Ghost vs Squarespace: publishing focus or all-in-one website builder?
Compare editorial workflow, memberships, SEO, design flexibility, and the true cost of ownership for content-driven sites.
Resumen de decisión
Actualizado 7/11/2026
Ganador rápido
Choose Ghost for publications and content businesses. Choose Squarespace for portfolio, service, or brochure sites with a blog attached.
Ghost is purpose-built around writing, newsletters, and memberships — every feature serves publishers. Squarespace is a general website builder where blogging is one feature among many (commerce, bookings, portfolios).
Elige Ghost para
Newsletter operators, editorial publications, content creators, membership businesses, and anyone who publishes regularly and monetizes through subscriptions.
Elige el competidor para
Service businesses, portfolios, restaurants, creatives, and brands that need an elegant website with occasional blog posts and integrated commerce or bookings.
¿Para quién es?
- Ghost: Native memberships, newsletters, and 0% platform fees
- Squarespace: Beautiful templates, integrated commerce, and bookings
- Ghost: Editorial-first design with typography-focused themes
- Squarespace: General-purpose builder with blogging as a feature
Platform comparison
| Category | Ghost | Squarespace | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Platform focus | Publishing, newsletters, memberships | General websites, portfolios, commerce, blogs | Different goals |
| Writing experience | Distraction-free markdown editor built for publishing | Capable editor but generalized for all site types | Ghost |
| Memberships | Native — unlimited tiers, Stripe, gated content | Basic member areas via integrations | Ghost |
| Newsletters | Built-in email delivery with segmentation | Email campaigns available but basic | Ghost |
| Template design | 160+ themes optimized for reading and editorial | 140+ beautiful templates for various business types | Squarespace (variety) |
| Editorial typography | Typography-focused, reading-optimized themes | Good typography but not editorial-specific | Ghost |
| E-commerce | Not supported (Stripe subscriptions only) | Full native e-commerce with inventory, payments, shipping | Squarespace |
| Booking/scheduling | Not supported | Built-in scheduling and appointment booking | Squarespace |
| Portfolio features | Limited | Excellent portfolio galleries and project showcases | Squarespace |
| SEO | Strong built-in basics; theme-dependent | Good SEO tools with guided optimization | Tie |
| Performance | Fast by default — lightweight output | Good performance; template-dependent | Ghost |
| Customization | Themes + custom code (Handlebars/CSS/JS) | Visual editor + custom CSS | Tie |
| Open source | Yes — MIT license, self-hostable | No — proprietary platform | Ghost |
| Pricing (entry) | $18/month | $16/month | Similar |
Publishing checks
SEO comparison
Meta control
- Ghost
- Full per-post control
- Winner
- Tie
- Squarespace
- Good control via SEO panel
Structured data
- Ghost
- Auto Article schema
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- Basic structured data support
Site speed
- Ghost
- Faster — publishing-optimized
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- Good but heavier templates
Content SEO
- Ghost
- Clean semantic HTML for publications
- Winner
- Ghost (for publishing)
- Squarespace
- Good general SEO
Performance comparison
Page load speed
- Ghost
- 0.6-1.5 seconds
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- 2-4 seconds (template-dependent)
Core Web Vitals
- Ghost
- Strong with quality themes
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- Good with optimization
Mobile performance
- Ghost
- Responsive themes
- Winner
- Tie
- Squarespace
- All templates mobile-responsive
Membership comparison
Native memberships
- Ghost
- Built-in with full tier support
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- Limited — requires Member Areas add-on
Paid subscriptions
- Ghost
- Native Stripe integration, 0% fees
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- Available via Member Areas
Newsletter delivery
- Ghost
- Built-in with segmentation
- Winner
- Ghost
- Squarespace
- Basic email campaigns
Pros and cons
Pros
- Purpose-built for publishing and editorial workflows
- Native memberships, newsletters, and subscriptions
- 0% platform fees on revenue
- Faster performance with lightweight output
- Typography and reading-focused theme design
- Open source and self-hostable
Cons
- No e-commerce or booking functionality
- No portfolio galleries or visual showcases
- Smaller template selection (160+ vs 140+)
- Not suitable for general business websites
Choose Ghost if
- You publish content regularly and it's central to your business
- You want native memberships and newsletter tools
- You care about editorial design and reading experience
- You want to monetize through subscriptions
- Performance and speed are priorities
- You want open-source flexibility
Choose the other platform if
- You need a general business website with a blog section
- You want integrated e-commerce or booking functionality
- You are a creative needing portfolio showcases
- You prefer an all-in-one visual builder
- You don't publish content as a primary business activity
Temas recomendados
Lumora
Photography
Por qué lo recomendamos
A visual Ghost theme for blogs, magazines, newsletters, and photography-led publications.
Fortalezas
- Image-led sections
- Magazine-friendly layout
- Good for visual storytelling
Pathmark
Blog
Por qué lo recomendamos
A full-width Ghost blog theme for photography, travel, personal publishing, and visual essays.
Fortalezas
- Full-width storytelling
- Photography-friendly layout
- Simple blog structure
Velora
Newsletter
Por qué lo recomendamos
A warm, customizable Ghost theme for creator newsletters, blogs, and magazine-style content.
Fortalezas
- Warm visual style
- Newsletter-focused pages
- Clean content rhythm
También comparan
FAQ
Can Squarespace replace Ghost for a publication?
Squarespace can host a blog, but it's not designed for editorial publishing at scale. Ghost offers a superior writing workflow, native memberships, newsletters, and themes designed for reading. If publishing is your business, Ghost is the better choice. If you need a beautiful business website with occasional blog posts, Squarespace works well.
Which has better templates: Ghost or Squarespace?
Squarespace has more visually stunning templates across a wider variety of categories (business, portfolio, restaurant, store). Ghost's themes are specifically designed for publishing — they prioritize typography, readability, and content hierarchy. For general websites, Squarespace wins. For publications, Ghost's themes are more purpose-built.
Is Ghost or Squarespace better for SEO?
Both have good SEO foundations. Ghost produces cleaner, lighter code that's naturally fast — an SEO advantage. Squarespace has more guided SEO tools and settings. For content-heavy sites that publish frequently, Ghost's speed and clean structure often provide better long-term SEO results. For local business sites, Squarespace's SEO tools are sufficient.
What is the main difference in Ghost vs Squarespace?
Ghost is purpose-built around writing, newsletters, and memberships — every feature serves publishers. Squarespace is a general website builder where blogging is one feature among many (commerce, bookings, portfolios).
Páginas relacionadas
Siguiente paso
Publish with purpose on Ghost
A publishing platform built for content, newsletters, and memberships — not an afterthought. Browse themes designed for serious publishers.
Browse Ghost themes