Enterprise WordPress hosting: which one actually fits your site?
Kinsta, WP Engine, Pressable, Cloudways - 4 questions, one match.
Quick fit matrix
| Scenario | Best fit | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Under 50k visits, price-sensitive | Cloudways | VPS-backed managed WordPress, pay for what you use |
| 50-250k visits, agency or SaaS | Kinsta | Best mix of speed, support, multisite mgmt; GCP infra |
| 250k+ WooCommerce / enterprise | WP Engine | Strong WooCommerce tooling; enterprise support SLAs |
| Automattic ecosystem / Jetpack-heavy | Pressable | Native Automattic stack, Jetpack bundled |
| Publisher with 1M+ visits | Kinsta / WP Engine Enterprise | Talk to sales; custom CDN, premium support |
What breaks first when you stay on shared hosting
- Uncached TTFB climbs past 800ms at ~50k visits/mo.
- WooCommerce checkout timeouts on sale days.
- Database query limits (most shared hosts cap concurrent SQL).
- Staging and backup stop being self-serve.
FAQ
- Is Kinsta or WP Engine faster?
- Kinsta tends to win uncached TTFB in independent benchmarks; WP Engine wins on WooCommerce-specific tuning. The gap is small enough that support quality and control panel UX dominate the real decision.
- Can I migrate without downtime?
- All four offer free or assisted migrations for new customers. The practical bottleneck is DNS cutover, not the host.
- Why not just run VPS yourself?
- If you have 0.5+ FTE DevOps dedicated, self-managed VPS can be cheaper. Below that, managed WordPress is usually the better labor arbitrage.