If you’re asking how much does WordPress cost a year, you’re already thinking the right way—because the real cost isn’t just “WordPress is free.” The yearly budget comes from essentials like hosting and a domain, plus optional upgrades like premium themes, plugins, and maintenance.
In this guide, you’ll get a realistic annual breakdown so you can plan a budget that fits your site—whether you’re launching a simple business website or managing an online store.
If you want a predictable plan and a site built for performance, explore our WordPress Website Design & Development.

Your annual cost depends heavily on which WordPress you’re using:
WordPress.com (hosted)
Self-hosted WordPress (WordPress.org)
If you want the flexibility to grow (SEO, custom landing pages, integrations), self-hosted is often the better long-term option—especially when paired with SEO & content support for long-term visibility.
External references for search and website fundamentals:
These are the “baseline” yearly costs most sites should plan for:
Domain (yearly)
Hosting (yearly)
SSL
Business email
Budget tip: Don’t choose hosting based on price alone. Cheap hosting can cost you more later in downtime, slow load speeds, and security cleanup.
If your site is a key growth channel, consider connecting it to ongoing tracking and optimization via Performance & Growth so you know what’s working—not just what’s live.
External resources that cover performance and site fundamentals:
Optional costs are where budgets can range widely. You may spend nothing here—or invest in paid tools to save time and improve quality.
Themes
Plugins
Page builders
Rule of thumb: pay for tools that (1) replace manual work, (2) improve performance/security, or (3) directly support leads/sales.
For lead capture and newsletter basics, Mailchimp is a popular starting point. If you want automated nurture sequences and follow-ups, see Email Marketing & Automation.
A standard business website and an e-commerce store don’t have the same annual cost—because stores have more moving parts (payments, customer data, shipping/tax rules, and more frequent updates).
Typical yearly budget categories (what changes most):
If you’re considering e-commerce on WordPress, it helps to understand the platform ecosystem through WooCommerce, and compare hosted store approaches via Shopify—even if you ultimately choose WordPress.
If your store needs customer follow-up automations or CRM syncing, CRM Integration can help connect inquiries, purchases, and pipeline data in one place.
Maintenance is the part many site owners forget to budget for—until something breaks.
Annual maintenance typically includes:
Even small sites benefit from maintenance because outdated plugins are one of the most common causes of security problems and site issues.
If you want structured tracking and improvement after launch, consider Performance & Growth so you can make decisions based on real performance—not guesses.
External references for quality and search readiness:
Here’s a quick way to estimate your yearly WordPress cost without overthinking it:
Step 1: Choose your WordPress type
Step 2: Add essentials
Step 3: Add “must-have” tools
Step 4: Add “business growth” tools (only if needed)
Step 5: Add maintenance
If you want help estimating your real total cost based on your site goals and feature needs, start with our WordPress Website Design & Development or reach out via our Contact Us page.