Websites

Why Your Business Website Needs HTTPS

Updated 29 June 20260 views2 min read

HTTPS is now basic trust

HTTPS encrypts traffic between a visitor's browser and your website. It also proves that the browser is talking to the site named in the certificate.

Modern visitors expect the padlock. Browsers also warn users when forms or login pages are not secure.

What SSL certificates do

An SSL/TLS certificate enables HTTPS. It helps protect:

  • Contact forms
  • Login pages
  • Payment pages
  • Customer details
  • Admin sessions
  • Cookies and session tokens

It also reduces the risk of visitors being redirected or modified by an unsafe network.

SEO and conversion impact

Search engines and browsers both prefer HTTPS. A site without HTTPS looks neglected and can lose trust before a visitor reads a single page.

If your site has a contact form, shop, booking form, login area, or newsletter signup, HTTPS is essential.

Common HTTPS problems

ProblemResult
Expired certificateBrowser warning page
Mixed contentPadlock missing or assets blocked
Wrong hostnameCertificate warning
HTTP redirects not configuredVisitors land on insecure version
Old TLS settingsCompatibility and security issues

What about free certificates?

Free certificates from providers such as Let's Encrypt are suitable for most business websites when configured and renewed correctly. The key is not the price of the certificate. The key is correct installation, automatic renewal, and proper redirects.

  • Force all HTTP traffic to HTTPS
  • Use automatic certificate renewal
  • Check both www and non-www versions
  • Fix mixed content warnings
  • Keep the website platform updated
  • Monitor certificate expiry

Bottom line

HTTPS is no longer optional. It protects visitors, improves trust, and prevents avoidable browser warnings. Every business website should have it configured correctly.

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