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The year was 2003. Apple had just launched iTunes, the first Harry Potter book came out, and two developers introduced the world to their free, open-source web app for creating blogs: WordPress.org.
Fast forward a few years, and WordPress has changed beyond recognition. You can now do a lot more than create blogs – in fact, the code that makes WordPress powers a whopping 42.9% of all websites on the Internet.
Meanwhile, the founders also launched a for-profit business using that code. This is where WordPress.com comes into the picture, and as you’ve guessed it, it’s not free (although there is a free version). Learn more about the differences between WordPress.org and WordPress.com further down below.
WordPress.com used to offer four paid plans (which were somewhat confusing), but they have thankfully simplified it down to two easy-to-understand plans: Free and Pro.
So is there an advantage for you in using WordPress.com’s paid version? Or should you stick to using the free software yourself? Let’s break it down in detail below.
WordPress.com Review: What to Expect
WordPress.com is a hosted website builder that uses the free WordPress software. You can create blogs, websites and online stores without much technical knowledge. Hosting is included with the free version (with ads), and also on the $15 per month Pro plan.
But now let's find out more about WordPress.com:
Pros / Cons of WordPress.com
Free plan
If you don’t mind ads and an assigned domain name, you can absolutely launch a basic site for free.
Clear pricing
No need to choose between different plans and features – the single Pro plan includes them all (plugins, premium themes, advanced SEO, backup and restore etc.)
No installation or maintenance
Everything is done automatically for you.
Support included
No phone, but email and live chat support is available.
Not the most intuitive
There is a steeper learning curve to understanding how WordPress works than with other website builders.
Reduced storage
While previous plans allowed for 200GB of storage, the Pro plan caps you at 50GB. This means it’s not ideal for very large websites (e.g. ones that host a lot of videos).
Not the most economical option for a WordPress site
If you’re after a cheap WordPress site, you can get much better WordPress hosting deals with providers like Dreamhost.
Videos
WordPress.com offers a free plan. You can sign up for it here.
WordPress.com Pricing
$0 |
Free Create a site with limited templates and features, and host it on a predefined domain, like mywebsite.wordpress.com. No access to plugins, 1GB of storage only. |
$15 |
Pro Connect your website to a custom domain and get 24/7 online support. 50GB of space. Ads are removed. Add custom plugins and access all available themes (free and paid). All SEO options available. |
We are showing monthly costs for yearly subscriptions. Payments can only be made yearly; monthly billing is not available. Compare the Free vs Pro plan here.
Rating Details
criterion | rating | comments |
---|---|---|
Ease of use |
|
Signing up is straightforward but even the new editor isn’t yet as intuitive as Weebly or Wix. There are certain WordPress specific quirks – like the complicated way menus are created – that take away from the user experience. It’s improving with every new version, though. |
Choice and flexibility of design (templates) |
|
Free themes are available. For premium or custom themes, you’ll need the Pro plan. Overall, theme customization is harder than with a classic website builder. |
Advertisement-free |
|
Users will see a WordPress.com banner in the header and a small text branding in the footer. Ads are removed on the Pro plan. |
Languages |
|
The service is available in English. You can change your backend interface to another language. For a multilingual website, you’ll need a plugin like WPML. (Requires the Pro plan). |
Features |
||
Your own domain name (e.g. .com or .net) |
|
A free standard domain is offered in the first year. Renewal is about $18/year. Email hosting is not included. Requires an external service like Google Workspace or Namecheap. |
Depth of navigation |
|
In theory: no limitations. It only depends on your chosen theme. |
Widgets (small tools to add extra functionality) |
|
Some widgets are included (newsletter sign-up for Mailchimp etc.). Plugins are even more powerful but require the Pro plan. |
Mobile App |
|
WordPress.com offers a native mobile app for iOS and Android. It lets you create and edit your website right from your smartphone or tablet. You can enter statistics, manage posts and upload media files too. When we tested the mobile app, we found it to be an easy-to-handle and intuitive mobile app with a clear design.
|
E-Commerce |
|
Lets you add the free WooCommerce plugin to your site. If you want to learn more about WooCommerce, check out our detailed review. |
Search Engine Optimization (SEO) |
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Limited out of the box. You’ll need a plugin like Yoast SEO to get full control (Pro plan required) |
Blog |
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Since WordPress has its origins in the blogosphere, there are basically no limitations. |
Visitor statistics |
|
Stats are included in the WordPress dashboard. Google Analytics will require a plugin. |
Contact form |
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Adding a standard form isn’t a problem. If you need more advanced features, you can install a plugin like Contact Form 7. |
Password protection & member areas |
|
You can protect every page with a password. Also, WordPress is great to give users different roles with rights (subscriber, administrator, etc.). Plugins for membership areas can be added too with the Pro plan. |
Newsletter tool |
|
A newsletter tool is not included. However, if you are with Mailchimp, you can add a sign-up form. Other providers can be linked via HTML or plugin. |
Add HTML code |
|
Not a problem. The HTML block allows you to add external code. |
Storage space |
1 GB - 50 GB |
Less than what was previously offered on older plans, but still generous. The Pro plan allows for 50GB which should be fine as long as your site is not massive. One bonus is that there is no bandwidth limit for visitors or file transfers. |
Backups & Restore |
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WordPress automatically saves 25 revisions of each post and page. Therefore restoring lost content isn’t an issue. If a plugin should crash your website, you can directly contact support. |
Support |
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One of the biggest advantages of WordPress.com is the direct support. In the free open-source version it’s not included. The live chat support could solve our issue very fast. Beginners should check out their helpful video library. |
Fun Factor |
|
We have seen simpler web builders, but thanks to the new block editor, it has gotten much easier to use. Every new WordPress update seems to improve the overall experience. |
Overall Rating |
3.8/5 |
WordPress.com is the easiest way to run a WordPress website that comes with dedicated support. The Pro plan makes it more affordable for users to access all features, although it may not be ideal for those who want a very cheap solution. |
How does WordPress.com work?
You sign up for free, choose a theme, and start editing your website by adding pages and content. Then you can choose to stay on a free plan, or pay a monthly fee to use more features and connect the site to your own professional domain.
It’s worth noting at this point that WordPress is sometimes called a CMS or Content Management System. But because WordPress.com allows you to build and host entire websites, I’ll stick with the “website builder” name.
The main concept to understand is that WordPress was originally a blogging platform, and it still relies on the same format:
- Pages: usually static content like an About Us page
- Posts: blog posts, news or regular updates. You can use tags to group them, and they usually appear in reverse chronological order.
What’s the Difference Between WordPress.com and .org
Great question. We’ve written a complete guide on the differences between WordPress.com and WordPress.org here, and you can see an explainer video below:
But the main points to remember are:
WordPress.com | WordPress.org | |
---|---|---|
Hosting | Included in price | Need to buy it elsewhere |
Domain name | Free the first year, you’ll need to renew it later ($18 – $65 a year) | Not included |
Included for 3 months only, around $3.50 / mailbox / month thereafter | Not included | |
Installation and updates | Automatic | Manual (or done by your third party hosting provider) |
Pricing | Either free, or $15/month with the Pro plan | Completely free to download and install. |
Features and plugins | Restricted on Free plan; access to all on Pro plan | All available |
Website templates | Limited on Free plan; access to all on Pro plan | All available |
Support | 24/7 support on Pro plan | None |
What About That New Editor?
As of late 2019, WordPress changed the way you add and create content on your site. It used to be through an editor called TinyMCE, a.k.a the Classic Editor. It was pretty much a text editor – great for writing posts, but not so great for complex pages (unless you knew how to code or relied on 3rd party plugins).
The new editor is called Gutenberg. It’s much more friendly to beginners as it uses blocks to add text, media or any other kind of content. It comes installed by default, but if you’re used to the Classic editor, you can still revert to it whenever you want.
Signing Up
Getting started with WordPress.com is as straightforward as it gets. You don’t need a credit card, and your whole basic website can be set up in 6 steps.
The steps are very broad (no design or SEO options yet), but it feels good to get something done in less than 10 mins.
Two major downsides: you can’t test the eCommerce option for free. They’re also a bit pushy about upgrading to a paid plan as soon as you login, but hey – can’t fault them for trying to make money.
Ease of Use and Getting Started
When you first create a site, you’ll be met with a page called Reader, where you can find news about other websites.
Okay – not the most useful thing to start with. I’d rather just dive into the editor, which you access by clicking My Site in the top left.
As noted earlier, the Gutenberg editor is automatically activated. It makes it easier than before to add content like text and media via what they call “blocks”. It’s really a beautiful editor with tons of space for text and images.
If you’ve used Squarespace before, it looks kinda similar. Adding more complicated elements like tables, buttons or signup forms is just as easy as text. No need for code or plugins (like with the old editor), and you can even edit the font colors without code.
One thing to note: you still need a basic understanding of how WordPress handles Pages and Posts (see all the way at the top of this review) to really feel at home here.
There can also be troubleshooting issues that will be baffling to complete beginners, for instance when the editor switches to HTML mode.
Before
After
Designs, customization and Themes
WordPress.com has, at the time of writing, 293 themes, both free and paid. They are grouped in 28 categories such as Art, Blog, Fashion, Magazine or Photography. You can also search by feature, style, number of columns, and layout.
A few notes:
- You can’t create sitewide changes or add CSS with the free plan.
- To purchase their official premium themes, you’ll need the Premium plan at least.
- You can unlock more custom themes (from third party places) with the Pro plan.
Then the amount of customization options is completely dependent on the theme itself. In fact, popular themes like Avada or BeTheme act as “modular theme builders”, so you can create many variations with the pre-selected elements.
Final point: if you want to code (or hire someone to code) a unique theme, it’s possible. Be prepared to spend a lot of time (or money).
Plugins and Add-ons
One of the greatest joys of playing around with a WordPress site is the ability to customize it with plugins. As I write this, there are close to 60,000 free and premium plugins available.
Now not all of them are top-notch. Anyone can upload a plugin to the store so it’s always important to read the reviews and check compatibility because they might crash your site. But still, there’s so much you can do with plugins:
- Create a multilingual website
- Control your SEO options
- Use exit-intent popups
- Add beautiful contact forms
- Integrate newsletters
- Transform your theme
- And much, much more…
While plugin access used to be restricted depending on what plan you were on, the good news is that the Pro plan now unlocks all plugins, giving you access to the full range available on WordPress.
Can I build an online store with WordPress.com?
Yes, you can! The WordPress.com Pro plan lets you install the free WooCommerce plugin, which will let you add an online store to your site. It will also allow you to:
- Sell unlimited physical and digital products
- Embed products anywhere on your site
- Display product ratings and reviews
- Take payments via various payment methods (Stripe, PayPal, credit cards etc)
- Offer various shipping options and set manual rates
- Automate tax calculations
- Set up customer accounts and guest checkout
- Send automated emails
However, for advanced functionality (e.g. customized product pages, real time shipping rates, local payment gateways), you’ll need to add WooCommerce extensions – which may carry an additional cost. WordPress.com provides ticket-based support for WooCommerce.
Marketing and SEO options
Generally speaking, with WordPress, if the feature you need isn’t already included with your theme, it comes in the form of a plugin. There is a nice out-of-the-box integration with Mailchimp so visitors can sign-up for a newsletter, but if you want to use another service, you’ll need to install a plugin.
This is also true of other email marketing integrations, popups and discount offers, or specific analytics tools. Once again, in order to install these plugins, you’ll need the Pro plan.
Let’s take a quick look at what marketing features are available with WordPress.com.
The SEO Options
While you can index your site (or choose not to) with any plan, the ability to optimize the SEO-title or descriptions is limited to the Pro plan. To get the most out of WordPress’s excellent SEO capabilities, we’d recommend installing the Yoast SEO plugin.
Optimize your title and description with the Yoast SEO plugin.
Google Analytics
Getting data about your visitors and site performance is another feature I believe anyone should be able to get. With WordPress.com it only comes with the Pro plan.
Monetization options
To receive single payments or donations, you need the Pro plan. You can add a block to accept one-time payments via PayPal for physical or digital goods, services and donations.
It’s great for nonprofits and creatives. Also much easier and cheaper than setting up an entire WooCommerce store.
Recurring Payments
You can also charge recurring payments for memberships, subscription offers or Patreon style sponsorships.
Ad Networks
Not to be confused with Google’s famous AdWords program (which you can also enable), the one for WordPress is called WordAds. It’s available – you guessed it – on the Pro plan.
There are a few ad placement options, but unlike AdWords, it’s not always targeted stuff related to your website’s content. You do not have the option to vet advertisers either. In short, it’s not as sophisticated or flexible as Google’s ad programme, but at least it’s very easy to enable it.
Affiliate marketing and referrals
Supported on all plans. There is even a WordPress.com guide on how to get started with Amazon Affiliate links.
The WordPress App
If you feel more comfortable working with apps rather than websites, you can download the WordPress Desktop app, available for Win7+, Mac OS 10.9+ and Linux. There are also iOS and Android versions.
How does it work? It creates a local copy of the site on your computer and lets you edit, update, and upload things from there.
But…. it doesn’t work offline or as a staging environment. So forget about writing a post on the train or holiday and pushing it live when you reconnect to the modern world. The company sells it as a “distraction-free” way to work, but I don’t really see the point – until they start offering offline or staging option.
Support and Troubleshooting
Usually, if you install WordPress by yourself, you’re on your own. There is no official support, and you have to find answers in community forums. It can be tedious, slow, and frustrating. And trust me, things will break, especially when third-party plugins and software updates are involved.
So one of the biggest advantages of paying for a WordPress.com plan is that dedicated support is included. Best of all, in my own experience, the live chat response was fast and helpful. And best of all, they even tried to help with help for 3rd party plugins, which is unheard of with support for other website builders.
Here’s what you get:
- Good video tutorials
- FAQ
- 24/7 email and live chat with all plans
- No phone support
Note that there is no personal support on the Free plan – you’ll need to rely on Forum support and your own research if you need help.
Hosting, Storage and Security
WordPress.com is very generous when it comes to bandwidth (which is unlimited), but less so when it comes to storage.
For storage, you get 1GB with a free plan, and 50GB on the Pro plan. That’s a downgrade from the previously-provided 200GB, but it’s probably good enough for most websites. The only exception would be those websites that want to host their own videos instead of streaming them from YouTube or other platforms – in this case, you might find yourself quickly running out of space with the reduced storage limit.
SSL and Firewalls
Security encryption is enabled by default on all pages, at no extra cost. You also get a built-in firewall to fight account takeovers (when fraudsters try to log into your account), and 2FA option (2 factor authentication) to increase security.
Interesting fact: white hat hackers (the good guys), can look for bugs or vulnerabilities in the WordPress code and be rewarded with a bounty thanks to the HackerOne program.
Backup and Recovery
There is a useful autosave function for when you work on posts, which lets you restore previous content as needed. For site-wide backup and recovery, it’s best to use a plugin like the WordPress Backup plugin or BackupBuddy. As you’ve guessed by now, it’s only possible with the Pro plan.
But you can also contact support and they might be able to help you there.
Staging
Staging is an advanced feature that lets you run an offline version of your site. It lets you make changes to test, for instance, if anything breaks when you add a new plugin. When you’re happy with the results, you can push the changes to the live version.
It’s a really useful feature with the more advanced WordPress hosts, where one small change in the theme code or plugin update can completely break your website.
But… it’s unavailable here, sadly.
Site Migration
If you like what you’ve read about WordPress.com, maybe you’d like to import a site from another platform? It’s possible thanks to the Import / Export function for:
- WordPress.org sites
- Blogger
- Wix
- Squarespace
- And more…
These tools can save you time, but they never make for completely smooth sailing. When I imported a test site from Wix, it was broken beyond recognition, so I still had to manually edit a lot of the content to fit it in my theme. I imagine the same problems might arise when exporting the site to another platform.
In fact, that little experiment made me realize how much easier Wix is to deal with. If you’re considering both options, don’t forget to check out our in-depth Wix vs. WordPress test.
Review Conclusion – Is WordPress.com Worth It?
I’ll start by answering the original question posed in the title of this review: what are you paying for exactly with WordPress.com? Essentially, this:
- Ease of installation
- Quick start
- Peace of mind for security and maintenance
- Quality support
- Hosting
The block editor and pre-selected plugins also all offer a smooth user experience that finally makes the WordPress software more accessible than ever.
While the recent changes to their pricing have been met with mixed feedback, we personally think it’s great that the new Pro plan offers all the features that you used to have to pay a lot more for. Also, anything that makes the pricing easier to understand gets the thumbs up from us. We only wish the Free plan wasn’t so limited in its scope – the inability to add plugins, and the paltry 1GB of storage, means it’s really only ideal for testing the service out.
But still, I can absolutely see how WordPress.com makes a lot of sense if you’ve always wanted to try this powerful platform, but weren’t ready to dive into the technical details and possible headaches of self-hosting.
WordPress.com Alternatives
If you are looking for an easier WordPress alternative, Wix gets the highest score from us. If a blogging feature is essential for you, Squarespace is the top website builder to look at.
Webflow is definitely not easier to use than WordPress, but it is extremely popular with designers as it gives you full freedom.
Find our full list of WordPress alternatives here.
FAQ
Is it possible to monetize my WordPress.com site?
You can’t run ‘WordAds’ ads with the free plan, but it is possible with Pro. WordAds is Automattic’s version of Adwords. But you are also free to add affiliate links or accept sponsored posts etc.
About Inka Wibowo, BBus (Marketing), Griffith University
Latest Review Updates
20 Apr 2022 - Changes to pricing
28 Feb 2022 - WordPress.com also offers monthly subscriptions now
17 Dec 2021 - Mobile app rating added.
22 Oct 2020 - Alternatives added
25 Nov 2019 - Review release