{"id":3921,"date":"2019-01-24T13:14:31","date_gmt":"2019-01-24T13:14:31","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sitebeginner.com\/?p=3921"},"modified":"2019-09-02T10:28:15","modified_gmt":"2019-09-02T10:28:15","slug":"costs-pricing","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sitebeginner.com\/wordpress\/costs-pricing\/","title":{"rendered":"An Introduction to the Possible Cost of Hosting a Website on WordPress"},"content":{"rendered":"

WordPress is an amazing platform for creating blogs<\/a> and building websites<\/a> to share your content.<\/p>\n

If you run a simple, personal blog, using WordPress is free, but you may need upgrades if you plan to have either high traffic or plan to link the blog\/website to your business. These upgrades can include top-notch web hosting plans that can cost anything between $3 and $200 a month and premium content, like handy plugins and fancy themes, to bring the website's layout or design to a new level.<\/p>\n

The average cost of premium WordPress services, including web hosting. design costs and costs for implementing plugins, is $50-$300 annually. However, this price can wildly vary depending on what needs to be added to the site.<\/p>\n

Some blogs and websites can operate on a very bare design with minimal bandwidth and no plug-ins, while others need large amounts of bandwidth and a fancy, eye-catching theme with helpful plug-ins to attract potential consumers or satisfy current ones. Different hosting plans can also affect speed and downtime of the site. Typically, the most expensive part of operating a WordPress website or blog is its hosting, so let's explore that first.<\/p>\n

Hosting Your WordPress Site, an Essential, but Somewhat Pricey, Element of Any Modern Website<\/h4>\n

Hosts are known as the services that “save” your website's data and provide you with a domain name, as well as email accounts associated with that domain. There is a free option offered by WordPress that can give you 3GB of storage, but no custom domain name or email account. As an example, the free option would name your website\/blog yourwebsite.wordpress.com instead of yourwebsite.com.<\/p>\n

This storage is more than enough for small, personal websites and blogs, as you typically won't need too much storage in the first place, however this absolutely won't work for businesses that plan to offer a much larger amount of content on their website or have higher amounts of traffic.<\/p>\n

After WordPress's free plan is their paid plans. They offer three different tiers of hosting, each with different features that can enhance your site or blog in many ways. The first is WordPress's personal plan, priced at $5 a month.<\/p>\n

The personal plan gives your website a custom domain name instead of being hosted on WordPress's domain, meaning the pesky “wordpress.com” will be removed from your website's address, as well as offering 6 GB of storage instead of three. This plan also removes WordPress's advertising that could be hindering potential traffic and offers customer service through live chat and email.<\/p>\n

Next, is WordPress's premium plan, which offers all the previous services mentioned along with 13 GB of storage, advanced design options and tools with CSS editing enabled, the ability to add your own ads to your site\/blog and the added touch of being able to add audio and video files to the site.<\/p>\n

Lastly, there is WordPress's Business Plan that is priced at $25 a month. The business plan offers unlimited storage space, free high-quality templates for the website, support with Google Analytics<\/a> and the option to remove WordPress branding from your site.<\/p>\n

There is also the option of choosing a third-party hosting provider to host your WordPress site or blog. These options can be cheaper and faster, and sometimes offer additional services like a free domain name when purchasing a plan. Some popular third-party web hosting services for WordPress include:<\/p>\n