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WordPress Development Blog

Expert tips, tutorials, and insights for WordPress developers.

WordCamp Europe 2026: what Kraków says about the future of WordPress

WordCamp Europe 2026: what Kraków says about the future of WordPress

From the room in Kraków and from the hard data: WordPress has slipped below 42 percent share and is losing for the sixth month running. The decline hits products, not services, and the smart move is migration readiness and a modern stack, not flight.

How to choose a WordPress agency: what to look for when you commission a site or store

A buyer's guide: agency, freelancer or in-house team, what questions to ask before signing, how to judge performance and security, and who owns the rights to the code, design and content once the project is done.

WooCommerce plugins: which ones you actually need and which just bog your store down

A practical guide to WooCommerce plugins: payments, shipping and invoicing, performance, supply-chain security, and when a paid plugin pays for itself faster than a free one.

WordPress 7.1 real-time collaboration: the second attempt, the FSE-style outreach program, and the eight-week deadline

WordPress 7.1 real-time collaboration: the second attempt, the FSE-style outreach program, and the eight-week deadline

Real-time collaboration was pulled from WordPress 7.0 two weeks before release. Anne McCarthy and the contributor team are now running an FSE-style outreach program to get it ready for WordPress 7.1 on August 19. We break down the database problem, the testing strategy, and what agencies should expect.

Review Signal 2026 WordPress hosting benchmarks: what three years of silence changed and which hosts won

Review Signal 2026 WordPress hosting benchmarks: what three years of silence changed and which hosts won

Kevin Ohashi's Review Signal benchmarks returned in 2026 after a three-year gap, powered by a brand-new open-source load-testing platform. We break down the five price tiers plus WooCommerce, name the winners, name the hosts who sat it out, and translate the data for European agencies.

WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakow wrap-up: 2,442 attendees from 81 countries, view from the Budget Team, and Malaga 2027

WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakow wrap-up: 2,442 attendees from 81 countries, view from the Budget Team, and Malaga 2027

WordCamp Europe 2026 in Krakow drew 2,442 attendees from 81 countries and 779 contributors across 26 teams. A view from inside the WCEU Budget Team, the CERN keynote, the new meetup signals from Italy, Spain, and Costa Rica, the Local Team that made it work, and what Malaga 2027 means.

More Articles

The AI Act and labelling AI-generated content

The AI Act and labelling AI-generated content

From 2 August 2026, Article 50 of the AI Act imposes transparency duties on companies that use AI. What you actually have to label, when editorial review lifts the obligation, and how to put two layers of labelling into practice for media, marketing and agencies.

Why shipping an MCP server in your WordPress plugin is the AI move that survives

Why shipping an MCP server in your WordPress plugin is the AI move that survives

Metorik founder Bryce Adams told WP Product Talk that the company's MCP integration drew 500 users within days of a quiet preview launch, faster than any feature he has shipped in ten years. He also said customers churning out of Metorik have an average MRR 40 percent lower than retained ones, suggesting AI is taking the commodity use cases, not the core ones. GravityKit just open-sourced Block MCP for block-level WordPress edits. The pattern is clear: in 2026, the plugin that ships an MCP server is the one that compounds. The plugin that bolts a chat box onto its admin is the one that gets cannibalised.

53 percent of WordPress sites run unpatched CVEs: GuardingWP 2026 audit

53 percent of WordPress sites run unpatched CVEs: GuardingWP 2026 audit

GuardingWP's inaugural State of WordPress Security 2026 report scanned 424 confirmed WordPress installs across 40-plus verticals. The headline finding is that more than half ship at least one plugin with a known unpatched CVE. Patchstack founder Oliver Sild said WordPress 7.0 will trigger an "absolute rush by hackers to steal API keys." This article reads both as evidence that the plugin economy is the structural problem and NIS2 plus DORA already encode the fix.

NIS2 and DORA on WordPress: what a site must meet in 2026

NIS2 and DORA on WordPress: what a site must meet in 2026

The NIS2 Directive (2022/2555) was to be transposed into national law by 2024-10-17. The DORA Regulation (2022/2554) applies directly from 2025-01-17. For a WordPress site operator this means specific obligations if the site relates to a regulated entity. We explain it without panic, with references to the texts of the acts.

WordPress 7.0 Armstrong shipped: AI infrastructure, Abilities API, and what actually changed

WordPress 7.0 Armstrong shipped: AI infrastructure, Abilities API, and what actually changed

WordPress 7.0 codenamed Armstrong shipped in May 2026 with foundational AI infrastructure (Abilities API, AI Services Registry, AI Client), a modernised dashboard, Command Palette everywhere, block-level custom CSS and the Icons block. Real-time collaboration was removed during the release-candidate cycle. This guide is the post-release recap of what changed, what to test, and what to wire up.

Core pathways

Start from the strongest topic pillar

This section routes users and crawlers into the service pages and topic archives that carry the strongest WordPress, SEO, and performance clusters.