WordPress vs Custom-Coded Website: Which Should You Choose?
We get asked this question constantly. And the honest answer is: it depends — but probably not in the way you think.
The Case for WordPress
WordPress powers 43% of the web for a reason. Here's what it genuinely excels at:
Content management at scale. If your marketing team publishes blog posts, landing pages, and case studies without developer help, WordPress's admin UI is unmatched. Non-technical editors can work independently.
Ecosystem maturity. Thousands of plugins solve problems that would take weeks to build from scratch — forms, SEO, e-commerce, memberships, analytics. Most are battle-tested across millions of installs.
Total cost of ownership. A well-built WordPress site costs a fraction of custom development upfront, and maintenance is straightforward.
The catch: WordPress's flexibility invites abuse. Cheap themes, too many plugins, and no performance strategy produce the slow, hacked-up sites that give WordPress a bad reputation. The platform is only as good as the team building on it.
The Case for Custom Development
Custom code wins when:
- You have genuinely complex, unique business logic (custom workflows, unusual data models, real-time features)
- You need an application more than a website — something with authenticated user states, complex permissions, integrations with proprietary systems
- Performance is critical at a scale where even optimised WordPress can't keep up
Custom also wins for long-lived products where the codebase needs to evolve rapidly. WordPress's plugin model becomes a liability when you're making deep architectural changes frequently.
Our Honest Take
Most businesses asking this question would be better served by WordPress — but not generic WordPress. They need WordPress built properly:
- Custom theme (no page builders)
- Minimal, purposeful plugins
- Performance-first from day one
- Proper staging and deployment workflow
The businesses that genuinely need custom development are fewer than they think, and usually already know it because their requirements are visibly complex.
If you're a founder building a marketing site, a portfolio, or a content-heavy product — WordPress done well will outperform a rushed custom build every time.
Not sure which fits your project? We're happy to talk it through — no obligation, just honest advice.
