Both host the same WordPress site. One costs ~$3/month, the other $20-30+. The difference isn't the site — it's who does the work and what happens on the worst day. Here's the honest breakdown of what 5-8x buys.
At a glance
| Shared hosting | Managed hosting | |
|---|---|---|
| Examples | Hostinger, Bluehost, Namecheap | WP Engine, Kinsta |
| Typical price | ~$3-10/mo | ~$20-35+/mo per site |
| Who maintains WordPress | You | Them |
| Performance | Good to very good | Consistently excellent |
| Security | Basics; you harden it | Actively managed, malware handled |
| Staging environments | Sometimes | Standard |
| Support depth | General hosting help | WordPress specialists |
What managed actually removes from your plate
Updates that might break the site (they test), security hardening and malware cleanup (their problem), backups and restores (automatic), performance tuning (built-in), and 'it's broken' panic (specialists on chat). Managed hosting is not faster shared hosting — it's an outsourced WordPress operations department.
The upgrade signals
Move to managed when any of these are true: the site produces income you'd genuinely miss; you've paid a developer more than the price gap to fix something; downtime during a launch would hurt; or you're spending real hours monthly on maintenance you resent. No signal? Shared hosting is the correct financial decision — most sites never need to graduate.
The verdict
Shared is right for most sites, most of the time — the industry's dirty secret is that good shared hosting (Hostinger, SiteGround) covers 90% of small sites forever. Managed is right the moment the site is genuinely revenue-critical. Pay for it as insurance and expertise, not speed.
Frequently asked questions
Is managed WordPress hosting worth it?
When the site earns real money or your time is the scarcest resource — yes. Otherwise premium shared hosting covers you.
Is managed hosting just faster shared hosting?
No — the speed is part of it, but the product is maintenance, security and expert support done for you.
What's the middle ground?
Two options: premium shared (SiteGround) or managed cloud (Cloudways) — both deliver part of the managed experience at part of the price.