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WordPress Hosting vs. Web Hosting – How Are They Different?

Choosing the best web hosting plan for your specific project has always been a bit confusing. Plan features never line up. Terminology never matches. And pricing varies according to current discounts and plan length.

But that was before the latest trend in web hosting – WordPress-specific hosting plans.

Nearly every hosting company offers a “WordPress Hosting Plan” in some form.

Sometimes those plans are nothing more than a headline change.

Sometimes they are very well-priced for the extra services. And sometimes they are plainly upselling with dressed-up “features.”

It’s maddening – because here’s the thing. WordPress software runs fine on typical web hosting.

You do not need “WordPress Hosting” to run WordPress software.

All you need is a Linux-based hosting account that supports PHP and MySQL – aka plain vanilla shared web hosting.

Both are run-of-the-mill features on even shared server plans since the early 2000s. So what is the difference between WordPress Hosting plans and Web Hosting plans?

Well – sometimes a WordPress-specific plan is absolutely worth paying for. WordPress does have some needs & requirements that are not “generic” so some companies can offer seriously better service, support & performance for WordPress installs.

Here’s how they differ along with features worth paying for, and what to look for when shopping for the right host for your specific project and next steps.

WordPress Hosting vs. Web Hosting Overview

WordPress software will run fine on standard Web Hosting. In fact, most companies offer an auto-installer to make the process easy.

However, WordPress Hosting plans should provide features that:

  1. The hosting company can provide better at a “global level” than you can.
  2. The hosting company can use to provide consistency.
  3. The hosting company can provide as a bundle that is a better value than you can buy individually.

If a WordPress Hosting plan does not do any of those three conditions AND charges more money – then it’s a bad deal.

That said, do not throw out all WordPress Hosting plans as overpriced upsells. Some are worthwhile and some are amazing. Your goal as a customer is to understand what features you actually need.

WordPress Hosting Features Considered

There is a myriad of features that hosting companies will bundle (or highlight) in their sales material. Here are a few of the broad feature categories to consider with WordPress Hosting.

I’ll also point out how you can do the same thing on standard web hosting.

Speed & Performance

There are a ton of variables that affect website speed. There is no single factor that makes your website “fast” – especially with WordPress.

Advantages of WordPress Hosting

WordPress Hosting means that your account shares a server with other WordPress installs.

This means a few things –

  1. The server’s resource usage is more predictable.
  2. The server’s configuration can be more specific.
  3. Upgrades can happen faster, due to #1 and #2.

Different hosting companies will go further than others on their configuration.

It’s usually hard to tell who actually does what though. It’s important to read the fine print to see what they *actually* do.

If you see things like “increased PHP memory” or “NGINX” or “PHP7” – then you know that they have made special considerations for an advanced WordPress configuration.

Now, there are companies like SiteGround, InMotion Hosting, and Bluehost that all have a strong bias toward WordPress in their standard web hosting.

Often, their standard web hosting will be “better” for a WordPress install than some hosting companies’ “WordPress Hosting.”

Lastly, there are managed WordPress hosting companies like WP Engine and Kinsta that *only* do WordPress installs. WordPress is their one thing. They are able to customize their servers to force speed considerations at the global server level rather than at the install level.

Doing the Same with Web Hosting

So all that sounds great, but the open secret about WordPress speed is that you can do 90% of a specialized WordPress hosting plan on a solid, but standard hosting account.

Think of it as buying a house that is good for “entertaining guests.” Sure – there are some houses that come prebuilt with a nice kitchen, a good deck, and comfortable furniture. But you can create a great house for “entertaining guests” on your own – provided you have a generally solid house.

Most hosting companies allow changes to the PHP version and extra allocation of memory.

If your server has a solid response time, then you can do almost all the caching that you need via a plugin.

If you take the time to understand all the variables of website speed, then you’ll be fine with a standard (and cheaper) shared hosting account.

In fact, most hosting companies allow even advanced configurations like NGINX on VPS accounts.

In the end, you are paying for convenience with a WordPress Hosting plan. They bundle many performance features that you can assemble on your own with standard web hosting. They directly allocated staff that assumes WordPress questions.

That said, there can be a real difference in raw configuration and resource allocation, which we will look at next.

Configuration & Resource Allocation

As I mentioned earlier, the core difference between a “WordPress Hosting” plan and a standard “Web Hosting” plan for the hosting company is that they know what will be running on a specific server.

Since they know what will be running, they can configure the server and allocate resources specifically for WordPress.

Some of these features will be near useless (like auto-installing “common” plugins). But some can be useful and worth the money for some.

Advantages of WordPress Hosting

A WordPress Hosting plan can pre-configure many web technologies for quick setup within WordPress.

For example, using an SSL certificate with WordPress is not super-complicated, but it does require many steps. A WordPress hosting plan can provide a pre-configured setup.

Same with a content delivery network (CDN). A CDN can speed up content delivery around the world.

It’s not super-hard to integrate one with WordPress, but it does take some steps. Companies like Stackpath / MaxCDN make it simple. But a WordPress Hosting plan can automatically “hook one up” with zero customer research or work.

The same goes for a staging site (ie, “test site that syncs with your live site) or memory allocation or auto-installers.

Doing the Same with Web Hosting

The thing about resource allocation and configuration is that you are straight-up paying for convenience.

That’s not a bad thing – often convenience is worth it. But before purchasing a plan because it promises “WordPress features,” it’s important to remember that there’s rarely a feature that you can’t reproduce on standard web hosting.

For example, many hosting companies cap allocated memory, but you are free to increase it via an edit in wp-config.php. It might require looking up a tutorial or using a 3rd party service, but it is possible.

Sometimes that’s an upsell, but sometimes convenience is the difference between bad site or a good site – as in the case of security.

Security & Vulnerabilities

WordPress security sounds complicated and scary, but it does not have to be.

WordPress is inherently secure. WordPress has notoriety with security because it’s so popular. It’s a big target. It also allows anyone to install any plugin software that can create vulnerabilities.

Securing your website is a bit like securing your house. You can never guarantee against a break-in but you can become less of a target.

Practicing basic precautions will protect against most attacks. But it’s important to maintain a backup in case someone *really* wants to break in.

Advantages of WordPress Hosting

Like resource allocation, WordPress Hosting plans provide hosting companies with predictability so that they can provide the same custom maintenance to all their accounts.

They can secure all their servers running WordPress to protect against WordPress-specific threats.

They can do bulk upgrades and instantly apply security patches. They can identify vulnerabilities across many accounts.

In other words, they can provide routine maintenance services since they are maintaining all their WordPress accounts as one.

Doing the Same with Web Hosting

That said, most WordPress Hosting-specific services are routine. They are rarely “above and beyond.”

Just because you have a WordPress Hosting plan does not mean that security is “done.” You still need strong passwords. You need to maintain reputable (and ideally, minimal) plugins.

WordPress Hosting services might take care of routine maintenance, but that’s something that you can easily do on your own.

The key security difference between the two is, again, convenience. But – it’s convenience that leads to habits. Practicing security means having secure habits.

If you are the type of person who needs convenience & ease of use for good habits, then you’ll appreciate WordPress Hosting plans’ security features.

If you are the type of person who sets up systems and habits (and you will be actively using your site) – then you can re-create every security feature on standard web hosting.

In fact, sometimes you can do security even better with a 3rd party plugin. I use the one from JetPack (maintained by WordPress.com) that does security scanning, automates updates and does backups all in one.

Either way – it’s important to think critically about what you personally need.

Customer Service & Support

Understanding your needs & habits factors into customer service & support as well.

It’s easy to dismiss customer support until you need it. And you will need it working with WordPress. WordPress has a lot of moving parts that can create issues quickly.

Since WordPress is free, community-supported software, it does not have professional support bundled with the installation.

When you install WordPress software, you are relying on your own troubleshooting ability. You “own” any problems with it.

Your hosting company’s support usually only covers problems with your hosting account – not the software on your hosting account.

Advantages of WordPress Hosting

When a hosting company sells a “WordPress Hosting” plan – they usually make some sort of promise to provide software support…up to a point.

And the “point” depends on your hosting company. It’s important to read the exact text to see how far their commitment goes.

A managed WordPress host like WP Engine or Kinsta will often take ownership of your issues and simply solve it. They will have actual WordPress experts on staff.

Some hosting companies will simply guarantee that your rep is trained on WordPress issues, and some, like Liquid Web, try to strike a balance.

It all depends.

*Side note – this is WordPress.com’s main pitch. They are the commercial side of the WordPress software community. They do provide WordPress-only support to the software & hosting bundle. I wrote about the difference between WordPress.com and WordPress software.

Doing the Same with Web Hosting

WordPress drives a *ton* of business to many hosting companies. Many hosting companies are basically WordPress Hosting companies by default.

If you go with a web host like SiteGround, InMotion Hosting, or Bluehost – then your tech support rep will be proficient in common WordPress issues.

Additionally, you can always make use of Google, the WordPress.org forums, paid support via JetPack, or any of my recommend best WordPress themes.

Your support journey might take a few stops, but it’s free and open. And sometimes it’s higher quality since you “own” the issue and are learning more about your site.

Either way, the choice comes down to the price of convenience. Do you want a single, go-to support option (WordPress Hosting company / plan) or do you want to put your own system together (standard Web Hosting provider)?

Software & Bonus Features

This balance between choosing your own 3rd party software and bundling extends to software and bonus features.

Many WordPress hosting plans offer lots of bundled software with WordPress. They might have premium themes, WordPress plugins, or even SSL certificates or CDN subscriptions. It’s all quite attractive.

The important thing here is, again, choosing convenience over control…and thinking through exactly what you want.

Advantages of WordPress Hosting

With WordPress Hosting plans, their bundled services usually work well. They are simple to install and come at an attractive price.

With a built-in, free SSL certificate, you can quickly secure your site without going through a 3rd party.

With a CDN, you can speed up your site without the confusing setups and API keys.

With a theme collection subscription, you get access to a range of designs for free.

Doing the Same with Web Hosting

On the flip side, you can usually get all the software and bonus features bundled with WordPress Hosting for a better price if you put in the time and planning.

Theme makers are a dime a dozen. You find exactly what you are looking for and buy one a la carte somewhere on the Internet. Same with plugins.

SSLs, CDNs, and other bonus features are available somewhere for the price and selection that you want.

For example, I wanted an Extended Validation SSL for this site – and I had to get it from a 3rd party rather than my hosting company. I decided that I wanted to use MaxCDN rather than Cloudflare.

If you want to use the products bundled with WordPress Hosting plans, then factor that into your decision.

But if you know that you want different software anyway, then be sure to add it to the “total cost of ownership” with your WordPress Hosting plan.

Popular WordPress Hosting

I have tried out a lot of hosting companies as a consultant and as a customer. Most of my projects use WordPress, though I usually work with standard web hosting installs.

Here’s an overview of some of the well-known brands that I’ve used.

InMotion Hosting

My Rating: 9.0 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 90 Days
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: No
InMotion Hosting Review

InMotion Hosting is a fast-growing independent hosting company. I use them for this site. They have a WordPress plan with lots of unique WordPress-focused features. InMotion provides WordPress-focused support regardless of plan. They do bundle a drag-and-drop builder with WordPress Hosting plans. Worthwhile plans.

Bluehost

My Rating: 9.5 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 30 Days
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: Yes
Bluehost Review

Bluehost is the big brand in the WordPress world. Bluehost’s managed WordPress Hosting plan is pricey. But – they do add a lot of value – including running WordPress on an NGINX VPS hosting platform. Their standard web hosting plans are actually pre-customized for WordPress installation though with dedicated WordPress expert support.

SiteGround

My Rating: 8.5 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 30 Days
Uptime Guarantee: Yes
Free Website Migration: No
SiteGround Review

SiteGround is a fast-growing independent hosting company. I use them for several side projects. Like InMotion, they have a shared hosting plan that is basically a shared WordPress hosting plan with the same dedicate support. They bundle free CDN and NGINX settings. They also have a one-click staging setup for your WordPress website. Worthwhile plans.

WP Engine

My Rating: 8.5 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 60 Days
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: No
WP Engine Review

WP Engine was the first Managed WordPress hosting service. They only do WordPress. Due to that specialization, they offer a lot of unique features that are worth their pricing. Worthwhile plans.

Kinsta

My Rating: 8.0 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: No
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: No
Kinsta Review

Kinsta is a rapidly-growing direct competitor to WP Engine. They only do WordPress. Due to that specialization, they offer a lot of unique features that are worth their pricing. Worthwhile plans.

GoDaddy

My Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 30 Days
Uptime Guarantee: Yes
Free Website Migration: No
GoDaddy Review

GoDaddy is the big brand in the web hosting space. Their WordPress Hosting plans are fine, but overpriced IMO given the value-adds.

HostGator

My Rating: 9.0 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 30 Days
Uptime Guarantee: Yes
Free Website Migration: Yes
HostGator Review

HostGator is a well-known budget brand. They have very attractive shared plans for WordPress. They are sister companies with Bluehost . HostGator’s WordPress Hosting is a rebranded form of their Cloud Hosting . Cloud Hosting is a bit of a different beast. Basically, HostGator hands your WordPress site to Amazon/Google/etc for a flat rate and a usable dashboard. It’s interesting, but not comparable to other WordPress Hosting plans.

iPage

My Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 30 Days
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: No
iPage Review

iPage is another well-known budget-focused shared hosting service. They are also sister companies with Bluehost. Their WordPress Hosting plans are web hosting plans with pre-installed software.

GreenGeeks

My Rating: 8.0 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: 30 Days
Uptime Guarantee: Yes
Free Website Migration: Yes
GreenGeeks Review

GreenGeeks is an independently owned web hosting service with a dedication to clean energy. They have excellent performance for WordPress websites, even though their “WordPress Plans” are simply the same as their Web Hosting plans. They also have excellent support paired with their clean energy commitment.

Liquid Web

My Rating: 9.0 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: No
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: No
Liquid Web Review

Liquid Web is one of the largest hosting companies in the world. They have traditionally focused on enterprise, cloud, and dedicated hosting. But they’ve recently moved into the Managed WordPress Hosting space. They have WordPress-configured & managed plans, especially for high-resource use WordPress sites like WooCommerce sites.

WordPress.com

My Rating: 8.5 out of 10
Money-Back Guarantee: No
Uptime Guarantee: No
Free Website Migration: No
WordPress.com Review

WordPress.com is a commercial website builder owned by Automattic and running only on WordPress software. They bundle hosting, software and support into a single package. Their founder, Matt Mullenweg, wrote the original WordPress software. If you want a more controlled but sleeker experience, WordPress.com is where you go.

Next Steps

The short version of WordPress Hosting vs. Web Hosting is one of convenience vs. control.

If the convenience of WordPress Hosting is worth the higher price point, then go for it. It’s worth it. One of my clients swears by his plan and his ability to “just pick up the phone and have it fixed.”

If you are sticking with a budget or simply want more control over 3rd party services, then be confident in your decision to use standard web hosting. WordPress was built for everyone. It does not need and will not need specialized hosting services to run well.

You might be interested in my Best WordPress Hosting or my WordPress setup guide.

I also wrote an explainer to explain what is WordPress hosting.

Larry Ludwig

About Larry Ludwig

Larry Ludwig is an entrepreneur, financial expert, tech & marketing guru with over 25 years of industry experience.

In July 2018, Larry successfully sold Investor Junkie for $6 million.

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