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Managed WordPress Hosting, per Visit

Two plans at $30 can include 35,000 visits or 250,000. The sticker price hides that, so this ranks managed WordPress hosts by cost per 1,000 monthly visits, the real measure of value, alongside storage and how many sites you can run.

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Sorted by cost per 1,000 visits, best first. Tap a column heading to re-rank.
$ / 1,000 visits ▲HostPrice/moMonthly visitsStorageSitesBest for

Indicative entry-plan pricing (annual billing) as last reviewed 11 July 2026. Visit caps and promos change; some hosts renew higher after the first term, confirm before buying. Resource-based hosts (no visit cap) are shown as unmetered and ranked last on cost per visit.

How to read this. Cost per 1,000 visits = monthly price divided by the plan's visit allowance. It is the fairest value measure because managed plans are capped by traffic, and two similarly priced hosts can differ tenfold in headroom. But weigh it against features: premium hosts (Kinsta, WP Engine) cost more per visit yet lead on speed, staging and support. Unmetered hosts like Cloudways bill by server resources instead of visits.
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Best value managed WordPress host?

On cost per visit, Rocket.net leads among premium hosts, about 10x the traffic headroom of Kinsta or WP Engine for a similar price. Budget hosts (Hostinger) are cheaper per visit with fewer premium features. Sort by "$/1,000 visits" above.

What if I go over my visit limit?

Most hosts charge an overage per extra 1,000 visits or push an upgrade, which is why generous headroom can be cheaper overall than a cheap plan you keep overshooting. Cloudways and a few others have no visit cap.

Managed vs regular hosting?

For business sites, managed usually wins: updates, backups, caching, security and staging handled, tuned for WordPress speed. Regular shared hosting is cheaper but more DIY and often slower.