Several types of caching can be used on WordPress websites, including object caching, static caching, dynamic caching, and full-page caching. As you decide which WordPress hosting service to use, you’ll see these different terms thrown around, which can be very confusing. This article will review the different types of caching and how it affects your website.
read moreHostinger is one of the most popular WordPress hosting companies, and for good reason. Hostinger offers a comprehensive suite of performance and hosting features while keeping its prices very reasonable. With data centers worldwide, access to a global CDN, and support in 10 languages, Hostinger is a wonderful hosting company no matter where you or your customers are in the world.
read moreGoDaddy is the Big Daddy of domain names. Even people not head-deep in web hosting have heard of GoDaddy, especially for registering domain names. But how does GoDaddy perform with WordPress Hosting?
read moreWP Engine is one of the major players in WordPress hosting, claiming that 8% of people visit a website hosted by WP Engine on a daily basis. WP Engine offers some of the most robust WordPress hosting features and is geared towards mid-level and higher websites. In this review post, we will detail WP Engine’s services, how they performed on our performance benchmarks and speed tests, and our overall ranking of their web hosting services.
read moreIonos Managed WordPress Hosting plans are geared towards beginner WordPress websites, in our opinion. In this review post, we will detail Ionos’s WordPress services, how they performed on our performance benchmarks and speed tests, and our overall ranking of their web hosting services.
read moreEasyWP’s services are based on their name: make it easy to set up a WordPress website. Owned by NameCheap, EasyWP is geared toward beginner WordPress websites that want an inexpensive WordPress hosting solution without needing the bells and whistles. If you want to get your simple WordPress website up and running without any fuss, then EasyWP is a good contender.
read moreSiteGround is a Bulgarian web-hosting company with offices in the United States, United Kingdom, Spain, and Cyprus. SiteGround started in 2004 and has grown exponentially. SiteGround claims they have a 98% customer satisfaction rating and host over 2.8 million domains. Plus, we were quite impressed to see that they have a positive testimonial from Joost de Valk, the founder of Yoast.com. Wow!
read morePressable started WordPress hosting in 2010, but Automattic later acquired the company. If Automattic sounds familiar to you, they also own WordPress.com, Jetpack, and WooCommerce. Having a seamlessly integrated WordPress experience with Jetpack and WooCommerce excited us – if you already use Jetpack and WooCommerce, why not use their WordPress hosting?
read moreIf we could sum up WPBuzz in one word, it would be “simplicity.” Not that WPBuzz offers a simple WordPress hosting plan – quite the opposite, WPBuzz has many amazing features that higher-end web hosts also include. But unlike other hosting providers that offer a myriad of plans and contract options, WPBuzz only offers two plans: a plan for one website and a plan for up to 50 websites. You don’t need to spend hours guessing which plan is best for you.
read moreWe really liked Kinsta’s plethora of optimization and performance features, which are really catered to delivering strong WordPress performance. If you need or want top-tier performance, Kinsta is a solid choice.
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