Pressable vs Cloudways: Which Host is Right For Your Site?

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I’ve worked with both Pressable (Current web host) and Cloudways (paid 2 years of invoices), and while they both fall under “managed hosting,” they take very different approaches. 

Pressable focuses entirely on WordPress and WooCommerce, offering a straightforward platform that’s built for speed, security, and ease of use. 

Cloudways, on the other hand, is a “semi” managed cloud hosting platform that gives you more control, flexibility, and options to choose from multiple cloud providers like DigitalOcean, Linode, Vultr, Google Cloud, and AWS.

If you’re a beginner, an agency owner, or running an online store, you’ve probably come across both names while researching the best hosting for WordPress. 

The problem is that on paper, both look great, but in real-world use, they serve very different types of users.

In this comparison of Pressable vs Cloudways, I’ll walk you through how they stack up in performance, features, ease of use, scalability, pricing, and support. 

I’ll also share my personal experience and observations. So by the end, you’ll know exactly which hosting is the better fit for your site’s needs.

With that out, let’s proceed. 

Quick Overview of Pressable and Cloudways

What is Pressable?

Pressable is a fully managed WordPress hosting platform owned by Automattic, the company behind WordPress.com and WooCommerce. 

That connection is important because it means Pressable is deeply integrated with WordPress at its core. 

The hosting environment is built specifically for WordPress sites, so you get server-level optimization without having to tweak anything yourself.

From your user dashboard, you can create new sites, manage staging environments, run backups, and troubleshoot some application-level issues without touching complicated server settings. 

Pressable also comes with Jetpack Security Daily pre-installed (free for all sites), which includes Akismet and VaultPress backup, and helps with malware scanning, WAF, and brute-force protection. 

It’s designed for people who want a “set it and forget it” approach – bloggers, small business owners, and agencies who prefer stability over constant configuration.

If you’ve ever used WordPress.com’s hosting but wanted more control and the ability to install any plugin or theme, Pressable feels like the next step up.

What is Cloudways?

Cloudways is a managed cloud hosting platform that sits between you and big cloud providers like DigitalOcean, Vultr, AWS, Google Cloud, and Linode. 

Instead of renting space on a shared WordPress server, you get a dedicated slice of cloud infrastructure that you can scale up or down based on traffic.

Cloudways handles server setup, security patches, backups, and performance tuning, so you don’t have to manage everything from scratch. 

But compared to Pressable, Cloudways gives you more technical freedom; you can run multiple CMSs, custom apps, and manage server configurations. 

That flexibility is a big win for developers, agencies, and e-commerce businesses that expect their hosting needs to grow or change over time.

The trade-off is that Cloudways has a steeper learning curve. While the control panel is beginner-friendly for a cloud platform, it’s still more complex than Pressable’s streamlined dashboard.

Pressable vs Cloudways – Feature Comparison

Here’s a quick side-by-side look at the main features you get with each platform:

Features

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Pressable

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Cloudways

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Hosting Type

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Managed WordPress

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Managed Cloud Hosting

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Supported Platforms

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WordPress & WooCommerce only

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WordPress, WooCommerce, Laravel, Magento, and PHP apps

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Data Centers

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4 global locations (Automattic network)

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65+ global locations (varies by provider)

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Performance Tools

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Built-in CDN and caching, server optimization for WP Cloud.

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Cloudflare Enterprise CDN (add-on), free Object CachePro, Varnish, Redis, Memcached, Breeze.

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Security

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Jetpack Security Daily, WAF, malware scanning, and SSL certificates.

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Dedicated firewalls, bot protection, free SSL, malware removal

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Backups

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Daily auto-backups, on-demand, and free Jetpack VaultPress backup

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Daily auto-backups, on-demand, and off-site backup.

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Staging Sites

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Developer Tools

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SSH, SFTP, WP-CLI, Git, and Studio Local.

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SSH, SFTP, WP-CLI, Git, database access

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Pricing Model

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Fixed monthly plans

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Pay-as-you-go based on server size

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Support

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24/7 chat and ticket support

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24/7 chat, ticket, and optional phone support

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Free Trial

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30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

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3-day Free Trial – No Credit Card

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Hosting Type and Supported Platforms

Pressable is strictly managed WordPress hosting. You can’t host other CMSs or custom applications. It’s built for WordPress and WooCommerce only, and that focus allows them to optimize every server setting for those platforms. 

Cloudways is more flexible. You can run WordPress, Magento, Laravel, or even custom PHP applications on the same account. 

If you’re building multiple types of sites or applications, Cloudways gives you more room to work.

Data Centers and Global Reach

Pressable’s infrastructure is powered by Automattic’s network, with four origin data centers in: 

  • Amsterdam, Netherlands
  • Washington, DC
  • Los Angeles, CA
  • Dallas, TX

You choose a data center location when setting up a site, which helps with speed for your target audience. While the four origin datacenter seems limited compared to Cloudways’s, Pressable’s 28 PoP edge caching locations compensate for it. 

So, even if your website is hosted in one of those datacenters, your Asia and Africa audience will still experience faster page loads.  

Cloudways gives you more datacenters to choose from, over 65 origin datacenters. This is because of its partnership with 5 different cloud service providers and each one has several datacenters. 

Depending on your choice of cloud provider (Linode, Digital Ocean, Vultr, Google, and AWS), you can host your website closer to your audience location. 

This can be advantageous for local businesses that have the majority of its audience in a particular region. 

Therefore, if you need ultra-specific server locations outside the US, Cloudways wins here.

Performance Tools

Pressable has server-level caching solutions (edge cache, page cache, object caching and Opcache), a built-in CDN powered by the Edge Cache, and performance optimizations tuned for WordPress. 

Aside from that, Pressable plans comes with 5 PHP workers (512mb per worker), 5vCPUs, geo redundant high availability cloud, autoscaling with bursting capabilities, Application Performance Monitoring, performance report, and monthly Lighthouse report for Core Web Vitals metrics. 

You don’t have to set up anything, all these are ready when your site goes live. 

Cloudways also offers caching but lets you choose between Varnish, Redis, Memcached and their own Breeze plugin. Object Cache Pro (worth $95/month) is preinstalled as a drop-in plugin. 

Like Pressable, Cloudways also runs an NVMe based server, but the entry-level plan starts with 1 vCPU which is lower compared to Pressable’s 5vCPU on the entry-level plan.

For an e-Commerce store, this can make a big difference in performance. 

Another issue is that Cloudways does not publicly disclose how many PHP workers you get in your plan, the assumption is that you get “sufficient” PHP workers as per your plan specs. 

You may want to contact sales if the number of workers is something that matters to your business needs. 

However, you can add Cloudflare Enterprise add-on for extra performance and security. This makes Cloudways more customizable, but also more hands-on.

But if I have to choose between Pressable vs Cloudways based on performance out of the box for a small personal site, I go with Pressable. 

The built-in multilayer caching mechanism, 5 PHP workers, 5vCPUs, and HA geo redundant cloud means better performance without much fine tuning from my end. 

Backups and Staging Sites

Both platforms provide daily and on-demand backups, and you can store them offsite if you need that extra security. You can download available backup anytime to your local machine. 

Presable gives you free 10GB storage on its JetPack VaultPress cloud-based backup. This store full backup copy (files and database) off your server, provide one-click restore point, and let you go back in time and see every site’s changes.  

Staging environments are available on both web hosts, too, allowing you to test changes before pushing them live.

However, Pressable has more test environments options for devs. There is staging, sandbox, development, local, and production. With Cloudways, I have only tested in staging environments.  

Developer Tools

Pressable supports SSH, SFTP, Git, and WP-CLI for advanced WordPress work. 

Cloudways offers the same, plus database management tools and the ability to install server-level software. 

However, Pressable’s Studio Local might give it an edge over Cloudways here, especially for developers. Because you can download Studio Local to your local machine and have more control, freedom and increased productivity.  

I think it all goes down to preferences and your needs – if you need deeper direct server access, Cloudways is better. But if you need something that makes your workflow better and a dedicated development tool, Pressable is the right choice. 

Performance and Speed

When it comes to hosting, performance isn’t just about server specs, it’s about how consistently your site loads fast, even during traffic spikes. 

Both Pressable and Cloudways have solid reputations for speed, but they achieve it in different ways.

How Pressable Handles Performance

Pressable uses the NGNIX web server and its infrastructure is fine-tuned for WordPress. Because they only host WordPress and WooCommerce sites, they’ve optimized everything from the PHP version to database queries. 

The platform runs on the same network that powers WordPress.com, so you benefit from Automattic’s global infrastructure.

Each site on Pressable uses a built-in edge cache CDN to serve static files like images, CSS, and JavaScript from the closest server to the visitor. 

Server-level edge caching is always on (Egde Caching), so you don’t need to install separate WordPress caching plugins. In fact, third-party caching plugins are not allowed on Pressable. 

But you can use other optimization features of the caching plugin like file minification, image optimization, lazy loading, font optimization, etc. Also, Pressable’s object cache is always on, and you can manage site actions that triggered automatic flush or purge with the Pressable Cache Management plugin. 

Aside from the built-in caching and CDN, Pressable also ensures your site remains 100% online through its high availability WP cloud and automatic server failover. Pressable 100% uptime is backed by Service Level Agreements (SLA). 

Another standout performance feature is the autoscaling of server resources to handle sudden traffic spikes, so even during seasonal sales, you’re not caught by surprise. 

In my experience, after moving to Pressable, my site consistently loads in under two seconds and averages 85ms TTFB without any manual optimization. And after enabling WP Rocket’s setting, such as file, image, fonts, and other optimization features, the load time went down to under 300ms for the blog homepage. 

Pingdom loading time test report for CybernairaPingdom loading time test report for Cybernaira

This kind of speed is what makes your site’s users and search engine happy, increases conversion, and the user experience. 

How Cloudways Handles Performance

Cloudways approaches performance differently. 

Instead of giving you a single optimized stack, they let you choose your server provider, size, and location. 

Performance depends on which cloud provider you pick – DigitalOcean, Linode, and Vultr High Frequency servers are known for excellent speed, while AWS and Google Cloud offer more scalability.

Cloudways uses a combination of NGINX/Apache web server, Varnish, Memcached, Redis, and PHP-FPM to speed up requests. The Breeze plugin adds front-end caching for WordPress, and you can integrate Cloudflare or a third-party CDN for extra optimization. 

Because Cloudways gives you more server-level access, you can fine-tune performance settings, but that also means you’re responsible for making the right adjustments.

On a well-configured Vultr High Frequency server, I’ve seen Cloudways sites load in under two second. However, if you choose a smaller server size and don’t configure caching properly, performance can dip.

And because Cloudways does not use a single cloud provider, I can not draw a conclusion on what kind of performance you’d expect. 

But from experience, using both DigitalOcean and Linode entry-level plans (1GB RAM and 1vCPU), my site loads fast and the time-to-first byte average 120ms is still fast. Based on my site performance, Linode High Frequency Micro plan performs better than the DigitalOcean server. 

I have reviewed Cloudways in the past where I detailed my experience. You should read that post for a better insight into Cloudways hosting infrastructure. 

Which One is Better? 

There is no right or wrong answer here. It depends on a lot of factors, such as your type of website, caching setup, traffic level, server resources, CDN, etc.

But from experience, using both platforms, the major differences in performance for my site after moving from Cloudways to Pressable is faster load time and TTFB. 

Yes, after moving to Pressable, my site speed increased dramatically, the time-to-first first byte reduced to under 85ms on average, and I also noticed a more responsive admin dashboard. 

One thing I can tell you is that if server response time is your priority, Pressable is hard to beat. The reliance on WordPress.com infrastructure means your website already benefits from best in-class server setup.

But if you need more control over server applications, such as the ability to STOP, RESTART, or even upgrade/downgrade applications, you’ll love Cloudways. 

Ease of Use

The way you interact with your hosting account matters just as much as speed. A fast host that’s a pain to manage can slow you down in other ways. 

Pressable and Cloudways both have their own style of making things “easy,” but my experience is very different with site management on both platforms. 

Managing a Site on Pressable

Pressable’s dashboard is clean, simple, and built around WordPress. 

As expected, there is no traditional cPanel, instead, you have a fully customized user dashboard. This dashboard has everything you need to manage your site without needing to connect to your server. 

Pressable user dashboard overview for Cybernaira blogPressable user dashboard overview for Cybernaira blog

For example, let’s say your site suddenly encounters a database error after updating a particular plugin or theme, and you can no longer login to your WordPress admin dashboard. You can easily deactivate such a plugin from your Pressable user dashboard. 

You don’t need to touch your database or use an FTP program to connect to your server. Everything about your site can be managed through your MyPressable dashboard. 

However, while there are no complex server options to sort through, you can’t change PHP memory limits or install custom server software from the dashboard. 

While that might sound like a limitation, it’s actually a time-saver for non-technical users. Pressable handles those optimizations in the background, so you can stay focused on building and managing your business.

If you’ve ever used WordPress.com’s admin area, you’ll find Pressable feels familiar but with more flexibility, things like installing any plugin or theme you want.

For a more detailed explanation about the user dashboard, check my detailed review of Pressable. 

Managing a Site on Cloudways

Cloudways control panel is also custom-built and designed to work across multiple cloud providers. You’ll see your servers and the applications installed on them, with options to manage each separately.

One advantage of Cloudways is that you get more control over settings like PHP versions, memory limits, caching layers, applications running on the server, and database management. You can also monitor real-time server performance and scale resources on demand. 

That’s great if you understand what these settings do, but it can be overwhelming if you’re new to hosting.

For example, if your WooCommerce store suddenly gets a traffic spike during a holiday sale, you can log into Cloudways and scale up your server in minutes. 

Unlike Pressable, if you ever need to troubleshoot an issue while you can not log into your WordPress admin dashboard, you will need to remotely connect to your website server via an FTP program like FileZila. 

For beginners, this can be a headache or time consuming compared to Pressable simplified user dashboard, which lets you manage such tasks without connecting to the server directly. 

I have shared detailed experience using Cloudways user dashboard in my review. Read that post for more information about Cloudways user experience. 

Which is Easier?

If you want a hosting panel that works more like a WordPress site manager – simple, clutter-free, and focused – Pressable is the better fit. 

You don’t need to learn server management to use it effectively.

If you’re comfortable with a bit of technical control or you work with different types of websites beyond WordPress, Cloudways offers more flexibility. 

You’ll need to spend some time learning their system, but the trade-off is deeper customization.

Security Features

Security is one of those things you don’t think about until something goes wrong, then it becomes all you care about. Pressable and Cloudways both take security seriously, but they handle it differently based on their hosting models.

Pressable’s Security Approach

Pressable is built specifically for WordPress, so the security stack is configured for common threats in the WordPress ecosystem. 

Every site comes with free SSL Certificates and Jetpack Security Daily at no extra cost, which handles malware scanning, brute-force attack protection, and downtime monitoring.

They also run a Web Application Firewall (WAF) to block suspicious traffic before it even reaches your site. 

Automatic updates for WordPress core are enabled by default, and the server environment is locked down so you can’t accidentally make changes that open up vulnerabilities.

Because Pressable’s infrastructure is managed entirely by their team, you’re not responsible for server-level security. 

If something goes wrong, whether it’s a hack attempt or a malware infection, the support team steps in to fix it. Pressable also offers free hack recovery assistant services. 

On top of the built-in security features, you can enable Edge Defensive Mode in your MyPressable dashboard. Edge Defensive Mode lets you filter malicious and bot traffic from accessing your website. 

Another security measure is the egress firewall rules. With this, you can set up connections such as ports, servers, or domains that your site is allowed to connect with. 

Cloudways’ Security Approach

Cloudways offers strong security as well, but with more control in your hands. If you’re not technical, this might be a disadvantage, otherwise, it’s beneficial. 

Every server comes with a dedicated firewall, bot protection, and free SSL certificates, just like Pressable. Cloudways also run regular security patches at the server level, so you don’t have to worry about outdated software creating holes.

For WordPress specifically, Cloudways includes options to limit login attempts, auto-healing, block XML-RPC attacks, and integrate with security plugins like Wordfence, Imunity360, or iThemes Security. 

If you want to add two-factor authentication, IP whitelisting for SSH/SFTP, or custom SSL certificates, you can do that from the control panel.

The difference is that Cloudways’ approach is more modular. You can choose how much security you add and configure it to match your needs. 

But if you don’t take the time to set up these extra layers, your protection might not be as complete as Pressable’s “everything included” model.

Which is More Secure?

For someone who wants their host to take care of all WordPress security without extra setup, Pressable is a safer choice. 

Everything you need is enabled by default.

If you want the ability to customize your security settings and layer multiple protections, Cloudways gives you that flexibility, just keep in mind you’re responsible for setting it up.

Pricing Comparison

Pressable and Cloudways have very different pricing structures. Pressable uses fixed monthly plans, while Cloudways runs on a pay-as-you-go model. 

Which one is better depends on how predictable you want your hosting bill to be and how much flexibility you need.

Pressable Pricing

Pressable’s pricing is straightforward and there are no surprises. You pick a plan based on the number of sites, monthly visits, and storage. 

At the time of writing, Pressable has two main standard hosting plans categories – Signature and Premium.

Signature plans let you host 1 website and up to 100 sites. The price starts from $20.83 for one website to $569.25 for 100 sites. This price is for the annual billing cycle. If you subscribe to the monthly billing, you will be paying more. 

For instance, the Signature plan for 1 website, 20GB storage, and 30k monthly visit cost $25 for the month-to-month billing. Here is the hosting plan. 

  • Entry Plan – $25/month: 1 site, up to 5,000 monthly visits, 5GB storage.
  • Personal Plan – $45/month: 3 sites, up to 30,000 monthly visits, 20GB storage.
  • Starter Plan – $90/month: 10 sites, up to 50,000 monthly visits, 30GB storage.
  • Professional Plan – $155/month: 20 sites, up to 100,000 monthly visits, 50GB storage.

All plans include the same security features, CDN, staging, 5 PHP workers, 5vCPUs, high availability  cloud, and 24/7 support. You won’t get surprise charges if traffic spikes, but you will need to upgrade if you consistently exceed your plan limits.

For example, if you’re running a single business site with steady traffic, you can stay on the Signature 1 plan for years without worrying about unexpected costs.

Cloudways Pricing

Cloudways’ pricing depends on the cloud provider and server size you choose. You pay by the hour or month for the exact resources you use. 

And there’s no restrictions on how many sites you can host in a hosting plan. What you’re paying for is the server size, RAM, bandwidth, and CPU. 

This means, you can host 5, 10, 20, and more sites in any plan, as long as your server resources can handle the combined traffic and assets from all the sites. 

Here are monthly costs for Cloudways entry-level plans on its five cloud providers:

  • DigitalOcean (1GB RAM, 1 vCPU) – $14/month.
  • Vultr High Frequency (1GB RAM, 1 vCPU) – $16/month.
  • Linode (1GB RAM, 1vCPU) – $14/month.
  • AWS (1GB RAM, 2 vCPU) –  $20.56/month.
  • Google Cloud (1.7GB RAM, shared CPU) – $37.33/month.

The catch is that Cloudways pricing doesn’t include extra costs like premium support upgrades, Cloudflare Enterprise, or malware protection. These are add-ons products in Cloudways. 

However, you can scale your server instantly if you need more power and scale back down when traffic drops, so you’re never locked into paying for resources you’re not using.

For example, if you run a WooCommerce store that’s busy during the holidays but quieter in other months, you can pay for a larger server in December and a smaller one in January. 

That flexibility can save money over time.

Which Offers Better Value?

If you want predictable costs, don’t want to pay for performance add-on, and don’t plan to change server size often, Pressable’s fixed pricing is easier to budget for.

Pressable includes core hosting performance features in its base hosting price. 

But if you prefer flexibility, want to pay only for the resources you use, and don’t mind paying for additional performance features, Cloudways is more adaptable and can be cheaper for smaller sites.

The price you pay isn’t really an issue, but what you’re getting for what price. 

For example, with Pressable, you won’t need a third-party CDN or a caching plugin. These are built-in for every Pressable’s sites. 

On the other hand, you may need to purchase the Cloudflare Enterprise plan as a separate add-on and install a caching plugin like WP Rocket or Nitropack if you need optimal performance on Cloudways. 

Support and Customer Service

Good hosting isn’t just about servers, it’s about knowing there’s help when you need it. 

Whether that’s fixing a site outage at midnight or walking you through a configuration issue, reliable support can make a big difference.

Pressable Support

Pressable offers 24/7 live chat and ticket support to all customers, no matter what plan you’re on. There’s no extra fee for “priority” access, everyone gets the same level of service.

Because Pressable is WordPress-only, their support team is highly specialized. 

They don’t just know how to restart a server; they understand WordPress core, common plugin conflicts, and WooCommerce performance issues. 

That means if your site goes down after a plugin update, they can often pinpoint the problem quickly without sending you elsewhere.

From my experience, response times on live chat are usually under 4 minutes, and the support team is proactive, helpful, and tends to go extra miles to resolve issues. 

Cloudways Support

Cloudways also offers 24/7 live chat and ticket support, but they have a tiered system. The standard support included with all accounts covers general troubleshooting and server issues. 

If you want faster response times, deeper application-level and enhanced support, you’ll need to upgrade to Advanced or Premium Support, which adds a monthly cost.

Cloudways’ team has strong server knowledge and can handle a variety of platforms, not just WordPress. 

However, because they cater to many CMSs and custom applications, their WordPress-specific support isn’t as specialized as Pressable’s.

In my experience, Cloudways’ standard chat support is responsive, but more complex WordPress issues sometimes require extra time or a higher-tier plan to resolve quickly. 

And, Cloudways standard support for all users does not include application-level. This means if your issue is related to your WordPress application itself (not the server), Cloudways might not be able to help directly, instead, they will redirect you to their help documentation. 

Which is Better?

If you want WordPress experts available at all times without paying extra, Pressable’s support model is hard to beat.

If you need broader platform support and don’t mind paying more for advanced help, Cloudways’ tiered system gives you that option.

Pros and Cons of Each Platform

Pressable – Pros

  • WordPress and WooCommerce focus: Every feature is designed for these platforms, making it easier for non-technical users.
  • All-inclusive security and performance tools: CDN, SSL, Jetpack Security, and staging are included at no extra cost.
  • Specialized support: 24/7 help from a team that only works with WordPress.
  • Host Unlimited Sites: Cloudways doesn’t restrict how many sites you can host in a plan. 
  • Predictable pricing: Fixed plans with no surprise overage fees.
  • Easy for agencies: Plans allow multiple sites, and you can manage them all from one dashboard.

Pressable – Cons

  • Limited to WordPress: No support for other CMSs or custom applications.
  • Plan limits: You need to move to a higher tier when you exceed visits or storage.
  • No email hosting: you need a third-party provider for domain email hosting.

Cloudways – Pros

  • Multiple cloud providers: Choose from DigitalOcean, Vultr, AWS, Google Cloud, or Linode.
  • Instant scaling: Add more CPU, RAM, or storage in minutes.
  • Supports multiple platforms: WordPress, Magento, Laravel, custom PHP apps, and more.
  • Pay-as-you-go pricing: Only pay for what you use; scale down to save money.
  • Customizable environment: Control over server settings, caching, and security layers.

Cloudways – Cons

  • More technical setup: Not as beginner-friendly as Pressable.
  • Support tiers: Faster or more advanced help requires an extra fee.
  • No email hosting: You’ll need a separate provider for email accounts.
  • Security setup: Some protections require manual configuration.

Pressable or Cloudways – Which One Should You Choose?

If you want a platform that’s ready to go out of the box for WordPress, Pressable is the safer and simpler choice. 

You get predictable pricing, all the essential security and performance features included, and a support team that lives and breathes WordPress. 

This makes it perfect for:

  • Small businesses that want a hands-off hosting experience.
  • Agencies managing multiple WordPress sites for clients.
  • WooCommerce store owners who don’t want to spend time on server management.

On the other hand, if you want more control over your hosting environment and no fixed number of install sites, Cloudways gives you unmatched flexibility. 

You can pick your cloud provider, scale resources instantly, and fine-tune server settings to your exact needs. It’s best suited for:

  • Developers and freelancers who manage a variety of site types.
  • Businesses with fluctuating traffic that need flexible scaling.
  • Power users who are comfortable configuring their own security and performance settings.

Conclusion 

Pressable and Cloudways are both excellent hosting options, but they serve different kinds of users and hosting needs.

Pressable works best if you want a hosting provider that’s ready for WordPress from day one. It takes care of speed, security, backups, and updates without you needing to adjust server settings. 

The support team is full of WordPress specialists, so you get help that’s directly relevant to your site. It’s ideal for business owners, agencies, and store owners who value simplicity and predictable pricing.

Cloudways is better suited for those who want more control and flexibility. It’s a solid fit for developers, power users, and businesses that run multiple types of websites beyond WordPress.

Both are capable, but the right choice comes down to whether you want “done for you” or “customizable” hosting.



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I am a passionate blogger with extensive experience in web design. As a seasoned YouTube SEO expert, I have helped numerous creators optimize their content for maximum visibility.

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