
- Thousands of Easy-To-Install Add-Ons
- Built-In Marketing and eCommerce Features
- WordPress Hosting, Domain Names, a Website Builder, Blogging Features, and Professional Email

- Easy & Accessible Open-Source Software Used By 43% Of the Web
- Customizable Designs, High Performance, Security, SEO Tools, Powerful Media Management & More
- Powerful Community of Over 60 Million Individuals & 55,000 Plugins to Help Your Website Meet Your Needs
WordPress.com vs WordPress.org: Quick Summary
WordPress.com is the overall winner. After testing it hands-on through the full registration, dashboard, support, and performance evaluation, I found a platform that has genuinely reinvented itself. All paid plans now include full plugin and theme access, a 99.999% uptime guarantee, flat renewal pricing with no increases at renewal, a global edge CDN across 28-plus data centers, automated datacenter failover, and WAF protection included at no extra cost.
WordPress.org wins for developers, agencies, and technically confident site owners who need complete ownership of their stack, unlimited plugin ecosystem access, multisite support, or highly custom server-level configurations.
1. Prices and Plans Comparison
WordPress.com’s All-In Pricing Beats the Real Cost of a Comparable Self-Hosted Setup for Most Single-Site Owners
WordPress.com offers five plan tiers at annual billing rates. The Personal plan starts at $4/month and already includes full plugin and theme access, a free domain for the first year, unlimited bandwidth, and flat renewal pricing that does not increase after your first term.
Premium is $8/month and adds VideoPress for native 4K video hosting and advanced analytics. Business is $25/month and unlocks staging environments, SSH access, GitHub deployments, and priority support. Commerce is $45/month and is built for WooCommerce with zero transaction fees.
The flat renewal pricing alone is a meaningful differentiator. Most shared hosting providers charge $2 to $4/month to acquire a customer and then charge two to three times that on renewal. WordPress.com does not do this at any plan level. The price I sign up at is the price I pay permanently.
WordPress.org’s software is free to download. The realistic ongoing cost, however, is not zero. Getting a self-hosted WordPress site to a comparable level of protection requires:
- Hosting: $3 to $10/month on a decent shared host, or $19 to $30/month on managed WordPress hosting
- Domain: $10 to $15/year
- SSL: Free via Let’s Encrypt on most hosts
- Daily automated backups: Plugin or host add-on at $2 to $5/month
- WAF and malware scanning: Wordfence Premium at $119/year, Sucuri, or similar
For a single site with proper security and backup coverage, the realistic annual cost on WordPress.org runs $150 to $400 per year once those tools are added. WordPress.com’s Business plan at $25/month includes all of those components, plus real-time VaultPress backups, automated datacenter failover, and a CDN, as part of the monthly fee.
2. Customer Support Comparison
WordPress.com Is the Only Platform in This Comparison With Professional Support of Any Kind
WordPress.com Customer Support
I tested WordPress.com’s support from inside the dashboard by clicking the “?” icon in the top-right corner. The entry point is not obviously labeled, which is a real usability issue worth flagging.

A first-time user could easily mistake it for a documentation link rather than a live support channel. That aside, what happens after you click it is genuinely impressive.
The AI assistant appeared instantly and greeted me by username. I asked a direct technical question about whether the Business plan truly had no page view or bandwidth limits, and what would actually happen at the server level during a sudden traffic spike from a viral Reddit post.
The AI confirmed the no-limits policy and explained that the platform scales through multi-datacenter support and global caching, allocating server resources automatically without manual upgrades.

I then requested a human agent. The response was immediate: “No problem. Help is on the way!” A Happiness Engineer joined the chat four minutes later.

The agent’s response was structured and technically thorough. They confirmed no hard caps, no overage fees, and no forced upgrades for traffic volume.
On the infrastructure question, they explained that WordPress.com runs on containerized infrastructure rather than a fixed pool of PHP workers, and that most traffic is handled at the global edge via their CDN, so requests never reach the PHP layer for the majority of visitors.

They also proactively mentioned WordPress VIP as the path for enterprise-scale operations requiring dedicated technical account management, without being asked. It was a genuinely useful interaction from start to finish.
WordPress.org Customer Support
WordPress.org is open-source software maintained by a community. There is no company behind it providing customer support of any kind.
When something breaks on a self-hosted WordPress site, the available options are:
- The wordpress.org support forums, where community volunteers answer questions with no guaranteed response time
- Your hosting provider’s support, which covers server-level issues only and does not help with WordPress configuration, plugin conflicts, or theme errors
- Paid WordPress developers at $50 to $200/hour for complex or urgent problems
- Third-party documentation sites, YouTube tutorials, and community blogs

The community is large and many common problems have documented solutions. For straightforward setup questions, forum responses can arrive within hours.
For obscure plugin conflicts or custom code issues, you may wait days or find no resolution at all. For a live production site with a business depending on it, that is a meaningful operational risk.
3. Hosting Features Comparison
WordPress.com’s Managed Stack Covers Everything Most Site Owners Need; WordPress.org’s Ecosystem Goes Further for Developers
WordPress.com Features
WordPress.com’s feature set is built around what a managed platform can do when every layer of the infrastructure is under its control. The most significant recent change is that all paid plans, including Personal at $4/month, now include full plugin and theme installation access.
The “restricted platform” reputation is no longer accurate. I installed Yoast SEO, WooCommerce, and Elementor from the same plugin marketplace available on any self-hosted site, all on the Personal plan.
What WordPress.com includes across all paid plans:
- Full access to 50,000+ plugins in the WordPress directory plus custom ZIP uploads

- Global edge CDN across 28-plus locations, active and routing automatically
- Automated datacenter failover with real-time site replication to a second data center
- High-burst capacity and scaling that handles sudden traffic spikes without manual intervention or extra cost
- WAF filtering SQL injection, cross-site scripting, and application-layer attacks
- Advanced DDoS protection using proof-of-work challenges that pass legitimate visitors through while blocking automated attacks
- Free domain for the first year on all paid plans
- Unlimited page views and bandwidth at every plan level
- AI Assistant built into the editor for content writing and image generation
- Built-in newsletters and email subscriber management
- Flat renewal pricing at every tier

What requires a Business or Commerce plan:
- VaultPress real-time backups with one-click restore
- Staging environments
- SSH, SFTP, and WP-CLI access
- GitHub deployment integration
- Server monitoring and performance tabs
What WordPress.com does not offer at any tier:
- WordPress Multisite
- Headless WordPress architecture
- Raw server-level configuration access
- White-label or reseller hosting
- Multiple sites per subscription
WordPress.org Features
WordPress.org’s defining advantage is the scale and depth of its ecosystem and the completeness of ownership it provides. Nothing is gated, nothing is managed for you, and nothing is off-limits as long as your hosting plan supports it.
What WordPress.org provides:
- 60,000-plus free plugins in the official WordPress Plugin Directory
- 70,000-plus total plugins, including commercial options from independent vendors

- 14,000-plus free themes, with 30,000-plus total including premium marketplaces
- Native WooCommerce integration powering 33% of all online stores globally

- WordPress Multisite for running multiple sites from a single installation
- Headless WordPress and REST API for decoupled front-end architectures
- Complete file access via FTP, SFTP, and SSH, depending on your host
- Custom server configurations, cron jobs, database access, and code-level customization
- Full data ownership: your content, your server, your terms
What WordPress.org does not provide by default:
- WAF protection (requires plugin at $119 or more per year for premium)
- Automated daily backups (requires plugin or host add-on)
- CDN (requires plugin or host inclusion)
- Any professional support channel
- Automatic security patching (you are responsible for updates)
4. Website Performance Comparison
WordPress.com Delivers Consistent Managed Performance; WordPress.org Can Match It on the Right Host
WordPress.com Performance Results
I tested a WordPress site hosted on WordPress.com using GTmetrix from their London, UK test server. The site had real page content, blog posts, and active plugins installed before testing.
Metric by metric:
- GTmetrix grade: 98% — an outstanding result for a managed hosting environment at this price point
- Structure score: 97% — near-perfect page architecture indicating efficient, well-optimized asset delivery
- LCP 927ms: The main visible element loads in under a second, well within Google’s 2.5-second Good threshold
- TBT 0ms: No JavaScript blocking at any point during load. The page is fully interactive the moment content appears
- CLS 0: Perfect visual stability with no layout shifts throughout the entire load sequence
- TTFB 464ms: The origin server response is on the higher side, but this figure reflects a cold request bypassing the CDN cache. In real-world conditions, the CDN handles the vast majority of visitor requests. Independent testing by Hostingstep across 34 hosting providers found WordPress.com’s global TTFB average was 208ms, ranking it among the fastest platforms tested
- Fully loaded 1.2s: All page assets finish loading in 1.2 seconds on a real content site

None of these results required installing a caching plugin, configuring a CDN, or touching any optimization setting.
WordPress.org Performance Results
I used performance data from a WordPress.org site hosted on Hostinger, representing what a well-chosen shared hosting environment can deliver. The test site was built with a standard business theme, images, caching and SEO plugins, and real page content. GTmetrix tested from Seattle, WA.
Metric by metric:
- GTmetrix grade: 99% — a strong result that reflects Hostinger’s LiteSpeed server and included CDN doing meaningful work
- Structure score: 89% — lower than WordPress.com’s 97%, suggesting more room for frontend asset optimization
- LCP 757ms: The main visible element loads in under 0.8 seconds, faster than WordPress.com’s 927ms headline figure
- TTFB 198ms: Faster raw server response than WordPress.com’s 464ms origin measurement, though the CDN-adjusted comparison narrows that gap significantly
- TBT 26ms: Near-zero JavaScript blocking, though not the perfect 0ms WordPress.com records
- CLS 0: Perfect visual stability, matching WordPress.com on this metric
- Fully loaded 842ms: Faster total asset delivery than WordPress.com’s 1.2s

Reaching these numbers on WordPress.org required choosing Hostinger specifically for its included LiteSpeed caching and CDN.
The same WordPress.org installation on a cheaper host without those defaults would perform considerably worse. The performance is real, but it is host-dependent.
5. Ease of Use Comparison
WordPress.com Eliminates the Setup Sequence That Makes WordPress.org Challenging for New Users
Getting Started
WordPress.com Registration
I signed up for WordPress.com starting from the “Get started” button on the homepage. The account creation page offered email signup or one-click options for Google, Apple, and GitHub. No credit card was required to create an account.

After creating my account, I was taken to a domain search screen with a clear “Already have a domain?” option below the search bar. I chose to connect an existing domain and was presented with two clear routes: transfer it completely (recommended, five to seven days, includes a free one-year renewal) or connect it while keeping the current registrar (up to 72 hours, no service disruption).

Both options explained their tradeoffs on the same screen, which I found unusually transparent for a hosting signup flow.
The plan selection screen showed all five tiers side by side with honest feature lists.
After selecting the Business plan and completing payment, a loading screen appeared that simply read “Turning on the lights.” The dashboard was live immediately after. Total time from homepage to a ready WordPress dashboard was under five minutes.

WordPress.org Getting Started
Getting a WordPress.org site live involves a sequence of decisions before reaching the WordPress dashboard. I needed to:
- Research and choose a hosting provider from dozens of options with different pricing, performance, and support characteristics
- Register a domain name
- Point the domain’s nameservers to the chosen host
- Install WordPress through the host’s one-click installer (Softaculous on most cPanel hosts) or manually

- Configure WordPress permalink settings
- Install a security plugin and configure the WAF rules
- Set up a backup solution, either a plugin or the host’s add-on service
- Install a caching plugin or verify the host’s caching is active
- Choose and install a theme before beginning to build
For someone who has done this before, the process takes 30 to 60 minutes. For a first-time user working through documentation, it commonly takes a full afternoon, with troubleshooting built in.
Every step is documented and the community has answered most questions that could arise. But nothing configures itself, and each step requires a decision.
Dashboard and Interface
WordPress.com Dashboard
The first screen after signup is My Home, an onboarding checklist with clear next steps and a live preview of the site in the right panel. The left sidebar follows standard WordPress admin navigation: Dashboard, Posts, Media, Pages, Comments, Appearance, Plugins, Users, Tools, Settings. Any user who has ever seen a WordPress dashboard will feel at home immediately.

A “Hosting Overview” button in the top-right of My Home opens a dedicated site management panel with tabs for Overview, Deployments, Monitoring, Performance, Logs, and Settings.
This is where PHP version control, SFTP and SSH credentials, WAF configuration, caching, and database access live. Deployments, Monitoring, and Performance unlock on Business plans.
WordPress.org Dashboard
A self-hosted WordPress site gives you two dashboards in parallel: the WordPress admin panel for content and plugin management, and your hosting provider’s control panel for server-level settings.

Moving between them for different tasks is the normal workflow.
The WordPress admin is the same interface as WordPress.com’s WP Admin, which means anyone familiar with WordPress will navigate it without adjustment. The hosting control panel varies by provider.
cPanel is the most common, covering file management, database tools, email accounts, and cron jobs in a familiar interface.
Plugin conflicts, white screen errors, and editor incompatibilities are the most common daily friction points, and resolving them requires either prior WordPress experience or independent research.
Plugin Installation and Site Management
WordPress.com Plugin Installation
Inside WordPress.com, the plugin installer is a full marketplace organized into curated sections such as “Must-have premium plugins,” “Developer favorites,” and “Popular plugins,” with category filter tabs and a search bar. WooCommerce, Yoast SEO, Elementor, Gravity Forms, and hundreds of recognizable plugins are all present and installable in one click. An “Upload” button allows custom ZIP uploads for plugins not in the directory. Akismet came pre-installed and active on my account.

The experience is identical to installing plugins on a self-hosted WordPress site. The old “restricted platform” criticism no longer applies.
WordPress.org Plugin Installation
WordPress.org’s plugin directory covers 60,000-plus free options and 70,000-plus total, including commercial plugins from independent vendors. Installation happens through the WordPress admin Plugins screen, from the directory or by uploading a ZIP file, exactly the same as on WordPress.com.
The difference is that there is no curated marketplace experience: the default directory search requires more browsing to find the right tool for a given need.

The broader trade-off is compatibility management. On a self-hosted site, plugin conflicts are your responsibility to diagnose and resolve.
On WordPress.com, Jetpack and other platform tools are pre-installed and maintained, reducing the surface area for conflicts.
Hosting Management
WordPress.com Hosting Management
WordPress.com’s hosting management lives inside the Hosting Overview panel, accessible with one click from My Home. The Settings tab consolidates everything I needed in a single view: PHP version selector, WordPress version display, SFTP and SSH credential generator, database access via phpMyAdmin, a CDN toggle, caching controls, and WAF configuration.

The Security tab covers WAF settings, WordPress.com login protection, and Defensive Mode for sites under active attack.
For day-to-day management, the WordPress admin handles everything content and plugin related, and the Hosting Overview handles the infrastructure layer. The two rarely need to be used simultaneously.
I found I almost never needed to touch the Hosting Overview once the initial setup was done, which is precisely the point. The platform manages WordPress core updates, security patches, server software, and caching without any input from me.
The limitation is that this abstraction is the ceiling as well as the floor. On Business and Commerce plans I have SSH access, WP-CLI, and GitHub deployments, but I cannot modify server configuration files, install server-level software, or access anything outside the WordPress environment itself. For most site owners, that boundary is invisible and irrelevant. For developers who want OS-level control, it is a real constraint.
WordPress.org Hosting Management
Managing a self-hosted WordPress.org site means working across two separate interfaces, depending on what needs doing.
The WordPress admin handles everything within WordPress itself: themes, plugins, users, settings, and content.
The hosting control panel, usually cPanel, handles everything at the server level: file manager, database tools via phpMyAdmin, email account management, DNS records, cron jobs, error logs, and PHP version selection.

For routine WordPress management, the two rarely interfere with each other. Where the split matters is during troubleshooting.
A white screen error might require checking the WordPress debug log through cPanel’s file manager, then diagnosing a plugin conflict inside WordPress admin, then modifying a PHP setting inside cPanel’s PHP configuration tool.
Moving between panels during an incident adds time and requires knowing which layer of the stack the problem lives in.
The upside is complete visibility and control. On a self-hosted VPS, I can adjust server configuration, install server-level software, set custom cron jobs, and access raw error logs without any abstraction layer filtering what I can see or change.
6. Privacy and Security Comparison
WordPress.com’s Managed Security Stack Is Active Before You Log In; WordPress.org Requires You to Build It Yourself
WordPress.com Security
WordPress.com’s security model is proactive and managed at every layer. By the time I logged in after signing up, the WAF was already filtering traffic, SSL was already active, and malware scanning was already running. Nothing required configuration.

What WordPress.com includes on all paid plans:
- WAF filtering SQL injection, cross-site scripting, and common OWASP Top 10 exploits, automatically updated by the security team
- Advanced DDoS protection using proof-of-work challenges that briefly present legitimate visitors with a browser-side puzzle while blocking automated attacks. Sites on the platform have successfully mitigated attacks reaching hundreds of gigabits per second
- Continuous malware scanning through Jetpack’s security infrastructure
- Automatic WordPress core updates and security patches, often applied before exploits become widely known
- Akismet spam protection pre-installed and active
- Free SSL on every connected domain, automatically renewed
- Brute-force login protection on all accounts
What expands on Business and Commerce plans:
- VaultPress real-time backups with geographic replication to a second data center
- One-click site restore from any point in the backup history
- Server monitoring and activity logs

WordPress.org Security
WordPress.org’s core software is secure and regularly patched by the WordPress security team. The vulnerability surface is primarily in third-party plugins and themes.
So, managing security on a self-hosted WordPress.org setup requires ongoing active effort:
- A WAF plugin (Wordfence Premium at $119/year or Sucuri at $199/year are the primary options)
- A backup plugin with off-server storage such as UpdraftPlus or BackupBuddy, or a host add-on
- Regular plugin and theme updates, ideally within 24 hours of a security patch release
- Strong admin passwords and two-factor authentication
- Monitoring for malicious file injections

All of this is manageable for someone with WordPress experience and the discipline to maintain it consistently.
The risk is not that the tools are unavailable but that a missed update or lapsed backup creates real exposure. In a single recent year, malicious files were found on over 1.1 million WordPress sites.
7. Server Locations Comparison
WordPress.org Offers Unlimited Geographic Choice; WordPress.com Covers Six Continents With Managed CDN Routing
WordPress.com Server Locations
WordPress.com operates data centers across six continents with 28-plus locations in its global edge network. Content is automatically routed to the nearest edge node for each visitor without any configuration required.
The platform does not offer a manual origin server selector at signup. Location assignment is handled automatically, and the CDN layer compensates for geographic distance by serving cached content from the nearest edge point.
For most content sites and blogs, this automatic routing delivers the global performance advantage of a CDN without any technical setup. The limitation is for users with strict data residency requirements. Selecting a specific country for your origin server data is not a feature WordPress.com currently offers, which matters for sites with GDPR compliance requirements that extend beyond EU CDN delivery to actual data storage location.
WordPress.org Server Locations
WordPress.org imposes no geographic restrictions whatsoever. The freedom to choose any host in any country is the most complete version of geographic flexibility available in web hosting.
If a site’s audience is primarily in Japan, I can choose a Japanese host.
If GDPR compliance requires documented data residency within Germany with a specific data processing agreement, I can choose a German host that provides that documentation. If I want my site on AWS in Sydney or Google Cloud in Singapore, I can have it. The only constraint is finding and evaluating the right host for the chosen location, which requires research.
WordPress.com vs WordPress.org: The Bottom Line
WordPress.com is the overall winner for most site owners. All paid plans now include full plugin and theme access, removing the restriction that gave the platform its old reputation.
From there, the advantages compound: a 99.999% uptime guarantee backed by real-time datacenter failover, a global edge CDN across 28-plus locations included from $4/month, a managed WAF and continuous malware scanning active before first login, VaultPress real-time backups on Business and Commerce plans, flat renewal pricing at every tier, and Happiness Engineers who answered my technical questions in under four minutes with genuine expertise.
For a single site where managed infrastructure, no traffic limits, and flat pricing matter, WordPress.com is now one of the strongest value propositions in the WordPress ecosystem.
WordPress.org earns a direct recommendation for developers who need complete stack ownership and server-level control.
| Category | Winner | Why |
| Pricing | WordPress.com | Flat renewal pricing, all-in bundling, effective cost beats DIY assembly for single sites |
| Customer Support | WordPress.com | The only platform with professional support; Happiness Engineers in under 4 minutes |
| Hosting Features | WordPress.com | WAF, CDN, datacenter failover, VideoPress, and VaultPress all included at plan price |
| Website Performance | WordPress.com | 0ms TBT, 208ms global TTFB average, 99.999% uptime with no configuration required |
| Ease of Use | WordPress.com | Pre-installed WordPress, managed security, guided onboarding, active backups from day one |
| Privacy and Security | WordPress.com | Managed WAF, malware scanning, real-time backups, and DDoS protection active before first login |
| Server Locations | WordPress.org | Unlimited geographic choice; any host, any country, full data sovereignty control |


