Plans and pricing: Startup to Scale
The Essential range runs across four tiers on annual billing. Startup is roughly $30/mo for 1 site, 25,000 visits/mo and 10 GB storage (75 GB/mo bandwidth). Professional is about $55/mo for 3 sites, 75,000 visits and 15 GB. Growth is around $109/mo for 10 sites, 100,000 visits and 20 GB. Scale sits at about $276/mo for 30 sites, 400,000 visits and 50 GB (550 GB/mo bandwidth).
Above Essential sits Core (dedicated/isolated), advertised as "starting at $400/mo" with isolated resources, NitroPack, senior support and a published 99.99% uptime SLA. Core pricing is quote-based, and notably that 99.99% SLA is published only on Core — there is no specific numeric SLA shown for the shared-resource Essential tiers.
One caveat to anchor on: those $30/$55/$109/$276 figures are first-year effective monthly rates on annual billing for new customers. WP Engine states renewal pricing is subject to change and does not publish the renewal numbers, so budget for an increase you cannot see in advance. Month-to-month billing costs more than these annual-effective rates.
Visit caps and the $2/1,000 overage
WP Engine prices by monthly visits, and the caps are hard: 25,000 on Startup, 75,000 on Professional, 100,000 on Growth and 400,000 on Scale. Exceed your allocation and you are billed $2 per 1,000 extra visits across every Essential tier.
This is the single biggest budgeting risk here. A traffic spike — a viral post, a campaign, a seasonal rush — translates directly into a higher bill rather than a slowdown. If your traffic is lumpy or hard to predict, model your worst month, not your average one. A site that occasionally doubles its visits can quietly cost far more than the sticker plan suggests, which is a different cost model from the flat-rate or generous-bandwidth shared hosts.
Storage is also modest for the money: 10 GB on Startup rising to just 50 GB on Scale, with per-tier bandwidth caps alongside the visit caps.
Performance and platform: EverCache, CDN, staging and Git
Every Essential plan includes WP Engine's proprietary EverCache caching layer, a global CDN, auto-renewing SSL and Layer 3+4 DDoS protection. That is a genuinely capable managed stack on paper, and it is consistent across the range — the lower tiers are not stripped of the caching and CDN that make the platform worth its price.
For developers and agencies, the platform leans on one-click staging plus Git-based and SSH workflows, so you can build, test on a staging copy and push to production without DIY server administration. Daily automated backups with 40-day retention are included on every tier, which is a long retention window relative to many competitors.
The platform is managed and opinionated. WP Engine enforces a plugin disallow list — caching, backup and certain security or performance plugins that conflict with its stack are blocked — because the host handles those functions itself. That keeps the environment stable, but if you rely on a specific blocked plugin, confirm it is permitted before you migrate.
Support and the 60-day guarantee
Support tiers up with price. Startup is chat-based; phone support becomes available from the Professional tier and up, with Core adding fast-track senior support. If live phone help matters to you, factor in that you need at least the ~$55/mo Professional plan to get it.
WP Engine also states a 60-day money-back guarantee on annual plans, which is longer than the 14-to-30-day windows common among competitors and gives you a real runway to migrate a site, test EverCache and the staging workflow, and decide before committing. Pair that with the included free migration plugin and you can evaluate the platform with your actual site rather than a demo. Note the guarantee is company-stated and applies to annual plans.
Who should skip WP Engine
Hobby sites, personal blogs and tight-budget projects are the wrong fit. The cheapest WP Engine plan is around $30/mo for a single site and 25,000 visits — and there is no email hosting included. If you are running a low-traffic personal site, that is a lot to pay for managed polish you may not use.
For those cases the data points to far cheaper options on our comparison: Hostinger and SiteGround both start near $2.99/mo, and Bluehost around $3.99/mo, for entry shared WordPress hosting. Cloudways, another managed option, starts around $11/mo if you want managed infrastructure without WP Engine's price floor. Compare renewal terms carefully on any of these, since intro pricing jumps are common across the category.
The honest line: WP Engine earns its premium for agencies and businesses that value managed support, staging and predictable infrastructure — and can stay within (or budget for) the visit caps. For everyone else, it is overkill.
The verdict
WP Engine is a strong, opinionated managed-WordPress platform for the audience it targets: agencies juggling multiple client sites, and business sites that want EverCache, a global CDN, one-click staging, Git/SSH workflows and 40-day daily backups without running their own servers. The clear Startup-to-Scale ladder, phone support from Professional up, and a generous company-stated 60-day money-back guarantee on annual plans make it a credible pick if you can work within its constraints.
But the constraints are real and worth naming. The ~$30/mo floor buys just one site and 25,000 visits with no email; storage is modest for the price; the headline rates are first-year intro pricing with undisclosed renewals; and the hard visit caps at $2 per 1,000 overage turn traffic spikes into bigger bills. Hobby and low-budget sites should skip it and look at Hostinger, SiteGround or Bluehost (from ~$2.99–$3.99/mo) or Cloudways (~$11/mo). It is the right tool for managed business hosting, the wrong one for a personal blog.