150+ WordPress Statistics – How Many Websites use WP?
Last updated: June 2026
WordPress powers 42.6% of all websites — but for the first time in over 20 years, that number is going down. Here are 150+ WordPress statistics covering market share, plugins, themes, security, performance, and the ecosystem economy for 2026.
Key WordPress Statistics (2026)
- 42.6% of all websites run WordPress — down from 43.6% peak in mid-2025 (W3Techs)
- 472-595 million WordPress websites globally (DemandSage)
- 59,000+ free plugins, 1 billion+ total downloads (WordPress.org)
- 11,334 security vulnerabilities in 2025 — up 42% YoY (Patchstack)
- $596.7 billion WordPress economy (WP Engine study)
- 4.17 million live WooCommerce stores (StoreLeads)
- 2.3 million blog posts published on WordPress every day (Kinsta)
WordPress Market Share & Usage

WordPress vs. Competitors

WordPress Plugin Statistics

- 59,000+ free plugins; 70,000+ total including premium
- 12,713 new plugins reviewed in 2025 — 40.6% increase over 2024
- Total downloads exceed 1 billion
- 80% of sites use at least one plugin; average site uses 12-15
WordPress Theme Statistics

- 14,000+ free themes; 12,000 premium on ThemeForest; 30,000+ total
- Divi is the most popular premium theme: 2.16 million live sites (BuiltWith)
- 60%+ of new themes use Full Site Editing; 90%+ are responsive
- Top Envato theme makers earn $10,000+/month
WordPress Version Adoption

- Only ~48% run a PHP version still receiving security patches
- 52 major releases, over 760 total — each named after jazz musicians
Gutenberg & Block Editor

- Adoption climbed to over 60%, up from 37% in 2020
- 19 million active installations; 157,000+ posts/day
- FSE grew 145% in 2025; 75%+ of new themes use it
- 4+ million Classic Editor installs — significant holdout base
Page Builder Market Share

WooCommerce & Ecommerce

WordPress Security Statistics

WordPress Performance

- Page weight grew 34% since 2016 — images 56%, JavaScript 30%
- 53% of mobile visitors leave if load exceeds 3 seconds
WordPress Hosting & Costs

- Custom WP design: $500-$52,800+; developers charge $20-$150/hour
- A quarter of WordPress users make a full-time living from the CMS
WordPress Economic Impact

- Ecosystem valued at $596.7 billion
- Automattic revenue: ~$710 million (2024)
- Enterprise users: White House, BBC, TechCrunch, Sony, Bloomberg
- Used in 190+ countries
WordPress Community

- 990 WordCamps across 73 cities in 65 countries
- 740+ meetup groups, 370,900+ members
- 22,000+ contributors to WordPress core
Key Takeaways
Sources
Frequently Asked Questions
How many websites use WordPress in 2026?
42.6% of all websites run WordPress — an estimated 472-595 million sites. It holds 59.9% market share among sites using a CMS.
Is WordPress losing market share?
Yes. WordPress peaked at 43.6% in mid-2025 and has declined to 42.6%. SaaS builders like Wix (+32.6% YoY) and Shopify are growing at WordPress’s expense.
How many WordPress plugins are there?
59,000+ free plugins in the WordPress.org directory and 70,000+ total. The Plugin Team reviewed 12,713 new plugins in 2025 — a 40.6% increase.
Is WordPress secure?
WordPress core is very secure (only 6 vulnerabilities in 2025). The ecosystem had 11,334 total, with 91% in plugins. Keep everything updated and use a security plugin.
How much does a WordPress website cost?
Basic site: $500-$3,000. Custom design: up to $52,800+. Developers charge $20-$100/hour; headless specialists $100-$150/hour. WordPress itself is free.
What is the WordPress economy worth?
$596.7 billion including hosting, themes, plugins, development, and businesses built on WordPress. Automattic generates ~$710 million annually.
What percentage of the internet uses WordPress?
42.6% of all detectable websites. Enterprise users include the White House, BBC, TechCrunch, Sony, and Bloomberg.
For the full CMS landscape, see our CMS Market Share deep dive. Browse our free WordPress themes or Tailwind CSS templates.
Was this article helpful?
YesNo

