Comparison

WordPress vs Webflow

Webflow and WordPress are the two main paths for sites that need a real CMS. Webflow is no-code with a visual designer; WordPress is open-source code you self-host or pay someone to host. The right choice depends on team skills and content scale.

WordPress

WordPress is open-source CMS software running 40%+ of the web. Best for teams that need maximum flexibility, plugin ecosystem, or content scale.

Choose WordPress if

  • You need plugin variety (e-commerce, membership, forums, etc.)
  • You want full code control and self-hosting
  • You have over 10,000 pieces of content
  • You're cost-sensitive and OK with maintenance
Learn more about WordPress

Webflow

Webflow is a visual no-code site builder with a designer-friendly CMS. Best for teams with designers but no developers.

Choose Webflow if

  • You have a designer and no developer
  • You want hosted infrastructure (no servers to manage)
  • Site has under 10,000 CMS items
  • You value design control over plugin flexibility
Learn more about Webflow

Side-by-side comparison

CategoryWordPressWebflow
TypeSelf-hosted (or managed) softwareHosted no-code platform
CMS scaleEffectively unlimited10k items / Business; Enterprise above
Custom codeUnlimited (PHP + JS)Limited (per-page caps)
Plugin ecosystemPlugins (60,000+)Webflow apps (small)
Hosting costVariable ($5–500+/mo depending on host)Included ($35–49/mo per editor)
MaintenanceYou handle (or pay a host)Webflow handles
Performance ceilingTunableHard limits
Best forAnything with content scale or plugin needsDesigner-led marketing sites

Whichever you pick, we audit the output.

We work with both. Webflow audits ($300+) and migrations off Webflow when you hit CMS limits ($500+). We don't typically build new sites in either — we help with audits, migrations, and the bridge between platforms.

Frequently asked questions

Can I migrate from Webflow to WordPress?
Yes, but plan for it. Webflow exports HTML/CSS/JS plus a separate CMS export. The conversion to WordPress means reapplying interactions, recreating templates as themes, and migrating CMS data. Doable; not trivial.
Which is better for SEO?
Both rank fine if implemented well. WordPress wins on technical flexibility (schema, headless setups, site speed tuning). Webflow wins on out-of-box clean code and mobile responsiveness.

Already built something? We'll review it.

Code audit, security review, or full migration. Fixed quotes.

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