Free and open source

Build a simple website.
Own it forever.

BlueYucca helps everyday business owners and creators use AI to build plain, fast HTML websites. No subscriptions, no lock-in, no surprise price hikes. Just files you control.

See the templates Build your prompt

How it works

Three steps. That is the whole system.

1

See

Browse real examples and free templates. Every one is a single HTML file you can open, read, and change. Look around.

2

Build

Use the prompt builder to describe your business in plain words. It writes a clear prompt you can paste into Claude, ChatGPT, or Gemini. Try it.

3

Publish

Put your site online for free or nearly free, step by step, no tech background needed. Follow the guide.

Why this exists

I have watched too many small business owners get pulled into website builders that start cheap and friendly, then raise the price once everything is locked inside. Your photos, your words, your customer links, all held on a platform you cannot leave without starting over. That is not ownership. That is rent.

A simple business website does not need a platform. It needs a handful of HTML files that belong to you. Files you can host anywhere, move anytime, and hand to any helper, human or AI, without asking permission. That is what BlueYucca is here to help you build.

Start with a real example

These templates are modeled on live, working sites. Pick the one closest to what you need, download it, and make it yours.

Browse examples and templates

About BlueYucca

BlueYucca is a free, open source utility lab from Cultivatum LLC and part of the kakt.ai family. The whole point is simple: help small businesses and everyday people build websites they actually own, so nobody gets taken advantage of by rising subscriptions or platform lock-in.

How this started

Earlier this year I ran a fun test. I built a page for this domain in Microsoft FrontPage 2003, a website tool from more than two decades ago, and put it live on a modern global network. It loaded fast, it worked everywhere, and it needed no platform, no subscription, and no rebuild.

That little experiment gave me the push to go back to the basics: simple, lightweight HTML that belongs to you. See the original FrontPage experiment.