Decisión de plataforma
Platform Comparison
Ghost vs WordPress: The Publisher's Guide
A practical, research-backed comparison for publishers, newsletter creators, and content teams choosing between Ghost and WordPress. Evaluate performance, security, cost, memberships, and editorial workflow to make the right decision for your publication.
Resumen de decisión
Actualizado 6/24/2026
Ganador rápido
Ghost
Ghost is purpose-built for publishing and audience ownership. Native newsletters, memberships, and zero platform fees make it the stronger choice for publishers, newsletter creators, and content teams focused on content and subscriber growth. WordPress remains the right choice when you need ecommerce, complex custom functionality, or maximum extensibility.
Elige Ghost para
Newsletter publishers, membership sites, editorial blogs, SaaS content teams, and independent creators who prioritize speed, security, and low maintenance.
Elige el competidor para
Ecommerce stores, multi-purpose websites, complex marketing stacks, and businesses that require extensive third-party integrations.
¿Para quién es?
- Publishing content is your primary business activity
- You want native newsletters without third-party tools
- You plan to monetize through paid subscriptions or memberships
- You value speed, security, and low maintenance overhead
- You want a clean, distraction-free editorial workflow
- You prefer predictable all-in-one pricing
- You are building a newsletter-first publication
- You want to own your subscriber list and data completely
- You prefer modern Node.js architecture over PHP
Platform comparison
| Feature | Ghost | WordPress |
|---|---|---|
| Built With | Node.js | PHP |
| Database | MySQL | MySQL / MariaDB |
| Plugin Ecosystem | None (by design) | 60,000+ plugins |
| Theme Ecosystem | Curated marketplace (~160) | Thousands (wide quality variance) |
| Built-in Newsletter | Yes — native email delivery | Requires plugin + ESP |
| Built-in Memberships | Yes — native Stripe, 0% fees | Requires paid plugin |
| Ecommerce | Stripe subscriptions only | Full ecommerce via WooCommerce |
| Page Speed (Default) | Fast — 85-95 PageSpeed | Variable — 40-60 without optimization |
| Hosting Cost (Entry) | Ghost(Pro) from $18/mo | Shared hosting from $3-8/mo |
| Security Model | Minimal attack surface | Plugin-dependent, higher risk |
| Maintenance Overhead | Low — managed hosting handles all | High — updates, patches, monitoring |
| SEO | Built-in sitemaps, structured data | Plugin-dependent (Yoast, Rank Math) |
| Editor Experience | Clean Markdown, distraction-free | Gutenberg block editor |
| User Roles | Basic (Owner, Admin, Editor, Author) | Granular (6+ roles) |
| Learning Curve | Low | Moderate to steep |
| Customization | Themes + code injection + API | Unlimited via plugins and code |
| Multilingual | Built-in support | Plugin-dependent |
| Dark Mode | Many themes include it | Theme-dependent |
Publishing checks
SEO comparison
Automatic XML sitemaps and JSON-LD structured data are built-in and enabled by default.
- Aspect
- Sitemaps & Structured Data
- Wordpress
- Requires plugins like Yoast SEO or Rank Math to generate sitemaps and manage structured data.
Built-in SEO title, meta description, and Open Graph tag support for all content types.
- Aspect
- Meta Tags
- Wordpress
- Requires SEO plugins for granular meta tag control.
Clean, customizable permalinks out of the box. Simple and consistent.
- Aspect
- URL Structure
- Wordpress
- Highly customizable URL structure, but complexity increases with plugins and custom post types.
Fast by default due to Node.js architecture. Scores 85-95 on PageSpeed Insights without optimization.
- Aspect
- Page Speed Impact
- Wordpress
- Performance depends on hosting, theme quality, and number of installed plugins. Requires caching plugins to achieve competitive scores.
Built-in AMP support available.
- Aspect
- AMP Support
- Wordpress
- Requires a plugin for AMP implementation.
Performance comparison
Default PageSpeed Score
- Ghost
- 85–95
- Wordpress
- 40–60
Time to First Byte (TTFB)
- Ghost
- Excellent — Node.js event loop, minimal overhead
- Wordpress
- Variable — depends on hosting, PHP execution, and plugin count
JavaScript Size
- Ghost
- Minimal — themes are lightweight by design
- Wordpress
- Varies — each plugin adds its own scripts
Optimization Required
- Ghost
- None for most sites
- Wordpress
- Caching plugin, image optimization, asset minification, CDN setup
Core Web Vitals
- Ghost
- Passes all three by default on most themes
- Wordpress
- Requires active optimization to pass consistently
Membership comparison
Built-in — enable memberships, connect Stripe, create tiers. Takes minutes.
- Aspect
- Setup Process
- Wordpress
- Requires membership plugin installation and configuration (MemberPress, Restrict Content Pro, etc.).
0% platform fees — only Stripe processing fees apply.
- Aspect
- Transaction Fees
- Wordpress
- Plugin-dependent — most charge annual license fees ($99–$399/year) plus Stripe fees.
Native — posts publish to both web and email simultaneously with audience segmentation.
- Aspect
- Newsletter Integration
- Wordpress
- Requires third-party ESP (Mailchimp, ConvertKit) or plugin integration.
Built-in member dashboard with segmentation and analytics.
- Aspect
- Subscriber Management
- Wordpress
- Plugin-dependent — varies significantly by plugin choice.
Native — public, members-only, and paid-member tiers available per post.
- Aspect
- Content Gating
- Wordpress
- Plugin-dependent — varies by membership plugin used.
Pros and cons
Pros
- Native newsletters and memberships — no plugins needed
- Zero platform fees on paid subscriptions
- Fast by default — no optimization plugins required
- Minimal security attack surface — no plugin vulnerabilities
- Low maintenance — managed hosting handles updates automatically
- Clean, distraction-free editorial experience
- Modern Node.js architecture with built-in CDN and SSL
- Strong support for multiple newsletters and member segmentation
Cons
- No plugin ecosystem — limited extensibility
- No ecommerce for physical products
- Smaller developer and freelancer pool
- Simpler user roles for large editorial teams
- Fewer themes compared to WordPress
- Handlebars theming requires learning for deep customization
Choose Ghost if
- Publishing content is your primary business activity
- You want native newsletters without third-party tools
- You plan to monetize through paid subscriptions or memberships
- You value speed, security, and low maintenance overhead
- You want a clean, distraction-free editorial workflow
- You prefer predictable all-in-one pricing
- You are building a newsletter-first publication
- You want to own your subscriber list and data completely
- You prefer modern Node.js architecture over PHP
Choose the other platform if
- You need a full ecommerce store with product catalogs and inventory
- You require complex custom functionality or extensive integrations
- You are building a multi-purpose website (blog + store + forum + LMS)
- You need granular user roles and permissions for large teams
- You rely on specific plugins that have no Ghost equivalent
- You have dedicated technical resources for ongoing maintenance
- You want maximum design flexibility through page builders
- You are building a corporate or enterprise website, not a publication
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FAQ
Is Ghost or WordPress better for newsletters?
Ghost is significantly better for newsletters because email delivery is built into the core platform. You write once and publish to both web and email simultaneously, with native audience segmentation and subscriber management. WordPress requires a newsletter plugin or external ESP integration (Mailchimp, ConvertKit), adding cost, complexity, and maintenance. For newsletter-first publishers, Ghost removes an entire category of tooling and integration work.
Can I sell paid subscriptions on both platforms?
Yes, but the approach differs substantially. Ghost includes native paid memberships with Stripe integration and charges zero platform fees — you only pay Stripe's processing fees (typically 2.9% + $0.30). WordPress requires membership plugins like MemberPress ($179-$399/year) or Restrict Content Pro ($99-$249/year) plus payment gateway plugins. Ghost's subscription setup takes minutes; WordPress requires plugin installation, configuration, and ongoing maintenance.
Which platform is faster?
Ghost is faster by default. Built on Node.js with a lightweight codebase and no plugin bloat, Ghost typically scores 85-95 on PageSpeed Insights without any optimization. WordPress defaults score 40-60 without caching plugins and performance tuning. An optimized WordPress site on quality hosting can match Ghost's performance, but achieving that requires expertise in caching, asset optimization, and plugin management. Ghost simply gets you there with zero effort.
Is Ghost more secure than WordPress?
Ghost is more secure by default due to its deliberate architectural choices. Ghost has no plugin system, eliminating the primary attack vector — plugin vulnerabilities. In 2025, 11,334 new vulnerabilities were found in the WordPress ecosystem, with 91% coming from plugins. Approximately 13,000 WordPress sites are hacked daily. A well-maintained WordPress site with security plugins and regular updates can be secure, but most WordPress sites are not properly maintained. Ghost's smaller attack surface and automatic updates provide stronger default security for publishers without dedicated security resources.
Which is cheaper: Ghost or WordPress?
It depends on your use case. For a simple blog, WordPress is cheaper — shared hosting at $50-$100/year with a free theme. For a publication with newsletters and paid memberships, Ghost is cheaper — Ghost(Pro) starts at $29/month with everything included (hosting, CDN, SSL, newsletters, memberships), versus $120-$220/month for WordPress with the required membership, email, SEO, and security plugins. Factor in maintenance time: WordPress typically requires more ongoing technical attention for updates, security patches, and plugin compatibility.
Can I migrate from WordPress to Ghost without losing SEO?
Yes. Ghost provides a WordPress migration tool that imports posts, pages, authors, and images cleanly. Preserve your URL structure and set up 301 redirects for any changed paths to maintain SEO equity. Custom pages, shortcodes, and plugin-dependent features will need manual recreation in Ghost. Many publishers report stable or improved SEO performance after migrating due to Ghost's superior page speed and clean code structure.
Does Ghost have plugins like WordPress?
No — Ghost does not have a plugin system. This is a deliberate design choice that improves security and performance. Instead, Ghost relies on native features, API integrations, webhooks, Zapier, and custom code injections. If your site requires functionality beyond publishing, memberships, and newsletters, WordPress's plugin ecosystem is the better fit. Ghost's philosophy is to keep the core lean and focused.
Which platform is better for teams?
WordPress offers more granular user roles (Super Admin, Administrator, Editor, Author, Contributor, Subscriber) and supports complex editorial workflows with approval chains — better for large editorial teams. Ghost has simpler roles (Owner, Administrator, Editor, Author, Contributor) that work well for small teams and independent creators but lack the depth for enterprise editorial operations. For lean content teams and solo creators, Ghost's simplicity is often an advantage rather than a limitation.
Can I run ecommerce on Ghost?
Ghost supports Stripe subscription payments for memberships and digital content, but does not support ecommerce for physical products. If you need a full online store with product catalogs, shopping carts, and inventory management, WordPress with WooCommerce is the correct choice. Some Ghost publishers use third-party tools like Gumroad, Shopify Buy Buttons, or Stripe Payment Links for limited product sales, but Ghost is fundamentally a publishing platform, not an ecommerce system.
What happens if I outgrow Ghost?
Ghost scales well for publishing — Ghost(Pro) handles millions of page views and hundreds of thousands of members on its enterprise plan. If you need functionality Ghost does not offer (like ecommerce or complex directories), you can run Ghost alongside other tools via API integrations. However, if your needs fundamentally shift away from publishing, migrating content from Ghost to WordPress is possible using JSON export tools, though memberships and subscriber data require separate handling.
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