Twenty-five years is a long run for any design studio, and Logo Bee has been at this since 2000. Logo design is a corner of the web packed with overnight outfits and gig-platform freelancers who vanish after a single job, so a studio that has kept going for that long has built either repeat clients or a process people trust, and probably both. That track record is the first thing a prospective buyer should weigh.

The core offering is custom logo design starting at $349. Work comes from in-house designers, not outsourced or pulled from a template library, and it carries unlimited revisions plus a satisfaction guarantee. That price lands in a sensible middle band: above the throwaway $5 marketplaces, well below an agency retainer. For a small business owner who wants something deliberate but cannot justify a four-figure branding engagement, it is a reasonable ask. The unlimited revisions clause is the detail that separates this from the cheap-logo trap, where a fixed-revision cap is almost always where the deal turns sour.

Beyond the logo itself, Logo Bee handles stationery and business card design, general graphic design, and custom web design starting at $1,549. There is a bundled package called BundleBee that folds a logo, stationery, and a five-page website into one purchase. For a startup building its first identity and online presence at the same time, packaging those together is practical. It also suggests the studio understands that a logo rarely arrives in isolation from the rest of a brand. The stated approach builds from the client's business profile and design preferences, so there is at least a brief intake stage instead of a designer guessing in the dark.

Logo Bee also runs a Free Logo Maker, a self-serve tool with editable templates where users adjust fonts, colors, and layouts themselves. This is a different thing from the custom service, and the studio keeps the two clearly separated. Someone with no budget can experiment with the DIY tool; someone who wants a designer's eye pays for the custom track. Offering both under one roof widens the audience without diluting the paid work. The portfolio gallery, covering projects across several industries, gives a prospective client something concrete to judge the studio's range against before spending anything.

What the outside reviews say

Logo Bee displays a 4.9-star rating from 558 reviews on its own site. A self-reported figure like that warrants a second look against independent sources, and the picture from third-party platforms is mixed but mostly favorable. ResellerRatings shows 4.95 stars across 89 reviews, which is both a strong score and a healthy enough sample to be taken seriously. TrustAnalytica cites 4.9 stars, echoing the studio's own claim. Sitejabber tells a thinner story at 3.8 stars, but from only two reviews, a sample too small to lean on either way.

A couple of profiles are less reassuring. The G2 listing for the Logo Maker exists but has sat inactive for over a year, and the DesignRush profile carries customer reviews without a visible aggregate score in the search snippet. No Trustpilot, Better Business Bureau, Google, or Yelp counts surfaced at all. The absence of those consumer-facing platforms is worth noting, because they are where unhappy customers tend to go loudest. What exists skews positive, but the independent verification is concentrated on a few specialist sites and absent from the names most people recognize.

Logo Bee lists a toll-free phone number on its homepage and has a separate contact page. No street address or direct email appears up front, which is common for a studio that runs its intake entirely online, and the phone line plus the contact form cover the practical need to get in touch. For a service bought and delivered remotely, that is an acceptable level of openness, though a physical address would add a touch more solidity for buyers who like to know where a company sits.

Pull the pieces together and Logo Bee reads as a settled, mid-priced studio that has maintained its footing through consistency and a coherent service range. The pricing is transparent, the unlimited-revisions promise removes the usual cheap-logo risk, and the spread of services suits exactly the small businesses and startups it aims at. The reputation is good where it is documented and simply absent on the mainstream platforms, which is worth factoring in before spending. The DIY maker is a genuine bonus for anyone testing ideas on no budget, and the BundleBee package is a logical step up for a founder who needs logo, stationery, and a website in one pass. Logo Bee does not oversell itself, and the offering is coherent from the cheapest free tool to the full website bundle.