WordPress.com

The managed hosting service from Automattic that runs WordPress sites on their infrastructure — with built-in security, backups, CDN, Jetpack features, and plans ranging from a free personal blog to full Business and Commerce tiers that unlock plugins, themes, and WooCommerce.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is WordPress.com For?
  2. The Block Editor & Themes
  3. Managed Hosting & Jetpack
  4. Plugins, Custom Code & Business Plan
  5. Commerce & WooCommerce
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is WordPress.com For?

WordPress.com is the managed hosting front door to WordPress, run by Automattic — the company behind WordPress itself. It's the option you pick if you want WordPress as a product rather than as software you install, update, and secure yourself. The upside is that hosting, backups, security, CDN, and updates are handled for you; the tradeoff is that lower tiers restrict plugins, themes, and customisation.

The ideal customer is a blogger, creator, small business, or publication that wants the WordPress ecosystem without the sysadmin burden. WordPress.com is especially strong for people who want to "just write" on a durable, professional platform with a free entry point and a clear upgrade path as they grow.

WordPress.com is also a natural fit for small businesses that need a professional site with a blog, contact forms, and maybe a simple store, and don't want to manage their own hosting stack. The Business and Commerce tiers open up plugins, custom themes, and WooCommerce for real growth.

It's less ideal for developers or agencies who want full control at a lower price — self-hosted WordPress with an SSD host like Kinsta, SiteGround, or DigitalOcean often works out cheaper and more flexible. The restrictions on lower WordPress.com tiers (no plugins, no custom themes, no removing ads on Free) are real.

Where WordPress.com genuinely shines is reliability and "it just works". You never worry about uptime, hacked plugins, failed backups, or MySQL tuning. For a non-technical user, that peace of mind is often worth the premium.

The Block Editor & Themes

WordPress.com uses the same Gutenberg block editor as self-hosted WordPress, with the full Full Site Editing experience on supporting themes.

The block editor has matured significantly. It's now a genuinely good writing and layout tool, not the rough prototype it was a few years ago, and the pattern library makes it easy to assemble complex pages without coding.

The global styles and FSE system closes much of the gap between WordPress and visual builders like Webflow or Framer, at least for sites that stick to block-based themes.

Managed Hosting & Jetpack

The hosting and Jetpack feature set is what you're really paying for on WordPress.com — the parts a self-hosted user would have to configure or pay for separately.

The zero-maintenance promise is real. You never log in to a dashboard of 14 pending plugin updates, you never troubleshoot a failed cron job, and you never wake up to a defaced homepage. For non-technical owners, that's the entire value proposition.

The included Jetpack functionality (stats, security, backups, CDN) would cost meaningful money as separate subscriptions on a self-hosted site, which narrows the "cheaper to self-host" argument significantly.

Plugins, Custom Code & Business Plan

The Business plan ~$25/month is the dividing line on WordPress.com — it's where the platform unlocks the full power of the WordPress ecosystem.

The Business plan is where WordPress.com becomes genuinely equivalent to a self-hosted install. Below that tier, the restrictions on plugins and custom themes mean you're essentially using a walled-garden WordPress that rules out many popular tools.

The staging environment included on Business is a feature self-hosted users often pay $30+/month for on managed hosts, which partially offsets the price.

Commerce & WooCommerce

The Commerce plan ~$45/month adds full WooCommerce support for real online stores.

The Commerce plan is essentially "managed WooCommerce hosting" with everything configured and updated for you. For small to mid-sized stores, it removes most of the pain of running WooCommerce on a generic host.

The premium extension ecosystem (subscriptions, bookings, memberships) is fully supported on Commerce, which gives you a real path to advanced ecommerce without switching platforms.

Pricing & Plans

PlanMonthly PriceKey Features
Free$0WordPress.com subdomain, basic themes, 1 GB storage, WordPress.com ads shown
Personal~$4/mo+ custom domain, removes ads, email support, 6 GB storage
Premium~$8/mo+ premium themes, advanced design tools, Google Analytics, 13 GB storage
Business~$25/mo+ plugins, custom themes, SFTP/DB, SSH, staging, 200 GB storage
Commerce~$45/mo+ WooCommerce, payment gateways, shipping, premium extensions

The Free plan is fine for hobby blogs but shows WordPress.com ads and uses a wordpress.com subdomain, so it's not appropriate for a serious brand.

Personal at ~$4/month removes ads and gives you a custom domain — the minimum viable tier for anything public.

Premium at ~$8/month unlocks premium themes and advanced design features, suitable for creator blogs and small business sites that don't need plugins.

Business at ~$25/month is the tier most real businesses should start at, since it unlocks plugins, custom themes, and developer access.

Commerce at ~$45/month adds WooCommerce and payment processing for real stores.

Compared to self-hosted WordPress on a managed host like Kinsta or WP Engine, WordPress.com Business is often cheaper and includes more features out of the box (staging, backups, Jetpack). Compared to budget shared hosts, it's more expensive, but the "never worry about it" operational quality is genuinely different — especially for non-technical owners.

WordPress.com — Managed WordPress Hosting

Hosted WordPress from Automattic with Jetpack security, backups, CDN, themes, and upgrade paths to full plugins and WooCommerce. The hands-off way to run WordPress.

Visit WordPress.com →