Hosting review sites rarely ask this question because the answer can eliminate the hosting bill entirely. We'll ask it anyway: WordPress runs a huge share of the internet, but a large slice of small-business sites would be faster, cheaper and safer without it. Here's the honest decision tree.
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1. WordPress (self-hosted)
Choose WordPress when the site changes constantly — publishing, products, members, bookings — or when non-technical people must edit it through a friendly admin. That flexibility is why it dominates; it comes with updates, security and hosting to manage.
Visit WordPress (self-hosted) →●
2. Static site (Netlify/Cloudflare)
A plumber's site, a restaurant's menu page, a consultant's five-pager — these change quarterly, not daily. Built as static files, they're faster than any WordPress site, unhackable in the usual ways, and free to host. Updates require editing files (or a helper), which is the honest tradeoff.
Visit Static site (Netlify/Cloudflare) →●
3. Website builders (Wix/Squarespace)
All-in-one: hosting, editing, templates, support in one bill. Costs more monthly than WordPress hosting and flexes less, but nothing is ever your technical problem. A fair trade for many owner-operators.
Visit Website builders (Wix/Squarespace) →●
4. Shopify
If 90% of the site's job is selling products, a commerce platform beats assembling commerce onto a content system. See our ecommerce hosting guide for the full WooCommerce-vs-Shopify math.
Visit Shopify →The one-minute decision tree
- Will the site change weekly or more? No → static site, free hosting, done.
- Is it primarily a store? Yes → Shopify vs WooCommerce question (our ecommerce guide).
- Do non-technical people need to edit it easily? Yes → WordPress on good hosting, or a builder if you want zero maintenance.
- Everything else → WordPress remains the sensible default, and our hosting rankings apply.
Frequently asked questions
Is WordPress overkill for a small business site?
Often, yes — a 5-page site that changes twice a year runs better and cheaper as a static site. WordPress earns its keep when content changes constantly.
What's the downside of skipping WordPress?
Editing requires touching files or using a developer/AI assistant instead of a friendly admin dashboard. For rarely-updated sites, that trade is worth it.
Can I switch later?
Yes in both directions — static-to-WordPress is easy; WordPress-to-static is a common performance upgrade for sites that stopped changing. (AI tools now make static sites easier to build and maintain than ever — our sister site AIToolDecks reviews them.)