Best WordPress Hosting 2018: The Facts

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It is almost impossible to slash your way through the jungle of marketing and misinformation to find the tiny number of hosts who provide a competent, conscientious service. So, to find the very best WordPress hosts, we look at the results of the biggest WordPress hosting studies ever, with 830 respondents hosting 11,736 websites.
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WP Engine High Performance Hosting
BionicWP Hosting

Based on the results of a major WordPress hosting customer satisfaction survey released last week, this article saves you time by breaking down the results into actionable recommendations. We end up recommending four different WordPress hosts, each a clear winner for different types of site and budget. You can jump straight to those winners.

Like death and taxes, paying for hosting is an unavoidable reality if you wish to make your WordPress website accessible to the world. WordPress itself is free, the WordPress.org repository provides a massive number of plugins and themes for free, even most of the paid plugins and themes are legally available for free on the GPL download sites. The one thing that we all must pay for, however, is hosting.

Technically, hosting WordPress is pretty simple. As an industry, however, it is a dumpster fire. The vast majority of web hosts are essentially marketing operations that depend on the ignorance of their customers.

The recipe for hosting company success, repeatedly proven over the past two decades, has been to spend 95% of your budget on marketing, as little as possible on hardware and hire the cheapest available staff, often in third world call-centers.

The role of staff has been to read from scripts designed to be helpful and encouraging to customers taking their first steps, generating word-of-mouth endorsements from enthusiastic new users, but then later deflect and lie if that customer has problems requiring real expertise or questions about poor performance.

In over two decades of consulting, I have seen that almost all hosting issues relate directly and unmistakably to a lack of resources. Practically all problems would magically disappear if, for instance, you doubled the amount of allocated memory. The “support” staff know this, but it is the one thing they cannot admit. The scripts they follow provide no path to that conclusion.

The simple, profitable formula for hosts is to let those problematic customers go; shrug your shoulders, give some half-assed excuse about not being able to support particular plugins and let the customer leave, knowing that it is cheaper and easier to gain new customers through more marketing than provide actual support.

Ironically, most customers then move to another web host that is actually just another front owned by the same conglomerate and unknowingly end up back on the same crappy servers and going in circles with the same support staff, reading from the same scripts. For example, Endurance International Group (EIG) own 83 companies including Bluehost and HostGator who are both among the worst in our survey results below.

How To Find a Good Host

For WordPress users, it is almost impossible to slash your way through the jungle of marketing and misinformation to find the tiny number of hosts who provide a competent, conscientious service.

So, customers satisfaction surveys from reliable sources are invaluable, and we particularly like the one released last week by CodeinWP, one of the biggest WordPress hosting studies ever, with 830 respondents hosting 11,736 websites.

78.67% of the respondents are WordPress professionals, meaning that they are likely to have experience of many different hosts and, therefore, be less susceptible to marketing bullshit than casual WordPress users. It makes sense to get WordPress hosting advice from WordPress pros.

The Survey Results

The job of this article is to boil down the results of this May 2018 survey to the essential points.

The three most heavily marketed WordPress hosts, according to Alexa, are:

Godaddy
Bluehost
HostGator

According to the survey’s overall customer satisfaction ratings, they are also the three worst WordPress hosts:

Bluehost – 3.3 out of 5
Godaddy – 3.5
HostGator – 3.7
A2 Hosting – 3.8
DreamHost – 4.1

So, there appears to be a negative correlation between dependence on marketing and customer satisfaction. If you can manage to resist the relentless marketing and avoid using any of those 5 hosts, you will be have avoided a bullet.

The five WordPress hosts rated highest for overall customer satisfaction are:

Kinsta – 4.8 out of 5
SiteGround – 4.6
Flywheel – 4.6
Cloudways – 4.5
WP Engine – 4.4

The survey also reveals that the most heavily-marketed hosts have the highest proportions of first-time users, suggesting that the marketing is effective but that, over time, users do tend to find their way to the better, less marketing-dependent hosts.

For security, the five highest-rated WordPress hosts are:

Kinsta – 94.3%
WPEngine – 90.2%
Flywheel – 88%
SiteGround – 83%
Cloudways – 73.6%

The four least secure are:

BlueHost – 38.9%
Godaddy – 41.1%
HostGator – 41.5%
DreamHost – 56.7%

For reliability, the four highest-rated WordPress hosts are:

Kinsta – 4.8 out of 5
WPEngine – 4.8
Flywheel – 4.7
Siteground – 4.6

The four least reliable are:

Bluehost – 3.4
Godaddy – 3.8
Hostgator – 4.1
Dreamhost – 4.3

For WordPress support, the five highest-rated hosts are:

Kinsta – 4.9 out of 5
Flywheel – 4.8
WPEngine – 4.7
Siteground – 4.5
Cloudways – 4.0

The six lowest-rated for WordPress support are:

Godaddy – 3.3
HostGator – 3.3
Bluehost – 3.4
A2 Hosting – 3.6
Inmotion – 3.8
Dreamhost – 3.9

The Winners

If money is no object, there is a clear winner: Kinsta was significantly ahead in every important metric. Almost all of us, however, do need to weigh up other factors, so, we have selected a different winner for each of four different scenarios.

Best Cheap Host for Getting Started with an Unlimited Number of WordPress Sites

When you are starting out with WordPress, there is a lot of value in being able to fire up new sites whenever you want without having to worry about being charged extra money. SiteGround‘s cheapest plan only allows one site, but their Grow Big plan does allow unlimited sites for €26.45 for the first month and then €12.95 per month after that.

This is shared hosting, generally a bad idea, and they use ancient hosting software cPanel, also generally a bad idea, but SiteGround have the best reputation for shared hosting and, if you are at the stage when you need to have a lot of sites that you are not being paid for, they are probably your best option. The more expensive managed WordPress hosts won’t be affordable for that because they tightly restrict the number of sites you can have.

Best Value Managed WordPress Host

As you can see from the survey results, WP Engine came in just a whisker behind Kinsta in every category, but it can work out significantly cheaper. Their standard pricing is more or less the same as Kinsta, but we have arranged a special discount for WP Mayor readers, giving you an entire year for the cost of 8 months. That value puts WP Engine right at the front of the pack of high-quality managed WordPress hosts.

4 Months Free
WP Engine
WP Engine
WP Engine has been a constant recommendation here on WP Mayor. Every website we have hosted with them has been smooth sailing all the way. Get 4 months free all annual (or 20% off monthly) shared...Show More
WP Engine has been a constant recommendation here on WP Mayor. Every website we have hosted with them has been smooth sailing all the way. Get 4 months free all annual (or 20% off monthly) shared hosting today. Starting at just $20/mo. Show Less

Obviously, you only start to use managed WordPress hosting when you have a site that is important. You are not learning, you are not playing around, you are at the stage when your sites absolutely must perform as well as possible, and you need a team of WordPress experts standing behind you. Managed WordPress Hosting is a different world from shared hosting, and you pay for that, but, with that 20% discount, WP Engine gets you to that level at a reasonable price.

Absolute Best Performing Managed WordPress Host

It is only a few percentage points but, when you are competing at the top of the scale, it takes real skill to remain the boss. If you want the very best, and are willing to pay the premium for that, you choose Kinsta.

You can try Kinsta risk-free for 30 days thanks to their 30-day money-back guarantee and no long-term contracts. So, if you cancel your hosting account with Kinsta in the first 30 days of service, they will issue a full refund.

Kinsta also offers free migrations from other WordPress hosting companies including WP Engine, Flywheel, Pantheon, Cloudways and Dreamhost.

Best Managed WooCommerce Hosting

We have a separate recommendation for WooCommerce hosting because getting that right, and ensuring the best possible reliability for your online stores, requires an additional set of expertise. Liquid Web has been around for over two decades but they have entered the WordPress market in a big way over the past few years and, now, are the only company investing in improving the core performance of WooCommerce.

Just to be clear, every hosting company makes big claims about performance, but the coders in Liquid Web’s WooCommerce department are widely recognized as introducing innovations which lead the way for where WooCommerce needs to go. Again, much like Kinsta, this is a high-end offering, but the cost of Liquid Web WooCommerce hosting is more than justified if you cannot afford to have your online store perform unreliably.

We’ve recently partnered up with the Liquid Web team to offer you a 33% discount. Just use our coupon code below.

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Liquid Web
Liquid Web
Get 33% off from Liquid Web - managed WooCommerce hosting specialists.
Get 33% off from Liquid Web - managed WooCommerce hosting specialists. Show Less

Donnacha MacGloinn

Donnacha is a freelance writer at Effective Text who combines a deep understanding of technology and business with the rare ability to convey complicated ideas in a clear, engaging manner. He believes that the natural SEO of good writing is the most effective way for companies to build their visibility and credibility online. He has been an active member of the WordPress community since 2005 and is a regular contributor to WP Mayor.

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20 Responses

  1. I’ve tried dozens of hosts over the years, and finally settled on LiquidWeb for my WordPress sites.

    If anyone is running a serious blog that has lots of traffic or is making them quite a bit of money or has multiple WordPress sites they manage, I would highly recommend starting with LiquidWeb.

  2. Although bluehost got a low rating in the survey, it is one of the cheap hosting options. It is damn cheap in shared hosting but theirs servers can sustain large number of visitors in shared hosting provided right cache plugins are installed. It is my experience with them for a high traffic site for last two years.

    1. Thanks for taking the time to comment Mahesh.

      I would imagine that the BlueHost users who gave it a low rating would be taking the price they paid into consideration. By whatever yardstick they apply, it is evident that, on average, the customers of other hosts, both cheap and expensive, are happier with their overall experience than BlueHost customers.

  3. Basically, I’m currently test-driving WPX Hosting and before this, I was using my local hosting provider so as far as I know and as I’m using currently WPX Hosting, I think it’s super fantastic WP Hosting Provider that everyone should be taking a look at when opting for a WordPress Hosting solution!

    #Thanks

    1. Thanks for sharing your hosting recommendation Yasar.

      For clarity, it is worth noting that you are a WPX affiliate.

    2. Considering price vs. quality I think is a way overpriced. Better try wpx. Much cheaper and also designed for wordpress users.

  4. Thanks for sharing your thoughts Numan.

    Yes, WP Engine provides a fine service, WP Mayor has been happily using them for years.

  5. I have a ticket from A2 hosting – opened 1 hour after a a database migration – 3500 words – 7 days – 11 techs to fix the A2 W3 caching plugin developed by A2 oh and to add permissions for uploading media

    1. Hi Mitch, thanks for taking the time to comment, and welcome to the club of “people who have shared hosting horror stories” – a club composed of pretty much everyone who works with WordPress 🙂

      I hope you get your problem fixed.

            1. Thanks Mitch. Yes, I have only just left another gig and am scrambling to get my freelance site set up.

              I added that link to my bio now in case I don’t have the ability to edit it later. So, I have the link, now all I need is the site!

              1. let’s stay in touch

                day gig zen cart/wordpress – building new woo store as I write

                side hustle:

                got about 50 posts in g docs I need to put up

                talk soon

                1. Sure. Fascinating sites. That is shocking about YouTube banning your channel, good luck with that.

                2. I have one more back door opportunity but weighing legal action – my 12 YO G rated 100% original content channel was shuttered because of repeated “hate speech, scams and copyright violations” which I think libels our 25 YO brand – stay tuned

  6. Very good article. Thanks!

    However, we should not forget the small independent companies that also offer hosting optimized for WordPress. They may not have such large infrastructure but for a personalized service, they will be hard to beat.

    The smaller hosting company is also much more flexible than the larger one. And very often cheaper or with more hosting options and services.

    To name only those, WPServeur in France ) or WP-Café in Quebec ) are perfect examples.

    What do you think?

    1. Hi Louis, thanks for taking the time to comment.

      These days, large infrastructure does not convey much of an advantage. Some of the biggest names are not even on their own infrastructure, they are built upon services that competitors of any size also have access to.

      So, smaller companies are certainly in a position to compete if they can offer better support keener prices or niche specializations.

    2. Agree with this 100%.

      But I’m biased, I work for an Australian WordPress hosting website.

      In business since 2008, we own our own tech / network (enterprise grade) and a level of support (in house / local) that none of the brands above can match. And we’re cheaper 🙂

      We also contribute to the local community via sponsorships, projects, helping not-for-profits, etc…

      Posts like this address a global audience so it makes sense to talk about global players.

      But good to point out that users should also look at what local players offer.

    3. I think there’s definitely a space for smaller players that can offer a more tailored managed WordPress setup for their customers.

      I’ve been experimenting with Servebolt lately and have been very impressed.

      With the tweaks they implemented I have been able to get some of my sites run faster on their servers than they did on Kinsta or WP Engine.

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