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WordPress and Webflow Alternatives for Agencies (Honest 2026 Roundup)

Most alternatives roundups are written for solo site owners. This one is for agencies that build and host client sites: an honest look at Webflow, Framer, Wix Studio, Ghost, headless, staying on WordPress, and owning your platform.

Andrew Lee Jenkins9 min readMigrations
WordPress and Webflow Alternatives for Agencies (Honest 2026 Roundup)

I read a lot of these roundups before I switched my agency off WordPress, and almost all of them are written for the wrong person. They rank a dozen builders by how easy they are for a small-business owner to make one site. Wix is easiest, Squarespace has the prettiest templates, Webflow is for designers, Framer has AI. Fine. But that is not my problem, and if you build and host client sites for a living, it is not yours either.

An agency does not pick a platform to make one site. We pick it to make and maintain dozens, hand them to clients, host them, and still be making money on each one three years later. That changes which questions matter. So here is the roundup I wish I had found: the real WordPress and Webflow alternatives, judged on what they actually do for agency client work, named fairly, and priced for the per-site economics that actually decide it.

The questions a roundup for agencies should ask

Ease of use barely makes my list. Here is what I care about when I am choosing the thing I am going to build a hundred client sites on:

  • Per-site economics. Does the price scale with my client count, or is it flat? A $19/mo site plan is nothing on one site and a mortgage payment across fifty.
  • White-label. Can I hand a client an editor with my brand on it, not someone else's logo in the corner?
  • Maintenance load. When I am not touching a site, is it costing me time? Plugins, updates, and security patches scale with the portfolio.
  • Client handoff. Can a non-technical client safely edit their own copy without breaking the layout or calling me?
  • Ownership and lock-in. If the vendor triples the price or shuts down, do I own anything, or do I start over?

Hold every option up to those five and the list reshuffles completely. I already wrote the long version of why I left WordPress specifically. If you want the plugin-tax and security-treadmill argument in detail, read why agencies are leaving WordPress in 2026. This post is the wider field: where you actually go next.

The hosted design tools: Webflow, Framer, Wix Studio

These are the obvious WordPress and Webflow alternatives, and I want to be fair to them because they are genuinely good at what they do. Webflow gives you real design control with clean output and a solid CMS. Framer is fast, the AI is useful, and for a marketing site it is a joy to build in. Wix Studio is Wix's serious answer for agencies, with a much better editor and proper client handoff than old Wix ever had.

If you build a handful of high-craft sites a year and you want to live inside one polished tool, any of these can be the right answer, and at that volume their per-site price never stings.

The catch is the same for all three, and it is the catch this whole post is about: you are renting, per site, forever. Every client site carries its own plan. The bill grows in lockstep with your portfolio, and the day you stop paying, the site goes dark. You also do not own the platform. When the vendor changes pricing or kills a feature, you find out the same morning your clients do. Great tools, but the economics are built for them, not for you.

The publishing pick: Ghost

Ghost is the one alternative on most lists that I actually respect as an ownership play. It is open source, you can self-host it, and it is genuinely excellent if the client is a publisher: a newsletter, a blog-forward brand, a membership site. Fast, clean, no plugin sprawl.

But be honest about the shape of it. Ghost is a publishing platform, not a general-purpose site builder for client work. The moment a client needs a real marketing site with service pages, a portfolio grid, and a layout that is not a blog, you are fighting the tool or bolting a front end onto it. For the right client it is a clean win. For a typical local-business build it is the wrong shape.

The build-it-yourself pick: headless and Payload

Going headless is the ultimate ownership answer. A Next.js front end with Payload, or any headless CMS, gives you total control, you own all the code, and there are no per-site platform fees at all. If you are a developer-led shop, this is a real and respectable path.

It also has a real cost, and glossing over it is how people end up resenting their own stack. You are building the site, the editing experience, and the deploy pipeline yourself, per project. There is no white-label client editor in the box. A non-technical client cannot safely touch a headless codebase. You traded per-site fees for per-site engineering time, and unless you have built a repeatable system on top, every new client starts closer to scratch than you would like.

Every alternative is a trade. Hosted tools cost you money that scales with clients. Build-it-yourself costs you time that scales with clients. The agency win is a platform where neither one does.

Just staying on WordPress (genuinely a valid answer)

I left WordPress, but I am not going to tell you it is dead, because it is not. The ecosystem is unmatched, it can build literally anything, and if you have a maintenance setup that already keeps your portfolio patched and fast without eating your week, you may not have a problem worth solving. Churning platforms for the sake of it is its own kind of waste.

The reason I moved is that the maintenance did eat my week, and it scaled with every client I added. Plugins to update, conflicts to chase, security patches across the whole portfolio, caching stacks to babysit so the pages stayed fast. If that describes your month, WordPress is the thing the rest of this list is an alternative to. If it does not, stay put with a clear conscience.

The agency-native SaaS: Duda

Duda deserves a mention because, unlike most of the names on the generic lists, it was actually built for agencies. White-label, client billing, team workflows, a reseller model. If you want a turnkey agency-in-a-box and you are happy to rent it, Duda does the agency-specific things Wix and Squarespace were never designed for.

And it is still a subscription, per site, forever. It solves the white-label and handoff problems and leaves the ownership and per-site-economics problems exactly where Webflow left them. Better fit for an agency than most. Same fundamental deal.

Own the platform: where I landed

After all of that, here is where I ended up. It is one answer, not the only one. I did not want another rented per-site platform, I did not want to hand-build every site from a blank headless repo, and I did not want the WordPress maintenance tax. So I built the thing in the gap: a self-hosted, white-label site builder I own outright, that outputs clean static client sites with no per-site fees. That is what I packaged as Seedly Sites.

The trade runs both ways. You run the CMS yourself, on your own host, for a flat monthly cost around twenty dollars. There is a real platform to operate, where a fully hosted SaaS hides that from you. In exchange, the per-site bill goes to zero, the editor wears your brand, the client sites ship as static HTML with nothing to patch, and the price you charge each client stays in your pocket instead of leaking back to a vendor every month.

Rent the platform

  • A plan or seat fee on every client site, forever
  • Vendor controls pricing, features, and your fate
  • Bill scales up with every client you add
  • Stop paying and the client sites go dark
  • White-label is a feature you keep paying for

Own the platform

  • Buy the license once, no per-site fees
  • You run it on infrastructure you control
  • Cost stays flat as the portfolio grows
  • Static client sites keep working regardless
  • White-label is the default, not an upsell

The number the other roundups never show you

For an agency, the per-site fee is the whole story, and it compounds. Same fifty client sites, same five years, three models:

What hosting 50 client sites costs over 5 years
Per-site SaaS at ~$20 to $29 per site / mo~$60,000
WordPress ~$600/mo server (up to 100 sites) + ~$745/yr subscriptions~$40,000
Own the platform one-time license + flat hosting$999 + ~$20/mo

The per-site SaaS line is the one the generic roundups never run, because their reader has one site, not fifty. Across a portfolio, a recurring per-site fee is the single biggest cost of the platform, and it grows every time you sell a site. A buy-once, self-hosted platform turns that forever-line into a one-time line.

That is not a knock on Webflow or Framer being overpriced per site. On one site they are cheap. It is a knock on the model: anything you pay per client site is a tax on your own growth, and the roundups aimed at solo owners will never tell you that, because for their reader it is true that it does not matter.

So which one should you actually pick?

I am not going to pretend the answer is always mine. Here is the decision tree:

  • Building a few high-craft sites a year and happy to rent a polished tool? Webflow or Framer. They are excellent and the per-site cost will not hurt you at that volume.
  • Client is a publisher, newsletter, or blog-first brand? Ghost. It is the right shape and you can own it.
  • Developer-led shop with the appetite to build and maintain your own system? Headless with Payload. Maximum control, if you can carry the engineering.
  • Maintenance under control and the ecosystem still serving you? Stay on WordPress. Do not churn for sport.
  • Want a turnkey white-label agency tool and fine renting it? Duda. Built for you, still a subscription.
  • Building and hosting many client sites and you want to own the platform with no per-site fees? That is the gap Seedly Sites was built for.

If you landed on that last line, the next step is to look at the trade up close. Compare the per-site model directly in the Seedly Sites vs Webflow and Seedly Sites vs WordPress breakdowns, see how the static hosting and performance works, and if you already run a portfolio you do not want to rebuild, read about the migration pipeline. Or skip the reading and try it live.

Every tool on this list is a real, defensible choice for the right agency. The only mistake is picking the one a roundup recommended to someone who was building one site, when you are building fifty.

Own your website platform.

One price, every client site, the full source. Say goodbye to slop, say hello to scale.

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