Free vs Paid WordPress Hosting: Real Comparison
Published April 21, 2026
Free vs Paid WordPress Hosting: The Real Trade-offs
Free WordPress hosting exists. But free doesn't mean no cost — you pay in other ways. Here's an honest comparison to help you decide.
Free Hosting Options
WordPress.com Free Plan: Gives you a yoursite.wordpress.com subdomain with WordPress.com ads displayed on your site. No plugins, no custom themes, limited storage. It works for personal journals but not for anything professional.
Free hosting providers (000webhost, InfinityFree, etc.): Offer free PHP hosting with ads, limited bandwidth, no SSL, slow servers, and frequent downtime. Your site often has the host's branding in the footer.
What Free Hosting Costs You
- Performance: Slow page loads lose 53% of mobile visitors and hurt SEO rankings
- Credibility: A .wordpress.com or .freehost.com domain signals “not serious” to visitors
- Security: No SSL, limited updates, shared resources with potentially malicious sites
- Features: No plugins means no contact forms, no SEO tools, no ecommerce, no analytics
- Ads: Your visitors see ads that make money for the host, not for you
- Support: Community forums, no guaranteed response time
What Paid Hosting Gives You
- Custom domain: yourbrand.com with professional credibility
- Full WordPress: Install any plugin or theme
- SSL/HTTPS: Encrypted connections (required for any form of trust)
- Performance: Dedicated or isolated resources for consistent speed
- Backups: Automated backup and restore
- Support: Real humans who help you fix problems
The Math
SiteICO's Starter plan costs $9/mo ($108/year). That includes custom domain support, SSL, daily backups, AI content tools, and container-isolated hosting. WordPress.com's equivalent Personal plan is $4/mo but still doesn't allow plugins. Their Business plan ($25/mo) finally allows plugins but costs nearly 3x SiteICO's Starter.
When Free Makes Sense
Free hosting is acceptable for: learning WordPress, testing ideas you might abandon, and personal blogs you don't care about monetizing. For anything else — business, portfolio, ecommerce, professional blog — paid hosting is a necessary investment.