publishing a website is currently available on all paid plans. The Education plan includes one published site and may be subject to bandwidth limitations. If you are on a free Starter plan, you'll need to upgrade your plan to publish your site.
Publish your in Figma site to the web
Update your site settings
When you’re ready to publish, go to Site settings in the navigation bar to enter key information about your site such as:
- A title and description for your site
- An ISO language code
- Your Google Analytics ID
- Accessibility settings
- A favicon that will appear in a browser tab
- A social sharing image for when people share your site
- and add password protection
Publish your site
After updating your site settings, click the publish button at the top left of the page, and follow the steps to publish your site. After publishing, anyone can now view it live on the web!
Your Figma site will be available with a figma.site subdomain. After you publish, you can customize the subdomain of your site, or add your own custom domain.
A note from the legal team
Figma is not responsible for content that is published from Figma Sites. Published sites are accessible to anyone on the public web, and you are responsible for complying with any regulations or laws that apply to your content or any data you collect from visitors to your published sites. If you're unsure about what those obligations are or how to comply with them, please consult a lawyer.
Figma reserves the right to remove any published content that is reported and determined to violate Figma’s Acceptable Use Policy.
Check your knowledge
You did it! (collection wrap up)
That’s the end of this quick collection of videos teaching you how Figma Sites brings your ideas to life and publishes them straight to the web. We learned to create a blank Figma Site file, create a website from blocks or from Figma Design, add interactivity and code layers, and publishing an accessible site.
Figma Sites is always improving as we add more features and capabilities. Check out our help center for up-to-date documentation, and subscribe to our YouTube channel to be notified about future Figma Sites videos.
Up next: The Figma Sites Playground file
Remember that the best way to learn is by doing. We hope that these lessons gave you confidence you need to open your first Figma Sites file and start making. If you’re still feeling a bit stuck, and haven't already checked it out, we recommend going through the exercises in the Figma Sites playground file.