Squarespace Fluid Engine Review: A True Drag-and-Drop Builder for Ecommerce and Business Sites

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If youโ€™ve used Squarespace (Squarespace.com) to build a website or online store (or you intend to create one in the future) you may have encountered what Squarespace calls its โ€œFluid Engine.โ€ This drag-and-drop builder serves to simplify the design process while empowering business owners to construct anything they want on their websites. In this Squarespace Fluid Engine review, we explore the pros and cons of Squarespace Fluid Engine, then go into a detailed analysis of its features, ease of use, customer support, and pricing.ย 

Keep reading to learn everything you need to know about Squarespace Fluid Engine!

What is Fluid Engine? 

Fluid Engine is Squarespaceโ€™s built-in website designer and editor. It allows designers and business owners the chance to change design elements, work with templates, and move or edit anything from text blocks to image blocks. 

Just about every website builder and ecommerce platform provides a page builder/editor, so this is Squarespaceโ€™s version of that type of product. 

Squarespace, however, still offers access to its Classic Editor, meaning that you can switch to that if youโ€™re more comfortable with that interface. 

Otherwise, Fluid Engine is a built-in feature, and itโ€™s much of the focus while on your Squarespace dashboard. After signing up for a Squarespace account, Fluid Engine appears by default; itโ€™s where you design the frontend of your website. 

If you currently run a Squarespace website, the older Classic editor continues running. You can convert existing sections to use Fluid Engine. Simply hover over a section and click the Upgrade button. In addition, itโ€™s possible to add a new page to your site, and that defaults to the Fluid Engine builder. 

Finally, keep in mind that some parts of Squarespace still utilize the Classic Editor and canโ€™t be changed to Fluid Engine; examples include blog posts and event descriptions. 

Note: Converting any Classic Editor content to Fluid Engine is irreversible.ย 

Pros and Cons of Squarespace Fluid Engine

Like all technology, Fluid Engine has its pros and cons. Based on our testing and research from real users, it appears that the pros heavily outweigh the cons due to its overall ease of use and customizability. 

Hereโ€™s a look:ย 

Pros ๐Ÿ‘

  • Significantly more customization options, leading to fewer cookie-cutter websites
  • Grid-based design system
  • Almost no need for custom coding
  • No extra cost
  • You can still use the Classic Editor
  • Itโ€™s easy to convert from Classic Editor blocks to Fluid Engine
  • Separate mobile layout editor
  • Itโ€™s a true drag-and-drop editor where you can move anything anywhere
  • Minimal glitches and shifting of elements when you try to make an edit

Squarespace Fluid Engine Review: The Features

The standard features for any drag-and-drop editor involve draggable modules and a visual editor for making adjustments to your design and seeing those changes as you go. Squarespace Fluid Engine is no different, but it does have extreme flexibility that you wonโ€™t see from other website builders. 

After our Squarespace Fluid Engine review, we found these to be the notable features:

Grid-based Dragging and Dropping

If youโ€™ve used other drag-and-drop builders, you know that there are definitely limitations to where you can place content modules. Occasionally, youโ€™ll see predesignated spots. Other times, you try to place an element, but it snaps to an area thatโ€™s close but not quite what you want. 

Those are all a pain to work with since thereโ€™s no true control over where your content goes. 

Thatโ€™s not the case with Squarespace Fluid Engine, since it utilizes a grid system that appears whenever you try to move an item. 

Fluid Engine review of the grid interface

Every little square that shows acts as a piece of real estate for you to place content. So, moving just a smidge over to the right, or all the way to the bottom of the page, is all possible. This configuration provides an excellent solution for modules of all sizes as well; in short, your website interface is flexible enough for quick and simple movements of anything from large banner images to small buttons. 

To the finest pixel, you have control over it all. 

Solid Header and Footer Editing Experience

Squarespace always had header and footer control with its Classic Editor, but Fluid Engine expands upon what you can do with those areas. 

At any point, you can click to Edit Site Header or Edit Footer. The headers lack drag-and-drop functionality, but the settings are intuitive enough to quickly edit and make them look appropriate for your brand. 

the edit site header button on a Squarespace website

For instance, the header module shows global, desktop, and mobile controls, along with options to edit its position, site title, logo, elements, and style. 

showing the logo editor area in our Fluid Engine review

Drag-and-drop editing is available to some extent with footers. Youโ€™re able to move around the entirety of your footer to position it in the perfect spot. However, the actual elements within the footer only have their usual settings; you canโ€™t move just one button or text box to a new section or part of the grid.

a footer being moved to a new grid area

Separate Mobile Editing

Mobile editing was extremely limited on the Classic Editor. Squarespace would simply generate a mobile version of your website after you created the desktop version. Many website builders and ecommerce platforms are like that. 

That has all changed with Fluid Engine. The Mobile Editor is one of the biggest new features you can find on the editor, allowing users to construct their desktop design and then switch over to edit elements by going to Mobile View

clicking the mobile view button

Whatโ€™s great is that Squarespace still autogenerates a mobile version based on your desktop design. However, you can now tweak elements that may not look that great from the automated mobile rendering. 

And each content module is editable in the mobile view. Click a module to see its unique settings, like row count, gap, and height under the format tab for a multi-column section with an image and text. 

format and background and color tabs from our Fluid Engine review

Fit, Fill, and Shape Images and Buttons

If you have some experience with design, you know that buttons and images never seem to look the way you want them. A recently uploaded image may have an unnecessary crop, or maybe the button you just added needs to be centered, but thereโ€™s no setting to do so!

During our Squarespace Fluid Engine review, we found that they solved many of the pain points with buttons and images by adding settings to fit, fill, and shape your designs.ย 

All thatโ€™s required is to click on any image or button in the editor. 

Choose the Design tab to reveal three tabs: Fit, Fill, and Shape. The Fit option attempts to fit the originally uploaded image or button into the provided space, without stretching it out. The Fill tab does add some minor stretching to the image or button to completely fill the provided area and often make the element look significantly cleaner. Both Fit and Fill tabs provide settings for adjusting the corner radius as well. 

Finally, the Shape tab features a wide range of border shapes to add creativity to your design. 

fit fill and shape tabs in Squarespace

Flexible Background and Animated Artwork

Fluid Engine delivers the power to implement backgrounds for any content block. 

To do so, select a block, then go to Edit Section > Background. Youโ€™ll see three background types: Image, Video, and Art. For images, you can upload an item directly from your device, or search for free and premium images from the Squarespace library. Videos function in a similar manner, where you upload a video from your computer, and configure settings for full bleeds, insets, filters, and a mobile fallback image if the video fails to play on smaller devices. 

background tab in Squarespace

One of the primary additions to Fluid Engine is the Art background tab. These are animated backgrounds with subtle movementsโ€”kind of like a compromise between an image and video (so youโ€™re getting the appeal of a video without the potential for decreased site performance). 

adjusting settings for background art from our Fluid Engine review

Once implemented, you can click the Play button in the bottom right corner of the editor to see the background in motion. The effects happen automatically while on the frontend, so your site visitors donโ€™t have to click on anything. Whatโ€™s great is that each piece of moving art in the Squarespace Fluid Engine has settings for adjusting images within the background, image tint, background color, scale, number of images in the background, filter, wave speed, and much more. 

Beautiful Prebuilt Sections

At any point, you can click one of the many Add Section buttons in Fluid Engine. These buttons are located above and below the previously added sections. 

clicking an add section button

The Add Section box presents a large library of stunning, prebuilt sections to add to your design with the click of a button. Itโ€™s possible to use a blank section and start from scratch, but the idea behind the Fluid Engine sections is to speed up your development process when building an online store or business website. 

Some predesigned sections include:

  • Intros
  • Contact forms
  • About information
  • People
  • Products for ecommerce
  • Services
  • Portfolios
  • Testimonials
  • Events
  • Quotes
  • Member Areas
  • Appointments
  • Donations
  • Images
viewing all the sections available for users

The predesigned sections are particularly useful for online store owners who want to place unique banners and promotional sections on different parts of their websites. You can easily link any of the ecommerce products from your inventory and add them to the beautiful designs from Fluid Engine. 

a look at the products sections from our Fluid Engine review

And youโ€™ll find even more categories to choose from, including options for videos, menus, forms, charts, and audio. Once you place a section into your design, Fluid Engine provides full editing control, so youโ€™re not stuck with the exact design from the section. We love these sections to use as starting points; after which, you can upload your own images, adjust the text, and modify all formatting. 

videos, menus, forms, charts, and audio sections

All the Blocks You Could Want

Content blocks are a given with any drag-and-drop editor. The Classic Editor from Squarespace had content blocks. Wix has content blocks. Shopify and Bigcommerce have some content blocks. 

Fluid Engine continues to provide content blocks, but with greater control over their settings and full flexibility when placed within your design. In short, the old blocks had fewer settings and were restricted to where you could place them. 

To insert a block in Squarespace Fluid Engine, scroll to reveal the Add Block button in the top-left corner. Click that button to reveal a window with all the blocks. 

clicking on the add block button

Fluid Engine lets you type in a keyword to find blocks. As an alternative, you can sift through the list of blocks to find the perfect solution for what youโ€™re trying to design. 

Blocks get categorized for easy identification. 

Some Basic blocks from Fluid Engine include:

  • Text
  • Form
  • Video
  • Image
  • Calendar
  • Summary
  • Social Links
  • Map
  • Newsletter
  • Embed
viewing basic blocks like text and buttons

There are two options to insert a block: you could either drag a block to where you want it to go or single-click a block to place it into the previously selected section. 

moving an image to reveal the grid from our Fluid Engine review

Once placed inside your design, each block is available to click and open its settings. 

placing a button on the grid

One of the great things about Squarespace is that thereโ€™s no shortage of content blocks, including unique elements with third-party integrations. 

For instance, thereโ€™s a Reservations block, along with an Events block for bookings. 

The Business category has blocks for:

  • Products
  • Scheduling
  • Member Sign Ups

And here are the Integration blocks (which link to popular third-party services):

  • Instagram
  • Zola
  • SoundCloud
  • RSS
  • Bandsintown
  • 500px
  • Flickr
  • Twitter
  • Swarm
more modules like reservations and Instagram

You also might consider adding filters or lists, like: 

  • Search Bars
  • Content Links
  • Tag Clouds
  • Archives

Finally, there are a few premium blocks for niche functionality, such as:

  • A block to add a full restaurant menu
  • An option to show and link to Amazon products
  • Donation buttons
  • An OpenTable reservation integration and block
filter and list blocks

Squarespace Fluid Engine Review: Ease of Use

Fluid Engine is deeply integrated with the entire Squarespace infrastructure, making it a seamless process for building your business or ecommerce website. 

It all starts with creating a Squarespace account. You then pick from one of the many visually oriented themes and get started building and managing your site from the Squarespace dashboard. There, you have access to an Admin panel. 

The Admin panel provides tabs for:

  • Pages
  • Design
  • Commerce
  • Marketing
  • Scheduling
  • Analytics
  • Profiles
  • Settings
  • Help
the main Squarespace dashboard

Weโ€™re pleased with the simplicity and cleanliness of the Squarespace dashboard, given that it shows countless features in an organized way. 

There are global design settings under the Design tab, but that still doesnโ€™t send you to the new Fluid Engine editor. Instead, the area provides control over elements like site styles, the Lock Screen, the 404 page layout, social sharing, and custom CSS. Itโ€™s more of a general, global focus on the web design of your entire project. 

Design section of Squarespace dashboard

To launch Fluid Engine, click the Edit button at the top of the website preview. 

Clicking the Edit button to get to the Fluid Engine editor

Fluid Engine takes control of the design and presents your website in a full-screen editor. Thereโ€™s minimal lag or glitches with Fluid Engine, and itโ€™s rather self-explanatory how to begin adding elements to the overall design. 

For instance, a quick scroll over any page section shows several new buttons for you to use. You can click the Add Block button to see Squarespaceโ€™s entire collection of content blocks (for adding to your business or ecommerce site). Thereโ€™s an Edit Section button to control the formatting and design of the currently placed section. And the Add Section buttons (available at the top and bottom of each existing section) let you insert a pre-made or blank section in that particular spot. Finally, Fluid Engine provides a little horizontal arrow button for resizing the height of the section; you can also make the section larger with that tool. 

several buttons in Fluid Engine, like Add Block, Add Section, and Resize Section

Based on our Squarespace Fluid Engine review, we found a certain level of beauty in the way it snaps into action whenever you click and drag an element. Whether thatโ€™s for a new element, current elements, or a section, the visual grid immediately pops up for the user to see where they can place the content block. Luckily, Fluid Engine lets you put those elements just about anywhere you want, due to its grid-based system. 

moving an event module to another part of the grid

Below, you can see the speed at which weโ€™re able to insert a newsletter form into the Fluid Engine Grid. Thereafter, it only takes a few drags and clicks to move it to the right spot and to change the design settings so that itโ€™s visible above the current background. 

Squarespace Fluid Engine Review: The Pricing

Fluid Engine is a free feature, as long as you pay for a Squarespace account. 

It comes as a default feature for new Squarespace customers. Previous Squarespace users also have the option to switch to Fluid Engine or keep the Squarespace Classic Editor (weโ€™re not certain how long Squarespace will continue to support the Classic Editor). 

Since itโ€™s an included feature, Fluid Engine doesnโ€™t cost anything extra, outside of the standard pricing plans from Squarespace

Hereโ€™s a brief roundup of the pricing packages from Squarespace, all of which provide access to the Fluid Engine editor:

  • Personal: $23 per month ($16 if paid annually) for a standard website. Thereโ€™s support for simple payments, but itโ€™s not a true online store. Includes Fluid Engine, SSL Security, extensions, and unlimited bandwidth.ย 
  • Business: $33 per month ($23 if paying annually) for everything in the previous plan, an ecommerce store, a 3% transaction fee, unlimited products, donations, gift cards, promo popups, CSS support, advanced analytics, and more.ย 
  • Basic Commerce: $33 per month ($27 if paying annually) for everything from the previous plan, a full online store with 0% transaction fees, point of sale, product reviews, limited availability labels, products on Instagram, merchandising tools, ecommerce analytics, checkout on your domain, customer accounts, and more.ย 
  • Advanced Commerce: $65 per month ($49 if paying annually) for everything in the previous plan, commerce APIs, advanced discounts, advanced shipping, subscriptions, and abandoned cart recovery.ย 

Squarespace Fluid Engine Review: Customer Support

Squarespace customer support is composed of:

  • A Help Center with tutorials
  • User forum
  • Direct email and chat support
  • A page to hire a Squarespace expert 
  • Webinars to help optimize your site
  • Developer documentation
  • Circle Member, Squarespace’s partner program

Users can contact the direct customer support team at any time to ask questions about the brand new Fluid Engine, or any Squarespace feature for that matter. 

In the Help Center, youโ€™re able to search โ€œFluid Engineโ€ to locate a few articles on its features and functionalities. There are even webinars and developer docs to ensure you have a full understanding of whatโ€™s possible with Fluid Engine. We like the developer docs for those who intend to pass off some responsibilities to a hired developer. 

Finally, the user forum has discussions on Fluid Engine. You can find praise and gripes about Fluid Engine in the forum, along with questions that users have about certain features. 

looking for Fluid Engine conversations in the Squarespace user forum

Who is Squarespace Fluid Engine For?ย 

After our Squarespace Fluid Engine review, we discovered:

  • Fluid Engine (Squarespace 7.1) is for everyone: advanced developers who want to speed up their development process; beginners who need to build a business website; ecommerce site owners with requirements to constantly edit their websites. Itโ€™s advanced enough for full control of your website, but also a true drag-and-drop editor for those who donโ€™t intend to use any custom code. 
  • Itโ€™s for those who need control over their mobile interface: the mobile editor has its issues, but theyโ€™re getting worked out by Squarespace. Itโ€™s a good practice to always check the automated mobile design prior to publishing a website since the mobile editor isnโ€™t perfect. However, we consider the separate mobile editor as a considerable step forward for users who have been clamoring for mobile control. 
  • Fluid Engine is so deeply integrated with Squarespace for seamless switching between the management features and design portal. This means that you can add a new online store product, then go right to creating a promotional banner on your homepage (using Fluid Engine). Itโ€™s perfect for business owners of all types, considering youโ€™re often jumping from one task to another. 
  • We like Fluid Engine for developers who want an alternative to their current design workflow. You might be more comfortable with the Classic Editor sections and blocks, but some practice is sure to make Fluid Engine a desirable interface. Developers can still access custom coding areas, and thereโ€™s no reason to abandon the standard Squarespace workflows (since most of those have remained the same). Overall, developers who make Squarespace sites for clients should feel right at home with a little tinkering inside Fluid Engine. 

Are you a Squarespace user? If so, please let us know your thoughts on the Fluid Engine editor. If youโ€™re not a Squarespace user, leave us a comment with any questions you may have about our Squarespace Fluid Engine review. 

Joe Warnimont

Joe Warnimont is a Chicago-based writer who focuses on eCommerce tools, WordPress, and social media. When not fishing or practicing yoga, he's collecting stamps at national parks (even though that's mainly for children). Check out Joe's portfolio to contact him and view past work.

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