You have a business name, maybe a rough idea sketched on a napkin, and no designer on payroll. The gap between that and a mark you can put on a sign, an invoice, and a storefront is exactly where Logoworks positions itself. Logoworks has been doing custom design work since 2001, and it reports having handled logos and branding for more than 80,000 businesses across upwards of 300,000 projects. Those numbers set expectations: this is a U.S.-based production shop with a long tail of finished work behind it, not a two-person studio you found on a freelancing app.
The entry point most people take is the logo itself. At Logoworks, logo design starts at $199, which puts it well below hiring an independent brand designer for a bespoke identity, and well above the five-dollar gig sites. What you get for that price is custom concept work with a real person managing the account.
What the design menu covers
The Logoworks catalog is wider than the name suggests. Beyond a standalone logo, there is a Full Brand Design package from $499 and a Startup Design Package from $1,299 aimed at founders who want the whole visual kit in one purchase instead of buying pieces over months. Print buyers get business cards, brochures and flyers (flyer and brochure design starts at $149), posters, postcards, t-shirt art, and even sports jerseys. On the digital side Logoworks handles website design from $699, landing pages, coming-soon pages, and social media graphics.
Dig past the headline services and the list keeps going into email templates, web banners, icons and buttons, infographics, and book or magazine covers. It reads like a shop built to be a single vendor a small company can keep going back to as it grows, first the logo, then the cards, then the site. Portfolio sections on the site let a prospective buyer scan real past output in each of these lanes, which is more useful than any promise about quality.
Themed logos are called out as their own product too, aimed at businesses that want their mark tied to a specific industry look. It is a small touch, and it points to a firm thinking about categories of buyer rather than one generic template.
Logo and branding as the anchor
Branding is clearly the core competency, and the structure of the offering reflects that. A buyer can take just a themed logo, or step up to a brand design package that carries the identity into stationery and a consistent look across materials.
Pricing is published on a dedicated Pricing page, which is worth flagging on its own: in a field where plenty of agencies hide behind "request a quote," Logoworks names a number before you commit. The startup design package sits at the top of the branding tier for founders who want stationery, a themed mark, and the full identity in one purchase. That transparency lets someone budget the project before a single conversation happens.
Ownership of the finished work
One detail stands out to anyone who has been burned before. Clients receive full copyright ownership and IP transfer of the final designs, which is the difference between renting a logo and owning it outright.
Some cheaper services quietly retain rights or license the artwork back to the client, and that becomes a problem the day someone tries to trademark it. Handing over the copyright removes that trap, and it is a term a serious buyer should confirm before paying anyone.
How the work gets managed
Every Logoworks project comes with a dedicated U.S.-based project manager, and the site runs the whole engagement through a "Start a Project" intake flow with a "Log In" client portal for tracking. That structure answers a common fear with online design: that you send money into a void and wait.
A named point of contact who is reachable, plus a portal to see progress, changes the tenor of the whole thing. For a founder juggling a launch, one person to email instead of a support queue cuts down the back-and-forth.
Standing and how to reach them
Outside reviews of Logoworks are mixed and middling rather than glowing, which is honest to report and probably more trustworthy than a wall of five stars would be. Logoworks has a Trustpilot listing with customers describing good design experiences, though the snippet did not pin down a firm aggregate. Third-party aggregators land in a spread: one coupon-and-review site cites 4.6 out of 5 from 20 reviews, Knoji shows 3.8 from 17, Tenereteam lists 4.3 though that leans on coupon-site scoring, and RatingCaptain sits around 4.16 on an unverified profile.
Glassdoor entries exist too, but those are employees rating the workplace, not customers rating the product, so they should be read separately.
Taken together, the scores cluster in the high-3s to mid-4s. That is the profile of a competent volume shop where most people leave satisfied and a minority do not, which is what you would expect from a firm running the volume Logoworks claims across hundreds of thousands of projects. Anyone paying more than a couple hundred dollars should still read the recent Trustpilot entries directly and judge the current tone for themselves.
Getting in touch is straightforward on the essentials. A phone number sits right at the top of the homepage, so a prospective client can call and talk to a human before spending anything. No street address or email is posted publicly, but the "Start a Project" intake is threaded through the site and functions as the main channel for opening a job. For a design service that runs on briefs and revisions, a structured intake is arguably more useful than an inbox anyway.
Someone who wants a physical mailing address will not find one, and that absence is worth weighing against the phone line and the portal.
The published price list and the copyright transfer are the two things a Logoworks buyer can verify before parting with money, and both are stated in plain terms on the site.